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Paleobotanist and Palynologist

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One of the most interesting questions that paleobotanists have helped answer is what the dinosaurs ate. For many years, people thought that most dinosaurs were fierce, meat-eating creatures. We now know that most were herbivores. They probably had tamer personalities.

Using the information below, prepare your own brief essay on how we know what the dinosaurs ate. Try to make your writing as clear as possible.

What did the Mesozoic dinosaurs really eat? This question has spawned numerous hypotheses from scientists, dinosaur enthusiasts and fantasy writers.

Did dinosaurs feast on certain ferns? Conifers? Mammals? Each other? We will never completely understand dinosaur food habits. But scrutiny of the fossil record has revealed a number of traces of dinosaur feeding activities.

Predator and prey interactions can occasionally be inferred from the associations of different organisms in exceptional fossil assemblages. One spectacular find from the Gobi Desert revealed the skeleton of a carnivorous velociraptor entangled with a herbivorous protoceratops.

The relative positions of the two dinosaurs suggest that they were engaged in a struggle when they died.

This association has often been cited as an example of fighting dinosaurs. But one report disputes that view. It suggests that the velociraptor was simply feeding on a dead or dying animal.

This scenario portrays the velociraptor as a scavenger that died of unknown causes while feeding. A more recent investigation argues that the taphonomic evidence supports the original predator vs. prey fight interpretation.

These skeletal associations tell us much about interactions between different dinosaurs. That's because both predator and prey organisms have been identified.

Fossil assemblages suggesting clear examples of predatory behavior are rare, however. They must be carefully scrutinized so that inadvertent associations of fossil bones are not misinterpreted.

If theropods dined on other dinosaurs, we might expect to find numerous bite marks on dinosaur bones. A number of researchers have reported tooth-damaged dinosaur bone. But the incidence of such traces appears to be considerably lower than that of marks found on bones from communities with large mammalian carnivores.

The identity of the animal responsible for bite marks is usually difficult to determine. That's because many Mesozoic vertebrates (including crocodiles) were capable of causing generalized tooth damage to bone.

Fortunately, well-preserved tooth marks can occasionally exhibit distinctive shapes, spacing, or serration marks that allow comparisons with fossil jaws of contemporaneous carnivores.

For example, the spacing of the teeth in an allosaurus jaw was found to match the patterns of scoring found on bones of an apatosaurus.

The rare occurrence of such carnivorous evidence is another block in the argument that most dinosaurs were herbivorous. Strong evidence, indeed, but not nearly as strong as the long plant-fossil record that has since been compiled.

Paleobotanists have opened a window on the dinosaur's world and the view is mainly of plant life.

(From: What Did the Dinosaurs Eat, by Indiana University professor Karen Chin)