Mei (Chinese for "sound asleep"); pronounced MAY
Habitat:
Woodlands of Asia
Historical Period:
Early Cretaceous (140-135 million years ago)
Size and Weight:
About two feet long and a few pounds
Diet:
Probably omnivorous
Distinguishing Characteristics:
Small size; small skull; long legs
About Mei:
Almost as tiny as its name, Mei was a small, probably feathered
theropod whose closest relative was the much larger
Troodon. The story behind this dinosaur's odd moniker (Chinese for "sound asleep") is that the complete fossil of a juvenile was found in a sleeping position--with its tail wrapped around its body and its head tucked underneath its arm. If that sounds like the sleeping posture of the typical bird, you're not far off the mark: paleontologists believe Mei was yet another intermediate form between
birds and dinosaurs. (For the record, this unfortunate specimen was probably smothered in its sleep by a rain of volcanic ash.)
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Bob Strauss is a freelance writer and book author; one of his specialties is explaining scientific concepts and discoveries to both a lay and professional audience.
Bob Strauss is the author of two best-selling question-and-answer books that range across the expanse of science, biology, history and culture: The Big Book of What, How and Why (Main Street, 2005) and Who Knew? Hundreds & Hundreds of Questions & Answers for Curious Minds (Sterling Innovation, 2007).