Close Menu
  • Home
  • United States
  • World
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Lifestyle
  • Entertainment
  • Health
  • Science
  • Tech
  • Sports
  • More
    • Web Stories
    • Editor’s Picks
    • Press Release

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest USA news and updates directly to your inbox.

What's On
Federal prosecutors turned away at Federal Reserve construction site in DC

Federal prosecutors turned away at Federal Reserve construction site in DC

April 15, 2026
Inside Celine Dion’s Preparations for Paris Comeback Concerts: ‘High Production and High Fashion’ (Exclusive)

Inside Celine Dion’s Preparations for Paris Comeback Concerts: ‘High Production and High Fashion’ (Exclusive)

April 15, 2026
The truth about Giants’ alleged Dexter Lawrence trade talks

The truth about Giants’ alleged Dexter Lawrence trade talks

April 15, 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Trending
  • Federal prosecutors turned away at Federal Reserve construction site in DC
  • Inside Celine Dion’s Preparations for Paris Comeback Concerts: ‘High Production and High Fashion’ (Exclusive)
  • The truth about Giants’ alleged Dexter Lawrence trade talks
  • ‘Human evolution didn’t slow down; we were just missing the signal’: Large DNA study reveals natural selection led to more redheads and less male-pattern baldness
  • Snap slashes 1K jobs in ‘AI efficiency’ bloodbath
  • Big advertisers agree to settle FTC probe of alleged boycott against X, others
  • Tom Steyer and Steve Hilton pull ahead in California governor race: poll
  • Israel says 60-second strike killed 250 Hezbollah operatives in Lebanon
  • Privacy
  • Terms
  • Advertise
  • Contact Us
Join Us
USA TimesUSA Times
Newsletter Login
  • Home
  • United States
  • World
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Lifestyle
  • Entertainment
  • Health
  • Science
  • Tech
  • Sports
  • More
    • Web Stories
    • Editor’s Picks
    • Press Release
USA TimesUSA Times
Home » Strange mammal ancestor laid huge, leathery eggs —‬ and it was key to surviving the world’s worst mass extinction
Strange mammal ancestor laid huge, leathery eggs —‬ and it was key to surviving the world’s worst mass extinction
Science

Strange mammal ancestor laid huge, leathery eggs —‬ and it was key to surviving the world’s worst mass extinction

News RoomBy News RoomApril 15, 20260 ViewsNo Comments

Scientists have cracked a major mystery about mammal evolution after discovering a 250 million-year-old fossilized egg from before the time of the dinosaurs. Researchers say the specimen, which holds a curled-up embryo of the plant-eating animal Lystrosaurus, is the first known egg ever found from a mammal ancestor, proving that mammals’ ancestors laid eggs.

The egg could help paleontologists better understand how these animals survived the Permian-Triassic extinction, also known as the Great Dying, which occurred around 252 million years ago. During this event, Earth faced brutal heat, drought, volcanic eruptions and ocean acidification, and 90% of Earth’s species died.

“It reveals how reproductive strategies can shape survival in extreme environments: by producing large, yolk-rich eggs and precocial young, Lystrosaurus was able to thrive in the harsh, unpredictable conditions following the end-Permian mass extinction,” Julien Benoit, a paleontologist and associate professor at the University of the Witwatersrand, South Africa’s Evolutionary Studies Institute, said in a statement.


You may like

The researchers revealed their findings April 9 in the journal PLOS One.

Which came first: the therapsid or the egg?

The fossilized egg was first found in 2008 during fieldwork near the Xhariep municipal district in South Africa. Although the specimen only had small flecks of bone near a nodule, it contained a nearly complete, tightly curled embryo. The researchers identified the animal as Lystrosaurus, an early ancestor of mammals belonging to a group known as therapsids. Therapsids were mammal-like reptiles that lived around 272 million to 250 million years ago that modern mammals descended from.

“The adult [Lystrosaurus] looked like a pig, with naked skin, a beak like a turtle, and two tusks sticking out and pointing down,” the researchers wrote for The Conversation.

Scientists have known about this mammal ancestor for years, but they weren’t sure whether the animal laid eggs.

Get the world’s most fascinating discoveries delivered straight to your inbox.

Initially, the researchers couldn’t determine if the embryo had already been born or was still inside an egg when it died, because the fossil lacked an outer shell and only the embryo was preserved.

An artist’s rendering of a Lystrosaurus embryo within its partially preserved shell. (Image credit: Sophie Vrard)

“I suspected even then that it had died within the egg, but at the time, we simply didn’t have the technology to confirm it,” Jennifer Botha, a professor at the University of the Witwatersrand’s Evolutionary Studies Institute in South Africa, said in a statement.

For the new study, the researchers used powerful CT scans at the European Synchrotron Radiation Facility in France to study the fossil without damaging it. The scans revealed tiny structures inside the fossil, including an unfused lower jaw, still in two halves. That meant the embryo was not developed enough to feed on its own ‪—‬ a sign that it hadn’t hatched yet. The researchers suspect the shell was leathery and dissolved.


What to read next

A 3D scan showing a colorful skeleton cramped within an ovular shape.

A 3D reconstruction of the skeleton created from X-ray scans. (Image credit: Professor Julien Benoit)

“For over 150 years of South African palaeontology, no fossil had ever been conclusively identified as a therapsid egg,” Botha said in the statement. “This is the first time we can say, with confidence, that mammal ancestors like Lystrosaurus laid eggs, making it a true milestone in the field.”

