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Fossil trove due to Pompeii-like blast

Excellent preservation at Jehol Biota deposit due to strong volcanic eruption, researchers says

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Photographs show the typical poses seen in fossils found entombed at the Jehol Biota deposit in Liaoning. Photo: Jiang Baoyu

A treasure trove of fossilised dinosaurs and other long-extinct species in Liaoning province was created, Pompeii-style, by an erupting volcano, scientists have said.

A seam of rock known as the Yixian and Jiufotang formations is the burial ground of an astonishing array of creatures that lived about 120 million years ago in the Early Cretaceous period.

Called the Jehol Biota, it is the richest and widest source of fossils found and has been the focus of study since the late 1950s.

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It has yielded the remains of dinosaurs, pterosaurs, early birds and mammals, as well as turtles, lizards, freshwater fish, frogs, plants and insects, which inhabited a long-gone area of lakes and conifer forests.

Many of the specimens are astonishingly well preserved, revealing even scales, feathers, hair or skin.

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The secret of the preservation, according to a study led by Jiang Baoyu of Nanjing University in Jiangsu province, lies in a volcanic explosion that extinguished life and then buried it in dust, locking it away for eternity.

Jiang's team looked at 14 bird and dinosaur fossils and the thin layer of darkish sediment in which they were found at five locations.

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