ENEVOLVE has achieved several important milestones:
Successful collection and tissue-level characterization of fossil and extant reptile teeth: The success of ENEVOLVE hinged on choosing appropriate pairs of fossil and extant tooth types to compare and contrast in terms of their structure, chemistry, and material properties. The PI and Dr. LeBlanc were able to establish collaborations with the UK’s only crocodile zoo “Crocodiles of the World”, Imperial College London, The Natural History Museum, the University of Alberta (Canada), and The Museum of Life Sciences (King’s College London) to acquire dental specimens. This project sampled the serrated teeth of Komodo dragons and tyrannosaurid dinosaurs, multiple types of grasping and crushing teeth of extant and extinct crocodylians, and the unusual grinding teeth of an extinct group of reptiles known as sphenodontians for the proposed downstream analyses.
Successful applications and significant results from seven synchrotron experiments: The project relied on synchrotron-based experiments (X-ray diffraction/XRD, fluorescence/XRF, and nanotomography/XNT), which require the submission of competitive project proposals for instrument time at a select number of synchrotron facilities across the globe. From January 2021 to the end of the project (October 2022), ENEVOLVE resulted in six successful synchrotron beam time proposals directly related to the objectives of the project, and an additional synchrotron experiment aimed at developing a new imaging technique (experiment #7) at three synchrotron facilities in Paris, Grenoble, and Oxford. These multi-day experiments yielded several terabytes of quantitative data on enamel and dentine crystal structure in reptiles (tyrannosaurid dinosaurs, fossil and modern crocodylians) that are being analyzed for at least three key ENEVOLVE publications.
Significant results addressing original Research Objectives: The combination of all of these techniques have yielded at least three important results that are currently being prepared for publication: the unexpected structural and chemical complexity of serrated reptile teeth, the effects of fossilization on the material properties of reptile teeth, and the first report of mechanically sensitive enamel in reptiles. The results and impact of these are discussed in the subsequent section.
So far, these results have been presented at institutional seminars and most recently at the Society of Vertebrate Paleontology annual conference held in Toronto, Canada (Nov. 2022).