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RE: Hell Creek Eggshell
Carpenter, K., Hirsch, K. F. & Horner, J. R., 1994: Dinosaur eggs
and babies.
?Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, New York, NY, USA, 1994, xii, 372
Partly outdated, especially in Orodromeus/Troodont -chapter.
--Mikko Haaramo
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Mikko K. Haaramo, M.Sc.
Paleontologist & IT-Manager
Department of Geology
P.O.Box 64 (Gustaf Hällströminkatu 2)
FIN-00014 University of Helsinki
email: mailto:mikko.haaramo@helsinki.fi
www: Mikko's Phylogeny Archive [http://www.fmnh.helsinki.fi/users/haaramo/]
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> -----Original Message-----
> From: owner-dinosaur@usc.edu [mailto:owner-dinosaur@usc.edu]
> On Behalf Of Phil Bigelow
> Sent: 18. huhtikuuta 2006 22:32
> To: dinosaur@usc.edu
> Subject: Re: Hell Creek Eggshell
>
> Not a lot of info out there. I too would like to know of any
> recent work on H.C. eggs.
>
> In lieu of that, get the book _Dinosaur Eggs and Babies_ (I
> think that's the title), edited by Ken Carpenter (and some
> other guy that I have forgotten, sorry. It may have been Hirsch.).
>
> Oh....and check out http://www.scn.org/~bh162/eggshells.html
> , although it won't help you much.
>
> <pb>
> --
> "We recognize, however dimly, that greater efficiency, ease,
> and security may come at a substantial price in freedom, that
> law and order can be a doublethink version of oppression,
> that individual liberties surrendered, for whatever good
> reason, are freedoms lost." - Walter Cronkite, preface to the
> 1984 edition of George Orwell's _1984_.
>
>
> On Tue, 18 Apr 2006 22:13:33 -0400 Lee Garrison
> <rgarrisonjr@hotmail.com>
> writes:
> > Hello Listmembers,
> >
> > Does anyone know of any ongoing/current studies of eggshell
> > (dinosaurian or
> > otherwise) in the Hell Creek Formation? I can't seem to find much
> > literature. If anyone has a reference or pdf that might shed some
> > light on this, I'm all ears. If anyone has a pdf of
> >
> > Hirsch, K. F. & Quinn, B. 1990. Eggs and eggshell
> fragments from the
> > Upper Cretaceous Two Medicine Formation of Montana. Journal of
> > Vertebrate
> >
> > Paleontology 10: 491-511.
> >
> > I'd love to read it. BTW, what ever happened to the "Orodromeus"
> > eggs from
> > the Two Medicine? Were all or just some of them reassigned
> to Troodon
> > (Prismatoolithus)? Have definitive Hypsilophodont eggs
> been found in
> > North America (or anywhere else)?
> >
> > Thanks very much!
> >
> > Lee
> >
> >
> >
> >
>
>
>
>
>