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Dr. Jon Armbruster - Auburn’s Dinosaur Egg

  • Alabama Center for the Arts - Performing Arts Building 133 2nd Avenue Northeast Decatur, AL, 35601 United States (map)

Alabama Center for the Arts - Performing Arts Building - Recital Hall

Auburn’s Dinosaur Egg: A Short and Long Tale

About 83 million years ago, an almost completely developed dinosaur died. Still encased in its egg, it somehow got washed out to sea, sank, and was buried. In 1970, Prescott Atkinson, then 17 years old, was looking for fossils west of Selma when he found the egg sitting on a pedestal of clay. In the over 50 years since then, the egg has traveled around Alabama and to France to unlock its mysteries. It is one of the rarest things in the world as it is the only ornithomimid egg; it is shaped more like a duck egg, while most dinosaur eggs are elongated. It is heavily textured, and it is among the thickest eggs ever found despite also being one of the smallest dinosaur eggs. As the eastern US’s only intact dinosaur egg, it unlocks just a bit of what is a very poorly known time in our area. The short life and the long history of the egg will be discussed.

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Christopher Joe

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Robyn Bailey - Nestwatch