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The original item was published from 12/22/2017 8:33:03 AM to 12/22/2017 8:33:34 AM.

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Posted on: December 20, 2017

[ARCHIVED] Baby Turtle Shell Found in Fossilized Poop

Baby Turtle Shell in Fossiled Poop for web

CALVERT MARINE MUSEUM

P.O. Box 97 - 14200 Solomons Island Road

Solomons, MD 20688

Traci Cimini - 410-326-2042 x62

Traci.Cimini@calvertcountymd.gov

CMM-PR-17-68

December 20, 2017

For Immediate Release

 

BABY TURTLE SHELL FOUND IN FOSSILIZED POOP

A baby turtle shell was found for the first time ever in fossilized poop! The Calvert Marine Museum announces the publication of a scientific paper documenting this find which was authored by Stephen J. Godfrey, the museum’s Curator of Paleontology, Robert E. Weems, and Billy Palmer and published in Ichnos, a scientific journal dedicated to the study of trace fossils.

During their analysis of the specimen, the authors determined that a predator swallowed a 2 1/2 inch-long whole baby turtle 60 – 70 million years ago in South Carolina. Remarkably, the shell passed through the digestive system of the animal intact, and apparently the feces fossilized shortly thereafter, preserving an impression of the turtle’s shell. The predator may have been either a mosasaur (an aquatic marine reptile from the time of dinosaurs) or a meat-eating dinosaur or bird. This is the first time a body impression of a vertebrate animal has been preserved in a coprolite.

Based on the texture of the fossilized shell impression, the tiny turtle lived for a few weeks after it hatched and before it was eaten. Embryonic turtle shell texture is different from hatchling shell texture. As turtles age, new growth occurs around the perimeter of the embryonic scutes, so it is very easy to distinguish between embryonic and hatchling turtle shell texture. In this unique fossil, the surface texture of the scutes is preserved, including its finely pitted embryonic texture and a narrow perimeter of hatchling scute texture.

There are two main groups of turtles. Those that retract their necks into their shells (the Cryptodires) and those that turn their necks to the side of their shell (the Pleurodires). We know from the pattern of the scutes on the shell that this turtle was a Pleurodire; a side-neck turtle. Modern pleurodires live only in the Southern Hemisphere, but were present in North America during the Cretaceous period and Paleocene epoch.

Two tyrannosauroids - Appalachiosaurusmontgomeriensis and Dryptosaurus aquilunguis are known from Late Cretaceous eastern North America. The bird-mimic dinosaurs, the Ornithomimids, were also apparently there during that time and certainly could have also eaten the turtle. A crocodile is not ruled out as the predator, although it is much less likely as the high acid content in their stomach almost always dissolves bone, and consequently would leave no bony shell to be voided to make an impression.

For more information, contact Stephen J. Godfrey (Stephen.Godfrey@calvertcountymd.gov or call 410-326-2042, ext. 28. To read the entire article in Ichnos, visit http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/10420940.2017.1386662.

Photo captions:

Photo 1: The three most likely predators that could have swallowed the baby side-necked turtle completely: an aquatic mosasaur (lower left foreground), a terrestrial meat-eating dinosaur (right), or less likely, a crocodile (contemplating the scene from a distance). Illustration by Tim Scheirer, © Calvert Marine Museum.

Photo 2: The fossilized poop preserving the baby turtle shell impression.

Photo 3: The fossilized poop whitened (i.e., coated with sublimed ammonium chloride to improve contrast). The arrows show the direction that the poop stretched its way through the cloaca of the predator. (In vertebrates [except mammals], the cloaca is the common opening at the end of the digestive tract through which both excretory and genital products are released).

Photo 4: Outline of the Pleurodire baby turtle shell (Taphrosphys sulcatus, Family Bothremydidae)

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The museum is open daily from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Admission is $9.00 for adults, $7.00 for seniors, military with valid I.D. and AAA members, and $4.00 for children ages 5 - 12; children under 5 and museum members are always admitted free. For more information about the museum, upcoming events, or membership, visit the website at www.calvertmarinemuseum.com or call 410-326-2042. Like us on Facebook, follow us on Twitter, Google+, Instagram and Pinterest.

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