100-Million-Year-Old Dinosaur Eggs
Featured in Ripley's Believe It or Not!
While evidence of dinosaurs is considered a generally rare discovery, paleontologists are constantly finding new caches of bones and footprints to dig out of the Earth. Dinosaur eggs, however, are much rarer finds.
Like modern day reptiles and birds, most dinosaurs are known to have laid eggs. These eggs were typically laid in a nest by a female and closely guarded until her young dinosaurs hatched. If a predator managed to find a clutch unguarded, they were likely to smash them to pieces as the ravenously consumed the baby dinos. These are the two fates most common for a clutch of dinosaur eggs and why finding wholly intact eggs is exceedingly rare.