Natural History Museum
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Fossilised nests of the world's largest dinosaur discovered in India | Natural History Museum
More than 250 titanosaur eggs have been uncovered in India, revealing more about the lives of some of the largest animals which ever lived.
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PLOS
journals.plos.org › plosone › article
New Late Cretaceous titanosaur sauropod dinosaur egg clutches from lower Narmada valley, India: Palaeobiology and taphonomy | PLOS One
January 18, 2023 - Peninsular India is well known for dinosaur oological fossils that occur at several sites in the Lameta Formation of central and western India, Deccan intertrappean beds, and shallow marine formations of the Cauvery Basin marking the extensive spread of the Indian dinosaur clutch, egg and eggshell sites [1–15]. From the Lameta Formation, dinosaur clutches, isolated eggs and eggshell fragments have been reported from the Lameta Ghat (type section), Bara Simla Hill, Chui Hill in Jabalpur, Bagh and Kukshi areas of Dhar District and Betul District of Madhya Pradesh (M.P.), Rahioli-Balasinor area of Gujarat, and Nand-Dongargaon Basin in Chandrapur District, Maharashtra.
IFLScience
iflscience.com › over-250-fossilized-dinosaur-eggs-found-in-india-including-rare-egg-in-egg-67092
Over 250 Fossilized Dinosaur Eggs Found In India, Including Rare Egg-In-Egg
January 19, 2023 - The authors identified six different egg species among the 92 clutches. This came as somewhat of a surprise as it paints a picture of biodiversity in the region that hasn’t been reflected by the skeletal remains dug up here. The discovery points towards an extensive hatchery of titanosaur sauropod dinosaurs in the Narmada Valley, making it a treasure trove of specimens and academic insights that could teach us new things about what conditions favor nest preservation and how these dinosaurs reproduced.