A fossil of a 125-million-year old dinosaur showed proof of belly buttons in at least some dinosaurs, making it the first time one has been spotted in a non-avian dinosaur.

 A handout illustration shows a sauropod dinosaur that lived in what is now Montana 150 million years ago during the Jurassic Period. (photo credit: Courtesy of Woodruff et al. (2022) and Corbin Rainbolt/Handout via REUTERS)
A handout illustration shows a sauropod dinosaur that lived in what is now Montana 150 million years ago during the Jurassic Period. (photo credit: Courtesy of Woodruff et al. (2022) and Corbin Rainbolt/Handout via REUTERS)

 

The oldest belly button ever found in reptiles and mammals was revealed last week in a 125-million-year-old dinosaur fossil found in China 20 years ago.

The discovery of a long umbilical scar on the Psittacosauraus specimen was made by paleontologists at The Chinese University of Hong Kong (CUHK) by applying the Laser-Stimulated Fluorescence (LSF) technique to a fossilized skin specimen of Psittacosaurus. The findings were published the international journal of biology BMC Biology.

An Egyptian spiny-tailed lizard in the South. (credit: ARIK WEINSTEIN/THE MIDDLE ARAVA)
An Egyptian spiny-tailed lizard in the South. (credit: ARIK WEINSTEIN/THE MIDDLE ARAVA)

 

Researchers said the size, smoothness and location of the umbilical scar rule out trauma or infection as the cause, adding that it is a similar scar to those found in living lizards and crocodiles. In contrast with mammals, this reptilian form of belly button is a slit-like opening connecting the embryo to the egg’s yolk sac and other membranes. The yolk sac is absorbed by the dinosaur either right before or immediately after hatching, leaving behind an opening in the abdominal wall that seals up and appears as a long scar.

While scientists have hypothesized that egg-laying dinosaurs would sport such scars, this is the first time it has been spotted in a non-avian dinosaur.

Psittacosaurus (a name that means ‘parrot lizard’) was a two-meter long beaked plant-eater that lived in the early Cretaceous period. The fossil used in this study was made public in 2002 and has led to big discoveries because of its exceptionally preserved state.

“Whilst this beautiful specimen has been a sensation since it was described in 2002, we have been able to study it in a whole new light using novel laser fluorescence imaging, which reveals the scales in incredible detail,” said Dr. Michael Pittman, Assistant Professor of CUHK’s School of Life Sciences and joint-corresponding author of the study.

As reported by The Jerusalem Post