Copenhagen:
The Museum of East Zeland said on Monday that a piece of vomiting fossil has been discovered in Denmark, which is of the time when dinosaurs roamed on the earth.
The discovery was made by a local amateur fossil hunter on the UNESCO-list site, Stevens’ rocks to the south of Copenhagen.
During a walk, Peter Bennic found some unusual pieces in a piece of chalk, which were pieces of sea lily.
He then took those pieces to a museum for examination, which revealed that the vomit was about 66 million years ago of the Creteshian era.
According to experts, the vomiting is made up of at least two different species of sea lily, which was probably eaten by a fish, which she could not digest parts that she could not digest.
The museum said in a press release, “This type of discovery … is considered very important during the reconstruction of the previous ecosystem as it provides which animals eaten by which animals.”
Fossilist Jasper Milan described the discovery as “actually an unusual discovery”, and said that it helped explain the relationship in the prehistoric food chain.
“Marine lily is not a particularly nutritious diet, as they mainly have calcareas plates placed simultaneously by some soft parts,” he said.
“But here is an animal, perhaps some type of fish, which eaten the sea lily living on the sea bottom of the Creteshius sea 66 million years ago and revived the skeletal parts.”
(Tagstootron) Denmark (T) Dinosaur (T) rocks of Stevens