Dinosaur Eggshell
Dinosaur Eggshell
This specimen is a fragment of Hypselosaurus eggshell from the Provence region of southern France. Recent studies suggest that the sauropod may have been a "small" titanosaur, measuring perhaps 12m (40ft) in length in adulthood.
The specimen comes inside a classic, glass-topped riker display case measuring 4 1/2" x 3 1/2". A small information card is also enclosed. As pictured, the eggshell is also enclosed in a small acrylic specimen jar.
ICHNOFOSSIL (TRACE FOSSIL) - ESTIMATED AGE: 70,000,000 years Old
MORE ABOUT DINOSAUR EGGS AND Hypselosaurus
"I would go to museums and say can I open your dinosaur egg? Can I just drop them on the floor and look inside? And they'd say no." ~ Jack Horner, Paleontologist
When thinking about deep time, we often find ourselves caught up in the grand movements and nearly unfathomable expanses of millennia stretched end to end. Yet, here in this humble eggshell, we have a single moment captured for all eternity... the birth of an individual dinosaur.
The egg is an incredible natural structure designed to protect and support a growing body until it is ready to come into the world. The texture, when viewed under magnification, resembles rocky hills with a network of valleys running in between. These numerous rifts serve as channels for oxygen, sustaining the fragile creature within.
📸 Macro image of Hypselosaurus eggshell fragments after preparation (Source: Mini Museum)
Many classic dinosaur books credit American George Olson with the first discovery of dinosaur eggs back in 1923 during an expedition in Mongolia. While Olson's find was the first recognized egg find, the real honor goes to 19th century French Catholic Priest Father Jean-Jacques Poech. In 1859, Father Poech came across the shell fragments of what he believed to be a giant bird. As it turns out, those eggs were really from Hypselosaurus.
Hypselosaurus was first described by P.E. Matheron in 1869 based on a selection of fossilized bone fragments. Matheron initially concluded the remains came from a huge crocodilian, but in 1890 Charles Depéret proposed Hypselosaurus was actually a sauropod dinosaur. The definition of Hypselosaurus has continued to shift over the years from a small to midsized sauropod perhaps 12m (40ft) in length to more current theories that may assign the remains to other, more firmly defined titanosaurs.
📸 Images from "Fifteen Recipes for Preparing Dinosaur Eggs"
Fossil eggshells Matheron collected from the same site where he found the Hypselosaurus skeleton bits are notable as the first (non-avian) dinosaur eggs discovered. This specimen comes from the same region.
As you might expect, fossilized sauropod eggshells can be a little dirty. In preparing the eggshells for Age of Dinosaurs, we were presented with the challenge of clearing the debris that had built up, without damaging the unique surface of the shell and preserving fine details like the oxygenation channels.
Our initial experiments to clean the eggshells led to the mutual removal of debris and the erosion of the ridged surface of the fossil. We tested various solutions and tools, but the end results were abraded and lackluster shells.
To take things to the next level, we turned to the Journal of Paleontological Techniques and an article by Spanish paleontologists Sandra Val, Rubén García, and Domingo López titled "Preliminary Results on the Chemical Preparation of Dinosaur Eggshells."
This study details fifteen (15!) different methods for preparing dinosaur eggshells using a variety of chemical agents. In the article linked below, we cover the entire process.
Front of the Specimen Card
Back of the Specimen Card
Further Reading
Matheron, Philippe. "Notice sur les reptiles fossiles des dépôts fluvio-lacustres crétacés du bassin à lignite de Fuveau." (1869): 1-39.
Depéret, Charles. Les animaux pliocènes du Roussillon. Vol. 3. Baudry, 1890.
Buffetaut, Eric, and Jean Le Loeuff. "The discovery of dinosaur eggshells in nineteenth-century France." Dinosaur eggs and babies (1994): 31-34.
Tortosa, Thierry, et al. "New discovery of titanosaurs (Dinosauria, Sauropoda) from Provence (SE France): implications on local paleobiodiversity." 10th Annual Meeting of the European Association of Vertebrate Palaeontologists, Teruel (Spain). 2012.
Val, S., García, R., López, D., 2014. Preliminary results on the chemical preparation of dinosaur eggshells. Journal of Paleontological Techniques, 13: 29-37