Author/Authors :
Grigorescu, Dan A Institute for Advanced Studies in Levant Culture and Civilization - Bucharest - 2A Mareșal Constantin Prezan Blvd., Romania
Abstract :
In 1898, when the first dinosaur eggs were discovered in Hațeg Country (which in
2005 became part of the UNESCO Global Geopark Network), not one dinosaur egg
had ever been unearthed either in the vicinity or anywhere in Romania. Twenty
years later, tens of sites bearing remnants of dinosaur eggs – of which at least eight
are dinosaur incubation sites – had been mapped in Hațeg Country and across
Southern Transylvania as a whole. The most famous is the site at Tuștea, situated
in the north-western part of the Hațeg Basin, especially well known because of the
so-called “Tuștea Puzzle” whereby spherical megaloolithid eggs, almost universally
seen as those of titanosaurid sauropods, are associated with hadrosaurid neonates.
Tuștea is the only site in Europe to feature the remains of dinosaur neonates alongside
eggs and eggshells from the Upper Cretaceous. Research here and in other
areas of the Hațeg Basin highlighted the climates and sedimentology of the areas
where the eggs were laid roughly 68–70 million years ago, and revealed aspects of
nest building and the behavior of dinosaur neonates after hatching. The site’s scientific
importance is strengthened by the great diversity of vertebrate fossil discoveries:
frogs, lizards, snakes, saurischian and ornithischian dinosaurs, pterosaurs and
mammals – 21 taxa in total, ranking Tuștea among the richest paleontological sites
in Europe. After 24 years of continuous research primarily by professors and students
from the University of Bucharest, the current owner of the land, making use
of legislative inconsistencies governing the right to land ownership, forbade further
investigation. During this time, the research site has degraded substantially and
today requires urgent restorative and conservation measures lest it be lost forev
Keywords :
Dinosaur eggs , Megaloolithidae , Hatchlings , Telmatosaurus , Late Cretaceous , Tuştea puzzle , Deadlocked research