- IGM 100 972
IGM 100/972 and IGM 100/974 are the fossilized skulls of two juvenile
troodontid dinosaur s.Mark Norell and colleagues described IGM 100/972 and IGM 100/974 in 1994. The two specimens were found in a nest ofoviraptorid eggs in theLate Cretaceous "Flaming Cliffs" of theDjadokhta Formation ofMongolia . The nest is quite certainly that of anoviraptorosaur , since an oviraptorid embryo is still preserved inside one of the eggs. The two partial troodontid skulls were first described by Norell "et al". (1994) as dromaeosaurids, but reassigned after further study.cite book |last=Mackovicky |first=Peter J. |coauthors=and Norell, Mark A. |editor=Weishampel, David B.; Dodson, Peter; and Osmólska, Halszka (eds.)|title=The Dinosauria |edition=2nd |year=2004 |publisher=University of California Press |location=Berkeley |isbn=0-520-24209-2 |pages=184-195 |chapter=Troodontidae] The troodontids were either hatchlings or embryos, and fragments of eggshell are adhered to them, although these seem to be oviraptorid eggshell. The presence of tiny troodontids in an oviraptorid nest is an enigma. Hypotheses explaining how they ended up in an oviraptorid nest include that they were the prey of the adult oviraptorid, that they were there to prey on oviraptorid hatchlings, or that some troodontids may have beennest parasite s.cite journal |last=Norell |first=Mark A. |coauthors=Clark, James M.; Dashzeveg, Demberelyin; Barsbold, Rhinchen; Chiappe, Luis M.; Davidson, Amy R.; McKenna, Malcolm C.; Perle, Altangerel; and Novacek, Michael J. |year=1994 |title=A theropod dinosaur embryo and the affinities of the Flaming Cliffs dinosaur eggs |journal=Science |volume=266 |issue=5186 |pages=779–782 |date=November 4 1994 |doi=10.1126/science.266.5186.779 ]References
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