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‘Once in a lifetime’ fossil reveals a dinosaur and mammal locked in mortal combat

It’s a dramatic snapshot in time showing a badger-like mammal sinking its teeth into the ribs of a dinosaur three times its size when they were buried in volcanic ash 125 million years ago, scientists said.

By Katie Hunt, CNN

Published Jul 18, 2023 1:10 PM EDT | Updated Jul 20, 2023 9:43 AM EDT

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An artist's impression of the moment Repenomamus robustus attacked the Psittacosaurus 125 million years ago. (Michael W. Skrepnick)

(CNN) — Sometime during the Cretaceous Period, 125 million years ago, a feisty mammal the size of a domestic cat encountered a dinosaur three times its size and thought it looked like a tasty meal.

A fossil unearthed in northeastern China captures the two creatures — a badgerlike animal called Repenomamus robustus and a species of plant-eating dinosaur known as Psittacosaurus — forever locked in mortal combat.

It’s a dramatic instant in time that challenges the idea that the earliest mammals lived in the shadows of dinosaurs, said paleobiologist Jordan Mallon, a research scientist at the Canadian Museum of Nature.

The 125 million-year-old fossil, found in China’s Liaoning province, shows the skeletons of a prehistoric badgerlike mammal attacking a larger dinosaur called Psittacosaurus. Scale bar equals 10 centimeters. (Gang Han)

A close-up of the fossil shows the smaller Repenomamus robustus biting the ribs of the Psittacosaurus. (Gang Han)

“The mammal preserved here is among the biggest mammals of the time, and you’re talking about an animal the size of a house cat. They didn’t get any bigger than that. And there was very little overlap in size between mammals, which were, you know, orders of magnitude smaller, and dinosaurs, which were an order of magnitude bigger,” said Mallon, who is coauthor of a new study that published Tuesday in the journal Scientific Reports about the striking fossil.

“The inherited wisdom has been that the ecological interactions were unilateral: The bigger dinosaurs ate the smaller mammals. And, and this upends that, it seems like these mammals could take down a bigger dinosaur if it was hungry enough or desperate enough.”

Volcanic events can yield fossil riches

The discovery is not the first evidence that early mammals preyed on dinosaurs — the remains of a Psittacosaurus were found in the stomach of R. robustus in a discovery documented in January 2005.

What makes this fossil exceptional is that the mammal is caught in the moment of attacking the almost fully grown dinosaur.

It’s extremely rare to find fossils that preserve an animal interacting with another and shed light on the predatory behavior of extinct creatures, according to Mallon.

A detail of the fossil shows the left forepaw of Repenomamus robustus wrapped around the lower jaw of the dinosaur. (Gang Han)

Those examples are among the world’s most famous specimens, such as the iconic dueling dinosaurs — a fossil that shows a Triceratops horridus and a Tyrannosaurus rex in a battle for the ages.

A Psittacosaurus was a small beaked dinosaur that would have been common in the region at the time — a bit like sheep today, Mallon said. The predator and prey were almost fully grown when the attack took place.

Mallon said he “was salivating” when he got the chance to study the fossil, which was found in 2012 in China’s Liaoning province at the Lujiatun fossil beds. The site is regarded by paleontologists as a dinosaur equivalent of Pompeii. Both skeletons are nearly complete.

“This is (a) … once in a lifetime type of fossil. They just don’t come like this very often,” he explained.

Mallon said the two creatures would have died while fighting — buried together suddenly by a mudslide in the aftermath of a volcanic eruption.

When dinosaurs walked the Earth our planet was a much different and no doubt scarier place. While one might imagine a giant t-rex stomping around and eating everything in sight, experts now say that this fossil had shed some light on one of the cretaceous periods’ fiercest predators.

Predator vs. scavenger

The fossil shows R. robustus gripping onto the lower jaw of Psittacosaurus with its left forepaw. The mammal’s left hind paw is gripping the dinosaur’s hind limb and its teeth were sunk into its prey’s ribs.

Mallon said he and his colleagues determined that the mammal was an aggressor rather than a scavenger for several reasons: There are no bite marks on the skeletons that would typically indicate scavenging, and it’s unlikely that the two animals would have been so intertwined if the mammal had happened upon a dead dinosaur.

An artist's reconstruction depicts the showdown. (Michael W. Skrepnick)

“All these various lines of evidence pull together to suggest that this was an act of predation that was sort of snuffed out and preserved in the moment,” Mallon said.

It was impossible to know if the mammal would have emerged victorious in the encounter, according to Mallon. However, he said it was definitely “possible,” adding that in the natural world today small carnivores will successfully attack much bigger animals.

“A weasel will take down a hare that is five times its body weight, or a wolverine will take down a caribou or even a moose,” he said.

Either way, however, the two prehistoric creatures were ultimately doomed.

Editor’s note: Sign up for CNN’s Wonder Theory science newsletter. Explore the universe with news on fascinating discoveries, scientific advancements and more.

The-CNN-Wire™ & © 2023 Cable News Network, Inc., a Warner Bros. Discovery Company. All rights reserved.

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