Rebuilding the head of an armoured dinosaur

A University of Alberta-led research team has taken a rare look inside the skull of a dinosaur and come away with unprecedented details on the brain and nasal passages of the 72 million year old animal. 

Skeleton of E. tutus, Senckenberg Museum [Credit: Wikipedia]
Lead researcher Tetsuto Miyashita, a U of A master's student in paleontology, examined the armoured skull of a Euoplocephalus, a six-metre long plant eater. The skull, which had been sitting in the U of A's paleontology collection, was broken, allowing Miyashita and his colleagues a unique view of the interior nasal cavities and details of blood vessels. 

The researchers obtained CT scans from undamaged Euoplocephalus skulls to reconstruct the twisted, looping nasal passages and brain chamber. The team concluded Euoplocephalus had good senses of smell and hearing. 


Skull of the ankylosaurian dinosaur Euoplocephalus tutus (AMNH FR 5405), revealing the brain and nasal cavity (Olfactory region in red, airway in yellow). Rendered from CT scans using Amira and QuickTime by Ryan Ridgely, and labeled by Jason Bourke.