Nodosaurus: Discovered mummy dinosaur with intact skin and intestines

17. 03. 2018
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His bones are not visible, and yet they are considered possible by scientists the most preserved specimen of the dinosaur, who ever appeared. This is because, after 110 for millions of years, his skeleton remains covered with untouched skin as a carapace. The Museum of Paleontology, Royal Tyrrell 'in Canada so recently revealed well preserved dinosaur cub, which many do not regard as fossil, but as a remarkable mummy of dinosaur with skin, carapace, and even retained guts. Scientists are overwhelmed by its almost unprecedented levels of conservation. "We have no skeleton, "said Caleb Brown, a researcher at Royal Tyrrell Museum, National Geographic," we have the entire dinosaur as it looked."

When this dinosaur was alive - as a representative of a new species called Nodosaurus - it was a huge four-legged herbivore, protected by pointed armor and weighing approximately 3000 pounds. To this day, the mummified Nodosaurus is so well preserved that it still weighs about 2500 pounds.

How the mummy dinosaur could stay so intact is still a mystery. According to CNN, however, researchers suggest that creatures could be flooded with river deposits and later flown to the sea, where they eventually sank to the bottom. For more than 100 millions of years on the seabed, minerals penetrated the carapace and the skin of the dinosaur, preserving them in their natural form. Although the mummy dinosaur was well preserved, getting it into its current form, suitable for exposure, was very demanding.

Creation was in fact first discovered in 2011 when an oil drill worker accidentally discovered this specimen at work. From this happy moment, researchers have spent the last six years of 7 000 hours working to test the remains and prepare them for an exhibition at the Royal Tyrrell Museum where visitors now have the opportunity to see the most amazing thing the world has ever seen.

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