How Coprolite Helped Win the First World War
More rare and often harder to identify than dinosaur bones, the fresh excrement of ancient animals if exposed to conditions favorable to preservation can become fossilized. The specimens can become rock-hard nodes. They are called "coprolite". High in phosphate, ground coprolite "dinosaur poop" was used for fertilizer and briefly used in munitions development during early World War I.
Coprolites are found around the world but some places are noted as having conditions that favored preservation as fossils. Coprolites can be easily confused with pseudofossils, natural inorganic and completely natural objects with regular shapes and patterns. -Things like bogi stones, for instance, which are completely inorganic yet surprisingly symmetrical is size and shapes. Only coprolites are true fossilized animal dung.
Coprolite of a Meat-Eating Dinosaur
Image via Wikipedia
Psuedofossils are objects that look similar to organic material or processes such as highly detailed crystalline markings, other impressions causes by natural forces and have nothing to do with animalia. One such famous psuedofossil was identified in 1865 by J. W. Dawson and was thought to be of very ancient, large and highly evolved protozoan. More were found in subsequent years which seemed to support the contention that these were some form of animal.
Image via Wikipedia
In 1970 however, the very same structure was discovered from ejecta material from the Mount Vesuvius volcanic eruption. The latter discovery obviously was created under conditions of extreme heat and pressure conditions more typical with geologic processes, not the natural fossilization of organic material or lifeforms.
Uses of Coprolite Include Fertilizer, Explosives/Munitions
In the 19th century England, coprolites were mined for agricultural and industrial applications. Coprolites are high in phosphates which made them valuable for fertilizer. The coprolite mining had declined in the late 1880s but during the early part of World War I, the industry was revived out of necessity. The phosphates from fossilized dinosaur dung were needed to make munitions, explosives. There is even a street called “Coprolite St.” near Ipswich Docks in Ipswich where the munitions factory that processed coprolites once stood. So in a very real sense, dinosaur poop helped the Allies in the war against Germany. Who would have guessed?
Fossilized Dinosaur Droppings

Image by author: obverse view of a coprolite from my collection
Fossilized animal droppings are often overlooked because they do not resemble anything familiar to the fossil prospector. Very small specimens can resemble stones or other inorganic rock formations or other natural concretions of minerals, such as bogi stones. Paleontologists study coprolites because they serve as evidence of the animal’s diet. From this we can learn what they ate and even of what parasites they may have carried in life. We can learn if the dinosaur ate only plants, was omnivorous or if it was exclusively a meat-eating predator. Sometimes coprolites are found to contain bone fragments or be of a high calcium and/or protein content from having digested remnants of their prey. This can solidly identify the associated dinosaur as a meat-eater and even the study of fecal remains of ancient humans can conclude if they included or raised domestic mammals for a stable food source.
Another View of the same Coprolite

Image by author: reverse side of the same coprolite shown above
Coprolite fossils are mainly composed of the compound calcium phosphate, hence their use as fertilizer and later out of necessity, explosives and other munitions creation.
Other organic matter sometimes is present in coprolites such as bones and flesh of whatever was in the digestive tract of the animal. Most terrestrial animals dung fall apart long before it can become fossilized so finding a coprolite is quite rare despite the aggregate volume excreted by any indigenous animal specie during its lifetime. Marine and aquatic animal coprolites are more common because they often were buried in silty sediments before they could fall apart and thus, preserved in situ. A land animal’s droppings would be subject to wind and rain erosion long before fossilization might occur. But in some rare cases, a fresh fecal spoor can be buried in sand or solid, and preserved. Eventually, to become fossilized.
Coprolites are seldom identified as having come from a particular specie of creature or animal. The more ancient the specimen the more difficult the taxonomy of identifying it becomes. It is of higher probability that a match has occurred when the same type of fossilized coprolites are found associated with the bones of specific dinosaurs and in multiple locations across continents. Only then with some degree of high certainty can one say that so-and-so sample of coprolite is confirmed as being the fecal spoor of any particular specie of dinosaur. A taxonomically similar coprolite found elsewhere can be reliable guessed as being from the same general of not specific specie of animal.
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Post CommentTheresa Johnson
On July 28, 2009 at 10:36 am
very interesting
Brenda Nelson
On July 28, 2009 at 10:54 am
I knew what Coprolites were which is why when I saw the title I knew I just had to click it. Never knew they destroyed so much scientific evidence for this. wow.
Reddit
On July 28, 2009 at 1:21 pm
FYI Nazi Germany was World War II, not World War I.
I Have Had Enough
On July 28, 2009 at 4:28 pm
Very interesting article, like BNelson I had heard of coprolite’s before (I was fascinated by dinosaur’s as a child).
thestickman
On July 28, 2009 at 5:10 pm
Reddit: -I saw that blunder last night and thought I’d fixed it. -It’s submitted now. I’m just so used to any mention of wartime Germany “Nazi.” Thanks for the heads-up on this.
Its actually flattering that people read for content and offer correction suggestions.
Lostash
On July 28, 2009 at 5:47 pm
Most interseting article. I never realised the WW1 connection either.
Daisy Peasblossom
On July 29, 2009 at 5:18 pm
Interesting article. I’d “like” it, but the button doesn’t seem to be working.
thestickman
On July 29, 2009 at 6:18 pm
Yeah, Triond is having a bit of trouble with the Ajax responder; “liked” and sometimes “comments” may not appear to work. chances are that even if you “liked” it and it does not immediately show up, it is actually recorded and it will be registered and the value updated eventually.
I have experienced this alot recently. “like it” and “comment” just once. It may not show up now, but in a little bit, it ‘magically’ appears.
And, -Thanks!
-thestickman
Babyface Jam
On August 2, 2009 at 8:59 pm
Nice work. Would never have known without this.
Ruby Hawk
On August 4, 2009 at 8:57 pm
Historically interesting, I must admit that I know nothing about it and I learned a lot.