Hilda Mega-bonebed
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The Hilda mega-bonebed is a complex of fourteen probable ''
Centrosaurus apertus ''Centrosaurus'' ( ; ) is a genus of centrosaurine ceratopsian dinosaur from Campanian age of Late Cretaceous Canada. Their remains have been found in the Dinosaur Park Formation, dating from 76.5 to 75.5 million years ago. Discovery and nami ...
'' bonebeds discovered near the town of
Hilda Hilda is one of several feminine given names derived from the name ''Hild'', formed from Old Norse , meaning 'battle'. Hild, a Nordic-German Bellona, was a Valkyrie who conveyed fallen warriors to Valhalla. Warfare was often called Hild's Game. ...
in
Alberta Alberta is a Provinces and territories of Canada, province in Canada. It is a part of Western Canada and is one of the three Canadian Prairies, prairie provinces. Alberta is bordered by British Columbia to its west, Saskatchewan to its east, t ...
,
Canada Canada is a country in North America. Its Provinces and territories of Canada, ten provinces and three territories extend from the Atlantic Ocean to the Pacific Ocean and northward into the Arctic Ocean, making it the world's List of coun ...
. It was first described in the scientific literature by David Eberth, Donald Brinkman, and Vaia Barkas in 2010 after more than ten years of research. The Hilda mega-bonebed is significant because the behavior of the preserved dinosaurs themselves was the dominant cause of its existence, rather than the stratum's geological history like most bonebeds. It is also Canada's largest bonebed.


History of research

In
1959 Events January * January 1 – Cuba: Fulgencio Batista flees Havana when the forces of Fidel Castro advance. * January 2 – Soviet lunar probe Luna 1 is the first human-made object to attain escape velocity from Earth. It reaches the ...
, Wann Langston, Jr. recorded evidence of a ''Centrosaurus'' bonebed near Hilda, Alberta. Later, between
1964 Events January * January 1 – The Federation of Rhodesia and Nyasaland is dissolved. * January 5 – In the first meeting between leaders of the Roman Catholic and Orthodox churches since the fifteenth century, Pope Paul VI and Patria ...
and
1966 Events January * January 1 – In a coup, Colonel Jean-Bédel Bokassa takes over as military ruler of the Central African Republic, ousting President David Dacko. * January 3 – 1966 Upper Voltan coup d'état: President Maurice Yaméogo i ...
Don Taylor of the
Provincial Museum of Alberta The Royal Alberta Museum (RAM) is a museum of human history, human and natural history in Downtown Edmonton, Alberta, Canada, located north of Edmonton City Hall, City Hall. The museum is the largest in western Canada with more than exhibition ...
(now called the
Royal Alberta Museum The Royal Alberta Museum (RAM) is a museum of human and natural history in Downtown Edmonton, Alberta, Canada, located north of City Hall. The museum is the largest in western Canada with more than exhibition space and in total. The museum w ...
) oversaw the collection of fossils from yet another bonebed in the same region. These prospective bonebeds attracted the attention of scientists working for the Royal Tyrell Museum in the 1990s because Hilda was an ideal location for maintaining physical continuity across the bonebeds' expanse. Physical continuity is important, because discontinuity in the rock strata can make it harder to tell if the bones were deposited at the same time or not. Eberth and the other researchers considered Hilda a prime site for a continuous bonebed for two reasons, one related to its history, one related to its present geography. First, during the
Cretaceous The Cretaceous ( ) is a geological period that lasted from about 143.1 to 66 mya (unit), million years ago (Mya). It is the third and final period of the Mesozoic Era (geology), Era, as well as the longest. At around 77.1 million years, it is the ...
the area was situated closer to the
Western Interior Seaway The Western Interior Seaway (also called the Cretaceous Seaway, the Niobraran Sea, the North American Inland Sea, or the Western Interior Sea) was a large inland sea (geology), inland sea that existed roughly over the present-day Great Plains of ...
where more sediment would have been deposited than at
Dinosaur Provincial Park Dinosaur Provincial Park is a UNESCO World Heritage Site situated 220 kilometres (137 mi) east of Calgary, Alberta, Canada; or northeast of Brooks. The park is situated in the Red Deer River valley, which is noted for its striking badland topo ...
. Secondly, the modern Hilda area lacks the rough
badland Badlands are a type of dry terrain where softer sedimentary rocks and clay-rich soils have been extensively eroded."Badlands" in '' Chambers's Encyclopædia''. London: George Newnes, 1961, Vol. 2, p. 47. They are characterized by steep slopes ...
terrain that breaks up many probably equivalent deposits in Dinosaur Provincial Park. In
1996 1996 was designated as: * International Year for the Eradication of Poverty Events January * January 8 – A Zairean cargo plane crashes into a crowded market in the center of the capital city of the Democratic Republic of the Congo ...
, the Royal Tyrell Museum finally performed a preliminary survey of the area studied by Langston and Taylor and entire new bonebeds were discovered. The next year, in
1997 Events January * January 1 – The Emergency Alert System is introduced in the United States. * January 11 – Turkey threatens Cyprus on account of a deal to buy Russian S-300 missiles, prompting the Cypriot Missile Crisis. * January 1 ...
, research at Hilda began in earnest. In only two days, researchers discovered 14 separate bonebeds in one mudstone bed that extended for at least 7 km, with 3.7 km worth of visible outcrops. By the conclusion of the research program, the scientists mapped the bonebeds and excavated the bonebed cataloged as H97-04. They concluded that the Hilda bonebeds formed simultaneously when a herd consisting of thousands of ''Centrosaurus apertus'' drowned in a flood. The researchers further speculated that some of the 17 ''Centrosaurus'' bonebeds of Dinosaur Provincial Park likely formed simultaneously in a manner analogous to the formation of the Hilda bonebeds, which the researchers estimated to be spread over 2.3 km2. The researchers only collected fossils and
taphonomic Taphonomy is the study of how organisms decay and become fossilized or preserved in the paleontological record. The term ''taphonomy'' (from Greek , 'burial' and , 'law') was introduced to paleontology in 1940 by Soviet scientist Ivan Efremov ...
data from the bonebed H97-04, although all the others were also examined to check the quality and number of preserved bones. The research at Hilda was so complex that over ten years passed from the start of the project until David A. Eberth, Donald B. Brinkman, and Vaia Barkas published a formal description in the
scientific literature Scientific literature encompasses a vast body of academic papers that spans various disciplines within the natural and social sciences. It primarily consists of academic papers that present original empirical research and theoretical ...
.


