Paleontologists’ Discovery Suggests Dinosaur Kids’ Table

Paleontologists’ Discovery Suggests Dinosaur Kids’ Table lead image
Abigail Malate, Staff Illustrator
(Inside Science) -- Sauropods were the largest animals
Then came Andrew the Diplodocus -- the sauropod with the smallest skull ever discovered at less than a foot long (24 cm). Andrew’s skull reveals previously unknown aspects of the animal’s immature anatomy, showing that juveniles were not just smaller versions of adults. Physically, the juveniles were more similar to their ancestors than to their own parents, according to a new study
An adult Diplodocus had peg teeth and a wide, square snout, which allowed the dinosaur to graze on softer plants like ferns. Andrew’s skull has peg teeth in the front, a narrow snout and spoonlike spatulate teeth in the back. The spatulate teeth, which are absent in adult Diplodocus, are found in some other sauropod groups.
Spatulate teeth allowed for grazing on tougher, more coarse foods. That Andrew’s skull has both led scientists to believe that younger dinosaurs ate more diverse foods.
“It’s kind of like having a Swiss Army knife in your mouth for teeth. Andrew and other young Diplodocus could basically selectively feed on really any of the different kinds of plants that they wanted to, which makes sense because these dinosaurs grew insanely fast, and so if you’re going to grow really fast you need to have a lot of energy,” said Cary Woodruff
The difference in size and nutritional needs led scientists to suspect that juvenile Diplodocus lived in age-restricted groups in the forests. This may have protected them from predators and from being trampled by their much larger parents.
Woodruff and his team have hypothesized that as the dinosaurs grew, they developed to be more akin to their parents and lost their youthful ancestral characteristics.