6471 

Large Fossil Hadrosaur Dinosaur Egg. Cretaceous Period, 145-65 million years B.P.. A fossil Charonosaurus sp. hadrosaur egg retaining evidence of the original leathery surface. 3.5 kg, 17 cm (6 3/4 in). Acquired 1983-1990. Private collection of an East Sussex gentleman. Dinosaur eggs are known from about 200 sites around the world, the majority in Asia and mostly in terrestrial (non-marine) rocks of Cretaceous Age. It may be that thick calcite eggshells evolved during the Cretaceous (145 to 65 million years ago). Most dinosaur eggs have one of two forms of eggshell that are distinct from the shells of related modern animal groups, such as turtles or birds; however, some eggs closely resemble the type of shells seen in present day ostrich eggs.

londres, Royaume-Uni