Geographic location and extent

The mega-bonebed is located 25 kilometers west of the town of Hilda, Alberta in a "steep-walled" valley cut into the landscape by
glaciers A glacier (; or ) is a persistent body of dense ice, a form of rock, that is constantly moving downhill under its own weight. A glacier forms where the accumulation of snow exceeds its ablation over many years, often centuries. It acquires ...
during the
Pleistocene The Pleistocene ( ; referred to colloquially as the ''ice age, Ice Age'') is the geological epoch (geology), epoch that lasted from to 11,700 years ago, spanning the Earth's most recent period of repeated glaciations. Before a change was fin ...
epoch In chronology and periodization, an epoch or reference epoch is an instant in time chosen as the origin of a particular calendar era. The "epoch" serves as a reference point from which time is measured. The moment of epoch is usually decided b ...
. Northward through this valley's interior runs the
South Saskatchewan River The South Saskatchewan River is a major river in the Canadian provinces of Alberta and Saskatchewan. The river begins at the confluence of the Bow River, Bow and Oldman Rivers in southern Alberta and ends at the Saskatchewan River Forks in ce ...
. The individual bonebeds in the complex are recognizable as dense concentrations of ceratopsid bones. Research on the bonebeds of Dinosaur Provincial Park has discovered that ceratopsian bonebeds preserved in
mudstone Mudstone, a type of mudrock, is a fine-grained sedimentary rock whose original constituents were clays or muds. Mudstone is distinguished from ''shale'' by its lack of fissility.Blatt, H., and R.J. Tracy, 1996, ''Petrology.'' New York, New York, ...
deposits tended to be circular to ovular in shape when viewed from above, so the similar Hilda bonebeds probably were as well. H97-04 is the largest of the fourteen bonebeds, at 150 m in width. If one assumes that H97-04's 150 m width is its longest linear dimension then it had an area of about 17,671 m2. Bonebeds other than H97-04 were less than 50 m wide. These individual component bonebeds tend to have areas of only a few hundred to a few thousand square feet and would have maximum areas of somewhat less than 2,000 square meters. The individual bonebeds at Hilda were generally smaller than those at Dinosaur Provincial Park. The researchers estimated the entire Hilda complex to be 2.3 square kilometers in area based on the length of its north-south and east-west axes. This is the size of about 280 football fields, and is one of the largest dinosaur bonebeds ever discovered. Bonebeds left by such large animals over wide areas are a rare discovery. However, completely excavating the bonebed would be too huge and complex an undertaking to be practical.


