How Did Dinosaurs Do It?

T. rex in the wild.


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T. rex in the wild. Prehistoric accurate Horsetail carboniferous trees.

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Tiny Dinosaurs: Vegetarian, But Fierce: Photos

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-- This "punk-sized" dinosaur with porcupine-like bristles and stabbing self-sharpening fangs was recently identified. Remains of Pegomastax africanus, illustrated in this model, were chipped out of 200-million-year-old red rock from South Africa. READ ARTICLE: Fanged, Tiny 'Punk' Veggie Dinosaur Found

Tyler Keillor

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The 2-foot-long dino weighed less than a modern housecat in the flesh. But Paul Sereno, a paleontologist and professor at the University of Chicago, believes it was a plucky survivor. "I think the bristles would have made it look at least a little bigger than it was -- perhaps they could poke out more strongly when excited," he said.

Paul Sereno and Carol Abraczinskas

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Pegomastax had 1-inch-long jaws that supported a short, parrot-shaped beak up front, a pair of stabbing canine teeth, and tall teeth tucked behind. The teeth in the upper and lower jaws operated like self-sharpening scissors, with shearing wear facets that slid past one another when the jaw was closed. Sereno believes the less than 3-inch-long skull was probably adapted to plucking fruit, and not to ripping flesh out of animal prey. This is supported by the way the teeth met during a bite, their shape, and wear pattern.

Drawing by Todd Marshall

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With its bristles, Pegomastax looked something like a "nimble two-legged porcupine," according to Sereno. NEWS: Dwarf Dinosaurs Lived on 'Neverland'-Like Island

Paul Sereno and Carol Abraczinskas

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"These plant-eaters are among the very oldest we know from the bird-hipped side of the dinosaur tree," explained Sereno, who authored a study about the remains in the journal, ZooKeys. "They started out small, and some of them got a bit smaller to be among the smallest dinosaurs we know." PHOTOS: Dinosaur Feathers Found in Amber

Photo by Erin Fitzgerald, sculpting by Tyler

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Birds do it, bees do it -- but how did 3-ton dinosaurs with sharp, pointed spikes on their backs and tails get it on?

Very carefully, say some researchers, who believe mounting a female from behind would have proved deadly for the males of dinosaurs like Stegosaurus.

"The females could not raise their tails, because the bones at the top end were fused," Brian Switek, a dinosaur researcher and writer, told the Sunday Times. "Also, some species had lethal spikes on their backs, which would have been impossible to get past."

Apparently, Switek -- whose new book is "My Beloved Brontosaurus: On the Road with Old Bones, New Science, and Our Favorite Dinosaurs" (Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2013) -- isn't the only researcher pondering the ins and outs of dinosaur sex.

Heinrich Mallison, a scientist at the Museum of Natural History in Berlin, has developed computerized models showing the numerous positions available to lusty dinosaurs.

His software models proved that the male Kentrosaurus (a relative of Stegosaurus) had a major obstacle to overcome; namely, castration by the female's sharp-spined back.

"These prickly dinosaurs must have had sex another way," Mallison told the Times. "Perhaps the female lay down on her side and the male reared up to rest his torso over her. Other species would have used different positions, like backing up to each other."

Sadly, no sex tapes exist to shed light on the sex lives of dinosaurs, but fossil evidence has revealed a few facts about their procreative habits. Research has found, for example, that dinosaurs were sexually active before reaching full physical maturity, not unlike human teenagers.

And a recent study suggests that dinosaurs -- like their avian relatives -- had feathered tails that they used in courtship displays to attract a mate.

But nobody really knows just how endowed male dinosaurs were, which makes questions about their sexual habits mere guesswork. Some experts have speculated that a large penis may have made the missionary position unnecessary for dino-copulation.

"A 33-foot long ankylosaurus with spikes and armor would have a 6-foot penis to bridge the gap when he got close to a female," John Long, professor of paleontology at Flinders University in Australia, told the Times.

Alas, no such fossils exist: "Soft tissues are seldom preserved during fossilization," Long said, "so we have never found a fossilized phallus, but doing so would solve many mysteries."

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