Putting all the eggs into one surviving basket

The researchers found that Lystrosaurus laid unusually large eggs for its body size. In living animals, large eggs carry more yolk, which can fuel more complete development before they hatch. That finding points to Lystrosaurus having young that were relatively mature and mobile soon after birth, the researchers suggested. This would have made these animals more capable of feeding themselves and avoiding danger, thus helping them survive the Great Dying, the researchers said.

The larger size of the eggs and their leathery texture helped these animals survive in other ways too, the researchers suggested.

“The larger the egg, the smaller its surface area (comparatively speaking), so Lystrosaurus eggs would lose less water through their leathery shell than those of other species of that time,” the researchers wrote in The Conversation. “Given the dry environment during and in the immediate aftermath of the extinction, this was a significant advantage, especially since hard-shelled eggs would not evolve for another 50 million years, at least.”

While many lineages vanished in the Permian-Triassic extinction event, Lystrosaurus not only survived but became one of the dominant land animals afterward.

“Growing up fast, reproducing young and proliferating were the secrets of Lystrosaurus survival,” the researchers added in The Conversation article.

The findings could help scientists understand more about how animals can survive changing climates.

“In a modern context, this work is highly impactful because it offers a deep-time perspective on resilience and adaptability in the face of rapid climate change and ecological crisis,” Benoit said in the statement. “Understanding how past organisms survived global upheaval helps scientists better predict how species today might respond to ongoing environmental stress, making this discovery not just a breakthrough in palaeontology, but also highly relevant to current biodiversity and climate challenges.”

Share. Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Telegram WhatsApp Email

Keep Reading

‘Human evolution didn’t slow down; we were just missing the signal’: Large DNA study reveals natural selection led to more redheads and less male-pattern baldness

‘Human evolution didn’t slow down; we were just missing the signal’: Large DNA study reveals natural selection led to more redheads and less male-pattern baldness

‘Something’s missing’: Most thorough-ever study of the cosmos proves we still can’t explain how the universe is expanding

‘Something’s missing’: Most thorough-ever study of the cosmos proves we still can’t explain how the universe is expanding

Artemis II quiz: Is your knowledge of NASA’s historic moon mission out of this world?

Artemis II quiz: Is your knowledge of NASA’s historic moon mission out of this world?

73 moon landings? NASA’s ‘Moon Base User’s Guide’ reveals the agency’s ‘most ambitious space project’ will be fraught with challenges

73 moon landings? NASA’s ‘Moon Base User’s Guide’ reveals the agency’s ‘most ambitious space project’ will be fraught with challenges

Diagnostic dilemma: A woman heard voices telling her she had a brain tumor ‪—‬ and scans confirmed she did

Diagnostic dilemma: A woman heard voices telling her she had a brain tumor ‪—‬ and scans confirmed she did

Triassic croc relative from Ghost Ranch, New Mexico finally identified after nearly 80 years in museum basement

Triassic croc relative from Ghost Ranch, New Mexico finally identified after nearly 80 years in museum basement

There were ‘audible screams of delight:’ Why Artemis II sightings of meteor flashes on the moon have scientists giddy

There were ‘audible screams of delight:’ Why Artemis II sightings of meteor flashes on the moon have scientists giddy

Physicists just witnessed pinpricks of darkness moving faster than the speed of light ‪—‬ without breaking the laws of relativity

Physicists just witnessed pinpricks of darkness moving faster than the speed of light ‪—‬ without breaking the laws of relativity

Mini lake meets snowy rim of Canada’s oldest ice mass — Earth from space

Mini lake meets snowy rim of Canada’s oldest ice mass — Earth from space

Add A Comment
Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Editors Picks

Inside Celine Dion’s Preparations for Paris Comeback Concerts: ‘High Production and High Fashion’ (Exclusive)

Inside Celine Dion’s Preparations for Paris Comeback Concerts: ‘High Production and High Fashion’ (Exclusive)

April 15, 2026
The truth about Giants’ alleged Dexter Lawrence trade talks

The truth about Giants’ alleged Dexter Lawrence trade talks

April 15, 2026
‘Human evolution didn’t slow down; we were just missing the signal’: Large DNA study reveals natural selection led to more redheads and less male-pattern baldness

‘Human evolution didn’t slow down; we were just missing the signal’: Large DNA study reveals natural selection led to more redheads and less male-pattern baldness

April 15, 2026
Snap slashes 1K jobs in ‘AI efficiency’ bloodbath

Snap slashes 1K jobs in ‘AI efficiency’ bloodbath

April 15, 2026

Subscribe to News

Get the latest USA news and updates directly to your inbox.

Latest News
Big advertisers agree to settle FTC probe of alleged boycott against X, others

Big advertisers agree to settle FTC probe of alleged boycott against X, others

April 15, 2026
Tom Steyer and Steve Hilton pull ahead in California governor race: poll

Tom Steyer and Steve Hilton pull ahead in California governor race: poll

April 15, 2026
Israel says 60-second strike killed 250 Hezbollah operatives in Lebanon

Israel says 60-second strike killed 250 Hezbollah operatives in Lebanon

April 15, 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Pinterest WhatsApp TikTok Instagram
© 2026 USA Times. All Rights Reserved.
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms
  • Advertise
  • Contact

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.