Lithology and stratigraphy

The Hilda mega-bonebed lies within the bottom 25 m of the
Dinosaur Park Formation The Dinosaur Park Formation is the uppermost member of the Belly River Group (also known as the Judith River Group), a major geologic unit in southern Alberta. It was deposited during the Campanian stage of the Late Cretaceous, between about 7 ...
. Eberth, Brinkman and Barkas estimated that in the Hilda area, the Dinosaur Park Formation was almost 60 m thick between the over- and under-lying formations, but glacial activity and slumping had removed all but 43 m of this at the field site. When the researchers examined the
stratigraphy Stratigraphy is a branch of geology concerned with the study of rock layers (strata) and layering (stratification). It is primarily used in the study of sedimentary and layered volcanic rocks. Stratigraphy has three related subfields: lithost ...
of the Hilda site they found that the fourteen bonebeds occupied identical positions in the stratigraphic column. This continuity in the mudstone was what allowed them to infer that each bonebed was actually a component of a single large "mega-bonebed". At its thinnest point the mudstone bed hosting the centrosaur fossils is 25 cm thick and it measures 1 m at its thickest. Eberth, Brinkman and Barkas observed
siltstone Siltstone, also known as aleurolite, is a clastic sedimentary rock that is composed mostly of silt. It is a form of mudrock with a low clay mineral content, which can be distinguished from shale by its lack of fissility. Although its permeabil ...
,
claystone Mudrocks are a class of fine-grained siliciclastic sedimentary rocks. The varying types of mudrocks include siltstone, claystone, mudstone and shale. Most of the particles of which the stone is composed are less than and are too small to ...
, and abundant organic matter in the composition of the "brown-grey" mudstone.
Ironstone Ironstone is a sedimentary rock, either deposited directly as a ferruginous sediment or created by chemical replacement, that contains a substantial proportion of an iron ore compound from which iron (Fe) can be smelted commercially. Not to be c ...
concretions A concretion is a hard and compact mass formed by the precipitation of mineral cement within the spaces between particles, and is found in sedimentary rock or soil. Concretions are often ovoid or spherical in shape, although irregular shapes a ...
can be found scattered throughout the bed, but were most abundant where fossils were also common. Fossils are most common in the lowest parts of the bed. There are signs of deformation in the sediment composing the mudstone. The stratum hosting the mega-bonebed has different sorts of contacts with other strata at different locations across its extent. The most distinct boundaries separate the Hilda bonebed mudstone from other mudstones above and below it. Less clear boundaries occur where the bonebed mudstone contacts the filled-in remains of an ancient body of flowing water. These contacts record where the channel cut down into the sediment now lithified as the fossil-bearing mudstone. The researchers couldn't find the bed's northern boundary, which they felt might extend north of the northernmost bonebed as part of a succession of stacked mudstone beds. An ancient channel cut all the way through the sediments now composing the mudstone, and its deposit forms the Hilda bonebed's southern boundary.


Related strata

Eberth, Brinkman, and Barkas also noted the presence of two beds in the mudstone hosting the Hilda bonebeds that weren't ceratopsian bonebeds, but rather they contained vertebrate microfossils. The first of these was H97-09, a natural part of the same stratum that hosted the ceratopsian bonebeds, but bearing only the remains of aquatic animals like champsosaurs,
crocodilians Crocodilia () is an order of semiaquatic, predatory reptiles that are known as crocodilians. They first appeared during the Late Cretaceous and are the closest living relatives of birds. Crocodilians are a type of crocodylomorph pseudosuchi ...
,
fish A fish (: fish or fishes) is an aquatic animal, aquatic, Anamniotes, anamniotic, gill-bearing vertebrate animal with swimming fish fin, fins and craniate, a hard skull, but lacking limb (anatomy), limbs with digit (anatomy), digits. Fish can ...
, and
turtles Turtles are reptiles of the order Testudines, characterized by a special shell developed mainly from their ribs. Modern turtles are divided into two major groups, the Pleurodira (side necked turtles) and Cryptodira (hidden necked turtle ...
. The second was a lens of sandstone that formed after the ceratopsian bonebeds cataloged as H97-12. This lens of sandstone penetrated down into the bed that hosted the ceratopsian bonebeds, probably deposited by a
creek A creek in North America and elsewhere, such as Australia, is a stream that is usually smaller than a river. In the British Isles it is a small tidal inlet. Creek may also refer to: * Creek people, a former name of Muscogee, Native Americans * C ...
. Like H97-09, H97-12 contained only fragmentary remains of aquatic vertebrates like crocodiles and turtles.


