Project Exploration Chinese American Dinosaur Exhibit 2001

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Survivor Reptiles in
a Dinosaurian World
...continued

Fabrice looked down on a turtle that Mike had found. Or was it more than one? Hard to tell. Their were perhaps a hundred pieces. After some 15 minutes, Mike had gathered them all into a collection bag bound for the camp library.

"Hey Paul, is this a fit? queried Mike, who was bent over his pile of turtle bone on the library's main working surface-a ping-pong table. "Yeah, that's the edge,the carapace, which is the upper half of the shell. You can see the end of the rib here, fused onto one of the plate of the shell," replied Paul. Other team members had their faces glued to papers and books in the libraries collection describing these long-lived reptiles.

Mike was hooked. He couldn't tear himself away when the dinner whistle blew. After dinner, he was at it again. Then Fabrice took the night shift, working by solar lantern. Such bone puzzles, indeed, are addictive. Slowly but surely, you create something amazing out of pieces that initially have little meaning. The turtle was coming together before our eyes.

Fabrice, unable to pull himself away from an ancient puzzle, is putting the last pieces in place by lamp light.
Fabrice, unable to pull himself away from an ancient puzzle, is putting the last pieces in place by lamp light.

Turtles are anatomical wonders, having achieved in the evolution of their skeletons something no other reptiles have ever managed-their shoulder, hips and limbs are inside their ribcage! All other backboned animals, including humans, have it the other way around-the shoulders, hips and limbs are outside the ribcage, which houses only our soft organs.

Turtles have expanded the ribcage so even the tail and head can fit inside. Each arched dorsal plate forms the upper side of the shell, called the carapace, has a rib fused to its underside.Mike, Fabrice and David were using such details to sort out the different shell parts. Midline plates have a vertebra fused to their underside. The turtle puzzlers eventually pieced together the flat bottom armor, called the plastron, which took the form of two X's. The legs extend out of the shell through embayments in the plastron.

The 100-piece puzzle now solved, we marveled at this noble fossil reptile, realizing that a new species was at hand. Prospecting the following day resulted in the discovery of its flattened, triangular skull with toothless jaws. Turtles may appear slow and not too intelligent. Yet, they live in almost every environment today, from the frozen plains of Canada to the rainforests of the Amazon, while their cousins the dinosaurs have long ago gone extinct.

Small Crocs
Another armored reptile and survivor of the dinosaur era surfaced among the pieces we picked up that day. "Crocodile" shouted David, holding a keeled, pock-marked armor plate in his hand. Unlike turtles, crocodilians do not fuse their armor plates (called scutes) to their skeletons but leave them embedded in the skin. "I think I found a croc skeleton over there," Andy sputtered with excitement. "It's a small guy."

Long summer days means extra time to excavate an interesting crocodile skeleton.
Long summer days means extra time to excavate
an interesting crocodile skeleton.

We brushed and blew back the powdery sediment, revealing the bones of a small crocodile with a total length no more than 3 feet. We had been trailing this croc for days, having found isolated scutes and sculpted jaw bones. Unlike living crocodiles that average between 8-15 feet in length, there are fossil crocodiles from the dinosaur era that are smaller and larger.

Camp II - Mazongshan
Mazongshan means "horse mane mountain," the namesake for the jagged ridge behind Camp II. We set up our tents on a basketball court located on the grounds of the local police station. Although officially a police station, it doubles as a hospital, community center, general waystation-and now as our Camp II!

We set up our library in their rec room. The courtyard has a well that taps the cold water beneath the dry desert floor. Water pumped from this well keeps a greenhouse humid, where vegetables are grown for the dozen or so personnel living at the station. Like many homes on the vast grasslands and deserts of Inner Mongoilia, solar panels and a wind driven propeller provide the main source of electrical power.

The ger, a lightweight felt-covered structure, is the traditional Mongolian home.
The ger, a lightweight felt-covered structure,
is the traditional Mongolian home.

By day, we reach our prospecting sites using the many tracks etched into the desert that link individual Mongolian families. A typical family lives in a ger (or yurt), a round felt-lined struture with one front door. Behind the ger is a round pen constructed of wood and used for herding goats and camels. Traditionally, Mongolians are nomads that periodically move their gers, camels and other domesticated animals. Although many Mongolian families are now more stationary, most still prefer to live in gers in the region of Mazongshan. Mongolian language and customs are in danger of being lost.Their population in Inner Mongolia, less than 15% of the total population of the Autonomous Region, their ceremonies, and their nomadic lifestyle are becoming more difficult to maintain.

The expedition team is extremely excited to be invited to attend--as the only foreign guests--a traditional Mongolian festival and celebration that will take place in the desert near Mazongshan. More on this shortly!


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Written by Gabrielle Lyon, Photos by Mike Hettwer unless otherwise noted.
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