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5.1: Dinosaur droppings? A bezoar?

  • Page ID
    45078
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    In 2004 a small pebble was collected by one of Ewan Fordyce’s students as part of an undergraduate research project. The pebble was found in a sediment horizon in the Waipara Valley in North Canterbury that is densely packed with shells from the Late Cretaceous gastropod Conchothyra parasitica. The pebble stood out to the student as a smooth, rounded and brown pebble amongst the mollusc fossils.

    The figure shows two views of the same coprolite or fossil faeces. The coprolite is mottled light and dark brown colours and is around one centimetre long and half a centimetre wide. The specimen ID for the fossil is OU22608. The left image shows the coprolite after it was cut through to make a thin section. The right image is the thin section of the coprolite and is rotated 90° clockwise compared with the left image.

    The left image shows the coprolite after it was cut through the centre to make a thin section. The right image is rotated 90° clockwise compared with the left image and shows the thin section of the coprolite. Image credits: RE Fordyce, DB Thomas.

    The pebble was brought back to the Department of Geology and prepared as a thin section, allowing the internal structure of the pebble to be studied with a microscope. Under the microscope the pebble was revealed to be a mixture of different types of plant fragments all cemented together. These plant fragments may represent the diet of an ancient animal, making the pebble a coprolite. And given that the fragments are from terrestrial plants, and that the coprolite was found in a Late Cretaceous sediment, the small brown pebble may be Aotearoa New Zealand’s first discovery of fossilised dinosaur droppings. Another word that could be used to describe this pebble is ‘bezoar’, a term used for undigested plant material trapped in the digestive system.

    The small pebble has yet to be fully analysed and described and so it remains one of the many tantalising potential research projects within the Geology Museum collections.

    —Written by Daniel B Thomas

    Specimen number: OU 22608 Age: Approximately 75 million years old (Late Cretaceous, Haumurian stage)
    Locality: Waipara Valley, North Canterbury Rock Formation: Charteris Bay Formation
    Collected by: DB Thomas  
    Citation: Not yet described

    This page titled 5.1: Dinosaur droppings? A bezoar? is shared under a CC BY-NC 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by Daniel B Thomas, Jeffrey H Robinson, and Daphne E Lee (Council of Australian University Librarians Initiative) via source content that was edited to the style and standards of the LibreTexts platform.