‘Baby dragon:’ Research into giant dino eggs took decades to hatch
EDMONTON — Research into the largest dinosaur eggs ever discovered took decades to hatch.
A farmer in China unearthed the eggs, roughly half a metre long, some 30 years ago. A scientific paper on the fortuitous find was published Tuesday in the open-access journal Nature Communications.
University of Alberta paleontologist Philip Currie has been studying the eggs since 1993. In 2015, Currie, accompanied by the farmer who first collected them, returned to the discovery site in north-central China’s Henan province.
“It was the most astounding thing. The whole area had been ripped up by enormous equipment terracing the mountainsides to plant walnut trees,” Currie recalled in a news release.


