Dinosaur Tots Were Baby-Faced

The skull of a juvenile plant-eating dinosaur called Diplodocus, illustrates that some sauropod species went through drastic changes in skull shape during normal growth. Here an illustration shows a juvenile dinosaur (with a narrower snout) eating alongside an adult Diplodocus.
(Image credit: Mark A Klingler / Carnegie Museum of Natural History.)

Like most baby animals, some dinosaur tots had proportionally larger eyes and smaller faces than their parents. New research on the skull of a juvenile plant-eating dinosaur suggests it was baby-faced, too.

The skull, which belonged to a sauropod dinosaur called Diplodocus, was rediscovered in the collections of Pittsburgh's Carnegie Museum of Natural History. Unlike the dinosaur's elders, this one had a drastically different skull shape, the researchers found.

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