Histological analysis and etiology of a pathological iguanodontian femur from England

Author:

Bertozzo Filippo12ORCID,Stein Koen3ORCID,Varotto Elena45ORCID,Galassi Francesco M.6ORCID,Ruffell Alastair7ORCID,Murphy Eileen7ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Operational Directorate Earth and History of Life Royal Belgian Institute of Natural Sciences Brussels Belgium

2. Sociedade de Historia Natural Torres Vedras Portugal

3. Vrije Universiteit Brussel Brussels Belgium

4. Archaeology, College of Humanities, Arts and Social Sciences Flinders University Adelaide South Australia Australia

5. FAPAB Research Center Avola (SR) Sicily Italy

6. Department of Anthropology, Faculty of Biology and Environmental Protection University of Lodz Lodz Poland

7. School of Natural and Built Environment Queen's University Belfast Belfast Northern Ireland UK

Abstract

AbstractDerived ornithopods, such as hadrosaurids, show a high occurrence of fossilized lesions and diseases. However, paleopathologies in iguanodontians seem to be less common, considering the rich fossil record of these taxa in Europe, in particular in Belgium, Britain and Spain. Here, we describe an iguanodontian femur discovered in England that exhibits a large overgrowth of its lateral aspect, not previously recognized in any other similar remains. The specimen was scanned with micro‐computed tomography (microCT) and later sectioned in three sites of the overgrowth for histological analysis. The femur belongs to an early adult Iguanodontia indet., based on the presence of a woven parallel fibered complex in the outer cortex and three to four lines of arrested growth. Internal analysis of the dome‐like overgrowth suggests it can be diagnosed as a fracture callus. The injury might have negatively impacted upon the animal's locomotion as the trauma had occurred in the region above the knee, a crucial spot for hindlimb musculature. Finally, a cancellous medullary bone‐like tissue was recognized in the medullary cavity next to the pathological overgrowth. An attempt was made to determine the precise nature of this tissue, as medullary bone is linked with the ovulation period in (avian) dinosaurs, whereas other types of endosteal, medullary bone‐like tissue have previously been recognized in pathological bones.

Publisher

Wiley

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