Paleontologist Filippo Bertozzo is in charge of digitalizing the museum’s impressive dinosaur collection, which includes 30 iguanodons excavated in a coal mine in Bernissart close to the border with France nearly 150 years ago. Bertozzo is investigating one of the largest specimens of the group, a seven-meter long individual presenting with an unusual set of vertebrae.
In a recent interview with VISIONS, Bertozzo explained how he first came across the odd piece when working on his PhD a few years ago. ‘I studied dinosaurs’ lesions, pathologies, tumors and infectious diseases, especially in animals connected with iguanodons, those large herbivorous dinosaurs who lived in the Lower Cretaceous,’ he recalled. ‘I noticed a specimen who presented with a potentially very interesting disease in two vertebrae.
Instead of being separated, as they usually should, the vertebrae were encapsulated in a bony overgrowth below the vertebral body below the vertebral body.’ Back then it was impossible to take the piece without dismantling the whole skeleton. But now with his new role at the Brussels museum Bertozzo has been able to further investigate this curious anatomic part. He also met with Anne Schulp, Professor of Vertebrate Paleontology at Utrecht University and researcher with Naturalis Biodiversity Center in Leiden, the Netherlands who regularly cooperates with Canon Medical and uses the facility in the headquarters in Zoetermeer, The Netherlands.