Fossil content


Centrosaur remains

At the conclusion of their research program, Eberth, Brinkman and Barkas were unable to identify the bonebeds'
ceratopsian Ceratopsia or Ceratopia ( or ; Greek: "horned faces") is a group of herbivorous, beaked dinosaurs that thrived in what are now North America, Asia and Europe, during the Cretaceous Period, although ancestral forms lived earlier, in the Late Ju ...
remains to a rank more specific than the subfamily
Centrosaurinae Centrosaurinae (from the Greek, meaning "pointed lizards") is a subfamily of ceratopsid, a group of large quadrupedal ornithischian dinosaur. Centrosaurine fossil remains are known primarily from the northern region of Laramidia (modern day Alber ...
. Nevertheless, every single ceratopsian fossil that could be identified from the bonebeds had features closely resembling those of ''
Centrosaurus apertus ''Centrosaurus'' ( ; ) is a genus of centrosaurine ceratopsian dinosaur from Campanian age of Late Cretaceous Canada. Their remains have been found in the Dinosaur Park Formation, dating from 76.5 to 75.5 million years ago. Discovery and nami ...
''. They consequently felt confident that the bonebed was mostly composed of that species. The researchers found that the larger bones in each bonebeds tended to lie at the base of the stratum with fragments of bone becoming smaller and less concentrated at higher positions in the mudstone bed. Most of the bones were angled parallel to the plane of the bed. The researchers only found associated or articulated fossils at two of Hilda's bone beds; H97-03 had a partial ''Centrosaurus'' skull and H97-19 had a partial ceratopsian tail. As such, they regarded such higher quality specimens as very rare. Eberth, Brinkman, and Barkas tried to estimate the number of bones in the mega-bonebed in order to infer the number of animals that died together during the formation of the deposit. However, the complexity of a bonebed's geologic and taphonomic history can only allow for rough estimates. H97-04 represented the densest part of the Hilda mega-bonebed and formed the "core" of its fossil deposits. Nevertheless, the amount and quality of preserved bone was highly variable within this bed. The centrosaur fossils of H97-04 were most densely concentrated in its middle 50 m, with the 50 m on each side of this central region of the bonebed being much sparser. The researchers took the average bone density of two excavations within H97-04, 1 individual per 3 square meters, and projected it over the 2,000 square meters of the H97-04 bonebed. They estimated that this core area preserved the remains of 667 centrosaurs. In H97-02 the researchers found that at least 6 individuals were discovered in a 20 square meter area, but suspected that this relatively high density was not uniform throughout the deposit. They concluded that the number of centrosaurs preserved at H97-02 was probably "in the low hundreds". The remaining 15,600 square meters of the Hilda mega-bonebed contained only about 10% of the fossil density observed in the "core" of H97-04. Assuming the periphery of H97-04 had this estimated average density, there would have been about 500-600 more centrosaurs overall. Thus, the total estimated number centrosaurs preserved in the Hilda area ranged from several hundred to about 1,500 individuals. However, the presence of centrosaur bonebeds on both sides of the South Saskatchewan River suggests that the river eroded away many fossil deposits that had originally been preserved there. Therefore the original size of the centrosaur herd was probably even larger than the estimate based on still-accessible fossils would suggest and may have included up to several thousand dinosaurs.


