Overview
- The study documents wedge-shaped hooves on the hind toes, marking the earliest hooves in a land vertebrate and the first confirmed hooved reptile.
- Two Edmontosaurus annectens from eastern Wyoming—a two-year-old juvenile and a young adult—preserve a fleshy midline crest and a full row of tail spikes.
- Imaging and microanalyses show the apparent skin is a sub-millimeter clay layer formed on microbial biofilms, with no detectable original organic tissue.
- The authors propose a drought-to-flash-flood sequence that desiccated carcasses, then rapidly buried them as clay accreted to the biofilm to mold external details.
- All known specimens cluster within a roughly 10-kilometer “mummy zone” in the Lance Formation, providing a framework and toolkit to target further finds.