AI Article Synopsis

  • Shed dinosaur teeth offer valuable insights into dinosaur behavior and ecology, but their interpretation can be influenced by how they're affected by environmental processes, particularly the shape and type of teeth (shed versus root-bearing).
  • Experimental testing using resin casts of Allosaurus and Camarasaurus teeth reveals that shed teeth travel further in water currents, especially at higher velocities, highlighting differences in their transportability.
  • These findings are crucial for understanding fossil records and can significantly impact future research on dinosaur populations and their feeding habits.

Article Abstract

Shed dinosaur teeth are commonly collected microvertebrate remains that have been used for interpretations of dinosaur feeding behaviors, paleoecology, and population studies. However, such interpretations may be biased by taphonomic processes such as fluvial sorting influenced by tooth shape: shed teeth, removed from the skull during life, and teeth possessing roots, removed from the skull after death. As such, teeth may behave differently in fluvial systems due to their differences in shape. In order to determine the influence of fluvial processes on the preservation and distribution of shed and root-bearing dinosaur teeth, the hydrodynamic behaviors of high-density urethane resin casts of shed and root-bearing Allosaurus and Camarasaurus teeth were experimentally tested for relative transport distances at increasing flow velocities in an artificial fluviatile environment. Results show that tooth cast specimens exhibited comparable patterns of transport at lower velocities, though the shed Camarasaurus teeth transported considerably farther in medium to higher flow velocities. Two-Way ANOVA tests indicate significant differences in the mean transport distances of tooth casts oriented perpendicular to flow (p < 0.05) with varying tooth morphologies and flow velocities. The differences exhibited in the transportability of shed and root-bearing teeth has important implications for taphonomic reconstructions, as well as future studies on dinosaur population dynamics, paleoecology, and feeding behaviors.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3994629PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.7717/peerj.347DOI Listing

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