231 Fossilised Dinosaur Eggs Seized In A China House. Ross Would’ve Been Delighted

Nearly 231 fossilised dinosaur eggs and a dinosaur skeleton were seized in China’s southern Guangdong Province, when a police raided a house last week on July 29.

The eggs which were seized by the cops, belong to the Cretaceous Period, which dates back to the time (about 65 million years ago) that marks the mass extinctions, when dinosaurs died out, except for the birds, according to a Xinhua report. The skeleton was later identified as belonging to a Psittacosaurus, the dinosaur lacking horns and having only the beginning of a frill.

@cmdhindle

Local residents plundered a construction site where a large number of dinosaur eggs were found in June, and again on July 28 when more eggs were found in the area, prompting police action the next day to retrieve the lost fossils. The laws of China have placed fossilised creatures under state ownership. It is forbidden to own such fossils unless it is a specialised institution.

The museum of Beijing city has entered the Guinness Book Of World Record for bearing a collection of 10,000 dinosaur eggs. Heyuan, which is situated which is situated near the Guangdong Province is popularly known as the hometown of the dinosaur in China, with many fossilised eggs discovered over the decades.

MailOnline

I am trying to imagine how Ross would have reacted.

It isn’t everyday that you hear about people with dinosaur bones in their house, do you now?

You might also like
Delhi Air Pollution: Stage IV Curbs to Now Apply at Stage III Under New GRAP Rejig — Full List of Restrictions
Seven Maoists Killed in Andhra Pradesh Encounter a Day After Madvi Hidma’s Elimination
Delhi Air Quality Deteriorates to ‘Severe’; Construction Halted, Schools Shift to Hybrid Mode up to Class 5
Dare. Drop. Win. The Creator Rebellion Rides With Pulsar Underground
Snabbit Bags $30Mn in Third Fundraise This Year, Clocks Over 3 Lakh Jobs in October
₹1.2 Crore Delhi Cloud Seeding Trial Fails to Produce Artificial Rain; AAP Takes ‘Lord Indra’ Dig