Other fossils

The mudstone hosting the Hilda mega-bonebed preserves large quantities of plant fossils throughout the bed as well as
coal Coal is a combustible black or brownish-black sedimentary rock, formed as rock strata called coal seams. Coal is mostly carbon with variable amounts of other Chemical element, elements, chiefly hydrogen, sulfur, oxygen, and nitrogen. Coal i ...
, wood debris, and
root In vascular plants, the roots are the plant organ, organs of a plant that are modified to provide anchorage for the plant and take in water and nutrients into the plant body, which allows plants to grow taller and faster. They are most often bel ...
traces. The root traces come at a variety of orientations ranging from horizontal to vertical. Some of these being the roots' original life position. The researchers concluded that the abundance of preserved plant material probably reflects the great abundance of local plant life during the Cretaceous. H97-04's excavation site Excavation A preserved shed teeth from
theropods Theropoda (; from ancient Greek , (''therion'') "wild beast"; , (''pous, podos'') "foot"">wiktionary:ποδός"> (''pous, podos'') "foot" is one of the three major groups (clades) of dinosaurs, alongside Ornithischia and Sauropodom ...
of differing size, champsosaur vertebrae, a
fish scale A fish scale is a small rigid plate that grows out of the skin of a fish. The skin of most jawed fishes is covered with these protective scales, which can also provide effective camouflage through the use of reflection and colouration, as w ...
, a
pisidiid ''Pisidium'' is a genera, genus of very small or minute freshwater clams known as pill clams or pea clams, Aquatic animal, aquatic bivalve molluscs in the family (biology), family Sphaeriidae, the pea clams and fingernail clams. In some bivalve ...
clam, and two unidentifiable
coprolites A coprolite (also known as a coprolith) is fossilized feces. Coprolites are classified as trace fossils as opposed to body fossils, as they give evidence for the animal's behaviour (in this case, diet) rather than morphology. The name i ...
in addition to its centrosaur fossils. The Excavation B site at H97-04 preserved a fish scale and two theropod teeth.


Formation

Previous research on Albertan centrosaur bonebeds interpreted their formation in terms of a herd of dinosaurs drowning while trying to cross a swollen river. Eberth, Brinkman, and Barkas proposed a different explanation for the Hilda mega-bonebed, hypothesizing that a herd of ''Centrosaurus apertus'', as well as other local wildlife, were killed by a
flood A flood is an overflow of water (list of non-water floods, or rarely other fluids) that submerges land that is usually dry. In the sense of "flowing water", the word may also be applied to the inflow of the tide. Floods are of significant con ...
. The researchers concluded that all of the component bonebeds of the Hilda complex formed during the same individual flood. The region around the Western Interior Seaway was prone to tropical storm activity, many of which could become full-scale
hurricanes A tropical cyclone is a rapidly rotating storm system with a low-pressure area, a closed low-level atmospheric circulation, strong winds, and a spiral arrangement of thunderstorms that produce heavy rain and squalls. Depending on its locat ...
. Similar weather events occur today in the
Gulf of Mexico The Gulf of Mexico () is an oceanic basin and a marginal sea of the Atlantic Ocean, mostly surrounded by the North American continent. It is bounded on the northeast, north, and northwest by the Gulf Coast of the United States; on the southw ...
and
Bangladesh Bangladesh, officially the People's Republic of Bangladesh, is a country in South Asia. It is the List of countries and dependencies by population, eighth-most populous country in the world and among the List of countries and dependencies by ...
. These floods would have been large enough to entirely submerge the coastal lowland plains that the dinosaurs were living on, leaving nowhere to hide or escape to. Because ''Centrosaurus'' likely had poor swimming abilities most of the herd would have drowned during sufficiently severe flooding events. Centrosaurs not killed by the flooding would have been vulnerable to "flood-related disease" outbreaks in its aftermath. Tropical storm-induced floods were probably common sources of mass mortality for ''Centrosaurus apertus''. According to David Eberth, smaller local wildlife were better equipped to escape the floodwaters than centrosaurs, noting that
birds Birds are a group of warm-blooded vertebrates constituting the class (biology), class Aves (), characterised by feathers, toothless beaked jaws, the Oviparity, laying of Eggshell, hard-shelled eggs, a high Metabolism, metabolic rate, a fou ...
could escape by flight, while
mammals A mammal () is a vertebrate animal of the class Mammalia (). Mammals are characterised by the presence of milk-producing mammary glands for feeding their young, a broad neocortex region of the brain, fur or hair, and three middle e ...
and
reptiles Reptiles, as commonly defined, are a group of tetrapods with an ectothermic metabolism and Amniotic egg, amniotic development. Living traditional reptiles comprise four Order (biology), orders: Testudines, Crocodilia, Squamata, and Rhynchocepha ...
could have taken shelter in trees or burrows. After they died the dinosaurs's carcasses were deposited in clumps spread over kilometers. Variation in the location and concentration of centrosaur bones was caused by factors like force and dimensions of the flood, smoothness or roughness of local terrain, and the centrosaurs' distribution in life. These variations likely coincided with the presence of small "sub-environments" commonly found between rivers like splays, ponds or creeks. After being deposited in their final resting places the carcasses were torn apart, had their bones trampled and chewed by
scavengers Scavengers are animals that consume dead organisms that have died from causes other than predation or have been killed by other predators. While scavenging generally refers to carnivores feeding on carrion, it is also a herbivorous feeding ...
. These processes left the abrasion and toothmarks seen on the bones preserved at H97-02. Chemical reactions between the decaying dinosaur flesh and floodwaters caused iron to precipitate out of the water and formed the ironstone concretions commonly found in the mudrock hosting the mega-bonebed. Their eventful taphonomies suggests that the centrosaur carcasses were permanently buried by a later flood rather than the one that drowned them. These floods may actually have been common enough to be the primary means by which sediment was deposited in the Hilda area during the Cretaceous. Eberth Brinkman and Barkas observed evidence that the sediment was deformed and contorted near the top and bottom before it hardened into the mudstone it is today.


