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Dinosaurs 'got high on psychedelic fungus', fossil discovery reveals

100 million-year-old grass parasite had 'poisonous and mind-altering effects'

Victoria Richards
Thursday 12 February 2015 06:41 EST
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This grass spikelet from the middle Cretaceous is about 100 million years old, preserved in amber as the earliest fossil ever found of the evolution of grass, and covered on its tip by the parasite ergot
This grass spikelet from the middle Cretaceous is about 100 million years old, preserved in amber as the earliest fossil ever found of the evolution of grass, and covered on its tip by the parasite ergot

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The discovery of a 100 million-year-old fossilised fungus which had 'poisonous and mind-altering' effects has revealed the possibility that dinosaurs...got high.

A preserved piece of ergot, a psychedelic fungus which grew on top of a grass spikelet, has been found in a hunk of amber in Burma – and researchers say that it may well have been nibbled by the prehistoric animals.

In the 2015 issue of the scientific journal Palaeodiversity, lead study author George Poinar Jr., a zoology professor at Oregon State University, said that the findings establish "for sure" that grasses like this "were in the Old World 100 million years ago", Live Science reported, rather than evolving after dinosaurs disappeared.

“It seems like ergot has been involved with animals and humans almost forever, and now we know that this fungus literally dates back to the earliest evolution of grasses,” Mr Poinar Jr said.

“This is an important discovery that helps us understand the timeline of grass development, which now forms the basis of the human food supply in such crops as corn, rice or wheat.

"But it also shows that this parasitic fungus may have been around almost as long as the grasses themselves, as both a toxin and natural hallucinogen.

"There’s no doubt in my mind that it would have been eaten by sauropod dinosaurs, although we can’t know what exact effect it had on them."

Ergot is a precursor to LSD – and studies have shown that people who eat grains containing the fungi, such as ergot-contaminated rye, can develop symptoms including mania or psychosis, hallucinations and muscle spasms or convulsions. Ergot constricts blood vessels, and some of its most serious effects include gangrene.

Ergotism, the experience of crawling sensations in the skin, tingling in the fingers and convulsions, was even implicated in the Salem witch trials in Massachusetts between February 1692 and May 1693. The trials resulted in the executions of twenty people, most of them women.

The researchers say that the amber relic, which is only a half-inch long and was excavated from a mine by German paleontologist Joerg Wunderlich, may prove that the type of grasses which provided a host to the parasitic ergot existed in the older Jurassic Period, 199.6 million to 145.5 million years ago – rather than appearing 30 million years after dinosaurs became extinct, as previously believed.

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