Comparison with other bonebeds

The Hilda Mega-bonebed is about 76 million years old, the same age as the lower Dinosaur Park Formation outcrops of the Dinosaur Provincial Park strata. Monodominant bonebeds of horned dinosaurs like ''
Styracosaurus ''Styracosaurus'' ( ; meaning "spiked lizard" from the Ancient Greek / "spike at the butt-end of a spear-shaft" and / "lizard") is an extinct genus of herbivorous ceratopsian dinosaur from the Late Cretaceous (Campanian stage) of North America. ...
'', ''
Pachyrhinosaurus ''Pachyrhinosaurus'' (from Ancient Greek ' (), thick; ' (), nose; and (), lizard) is a genus of centrosaurine ceratopsid dinosaur from the Late Cretaceous period of North America. The first examples were discovered by Charles M. Sternberg in ...
'' and ''Centrosaurus'' are common in late Cretaceous strata of central and southern Alberta. The close proximity of such a large number of bonebeds has fueled suspicions in some experts that some of the different bonebeds may have actually formed simultaneously in the same events. According to Eberth, Brinkman, and Barkas, the idea that several of these bonebeds could have formed together is "difficult to test", however. This difficulty emerges from the complicated nature of local stratigraphy as individual bonebeds are difficult to track for more than a few hundred meters because they are divided by ancient channel deposits. The only certainty regarding the number of events involved in the formation of the bone beds is that more than one occurred since at least one bonebed is known to be preserved in a rock stratum directly over another bonebed. The Hilda bonebeds distinguish themselves by being preserved in a single easily traceable stratum. In two 2005 scientific papers, Eberth, Getty, and Currie formulated a hypothesis for the formation of the centrosaur bonebeds of Dinosaur Provincial Park. They envisioned common flooding events drowning large numbers of local wildlife, including herds of ''Centrosaurus'' and ''
Styracosaurus ''Styracosaurus'' ( ; meaning "spiked lizard" from the Ancient Greek / "spike at the butt-end of a spear-shaft" and / "lizard") is an extinct genus of herbivorous ceratopsian dinosaur from the Late Cretaceous (Campanian stage) of North America. ...
''. Flowing water would distribute these remains across the local floodplain, where they would be buried by later floods. Burial was not always permanent as some remains seem to have been uncovered again by later flood activity only to be buried again by yet more later floods. The process of reworking and reburial might have occurred over decades or millennia before the remains were buried for good in their final resting place, which was often in deposits left by channels of flowing water. Eberth, Brinkman, and Barkas thought that the above scenario "appl edparticularly well" so the Hilda bonebeds formed as a result of similar processes to those of Dinosaur Provincial Park. The bonebeds at Hilda and in Dinosaur Provincial Park also preserve similar quantities and types of plant fossils. The two areas differed, however, in that all of the component bonebeds of the Hilda mega-bonebed, apart from H97-04, were smaller and preserved lower numbers of dinosaurs than those of the park. The centrosaur bonebeds of Dinosaur Provincial Park were often more than 10,000 square meters in area. These bonebeds tended to preserve centrosaurs in the "hundreds to low thousands" apiece.


Implications

Although not the first ''Centrosaurus'' bonebed, the study of the fossils preserved in the Hilda mega-bonebed provides additional data that will help scientists estimate the size of ceratopsid herds and therefore better understand ceratopsid social behavior. Hilda increases the evidence for herding in ''Centrosaurus'' and that centrosaur herds were sometimes significantly larger than previously thought, possibly containing numbers in the high hundreds to low thousands. The abundant mudstone beds in the Hilda area may imply that floods like the one drowned the centrosaurs at Hilda were common. The researchers contended that the existence of a single mega-bonebed with 14 individual components at Hilda may imply that some of the bonebeds of Dinosaur Provincial Park may themselves be components of larger mega-bonebeds. The Hilda mega-bonebed may also support the previously suggested notion that some kinds of
centrosaurines Centrosaurinae (from the Greek language, Greek, meaning "pointed lizards") is a subfamily of ceratopsid, a group of large quadrupedal ornithischian dinosaur. Centrosaurine fossil remains are known primarily from the northern region of Laramidia ( ...
participated in seasonal migrations, travelling from east to west. Brinkman and others proposed this hypothesis in
1998 1998 was designated as the ''International Year of the Ocean''. Events January * January 6 – The ''Lunar Prospector'' spacecraft is launched into orbit around the Moon, and later finds evidence for Lunar water, frozen water, in soil i ...
to explain why ceratopsians represented a greater portion of
ornithischian Ornithischia () is an extinct clade of mainly herbivorous dinosaurs characterized by a pelvic structure superficially similar to that of birds. The name ''Ornithischia'', or "bird-hipped", reflects this similarity and is derived from the Greek st ...
biodiversity at sites like
Unity, Saskatchewan Unity is a town in the western part of the Canadian province of Saskatchewan with a population of 2519. Unity is located at the intersection of Highway 14 and Highway 21, and the intersection of the CNR and CPR main rail lines. Unity is loca ...
or
Onefour, Alberta Onefour was a research substation of Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada that focused on forage and cattle data. This locality is located in the extreme Southeast of southern Alberta within Cypress County, located west of Highway 41, southeast o ...
near the ancient coast, while the famous centrosaur bonebeds of Dinosaur Provincial Park were all preserved in more inland habitats. The migration hypothesis proposed by Brinkman and the others was that centrosaurs bred near the coast and reared their young in small family groups. These groups would then migrate toward the west in order to avoid seasonal hazards like storms or to exploit seasonally available resources in that direction. As the migration progressed the family groups would gradually merge, becoming large herds, which may have protected them from predators on the journey. Eberth, Brinkman, and Barkas noted that Hilda is located roughly halfway between the ancient coast and the Dinosaur Provincial Park bonebeds.


See also

*
Centrosaurinae Centrosaurinae (from the Greek, meaning "pointed lizards") is a subfamily of ceratopsid, a group of large quadrupedal ornithischian dinosaur. Centrosaurine fossil remains are known primarily from the northern region of Laramidia (modern day Alber ...
*
Taphonomy Taphonomy is the study of how organisms decay and become fossilized or preserved in the paleontological record. The term ''taphonomy'' (from Greek language, Greek , 'burial' and , 'law') was introduced to paleontology in 1940 by Soviet scientis ...


Footnotes


References


"Alberta Dinosaur Bonebed is Largest Ever Found"
Royal Tyrell Museum. June 17, 2010. * Eberth, David A
Hilda Dinosaur Mega-Bonebed, Alberta
The Canadian Encyclopedia. * D.A. Eberth, D.B. Brinkman, V. Barkas, "A centrosaurine mega-bonebed from the Upper Cretaceous of southern Alberta: Implications for behaviour and death events" in New Perspectives on Horned Dinosaurs: The Ceratopsian Symposium at the Royal Tyrrell Museum, September 2007 (2010). {{Portal bar, Dinosaurs, Paleontology, Canada Geography of Alberta Cretaceous paleontological sites of North America 1959 in paleontology