Feeding dinosaurs with milk?

Pauk Els physiologist, Wulongong University (New South Wales state, Australia) affirmed that dinosaurs are like modern breast-feeding mammals.

For the past 15 years, Pauk Els has studied the evolution of dinosaurs and tried to shed light on how these few tons of giant reptiles reared their tiny babies.

Picture 1 of Feeding dinosaurs with milk?
The platypus dinosaurs may have raised their children with "milk".

His decades-long research has come to the conclusion that these dinosaurs feed on a very special liquid. He cited duck-billed dinosaurs (hadrosaurus) as a prime example of his theory.

According to the scientist's explanation, duckbill dinosaurs live in swarms and nest to stay. Obviously, for these herbivorous animals, when born, eating raw plants (on tall trees) is not appropriate.

Pauk Els thinks that mother-raising dinosaurs are not by spitting out what they have eaten for their children, but by swallowing their stomachs, treating them with digestive enzymes, then refluxing food in the form of a solid liquid It is rich in nutrients like current mammals 'milk' . Most likely, in this type of 'dinosaur milk' that has been added - in addition to nutrients - there are also antioxidants, antibodies and growth hormones.

It should be noted that Professor Paul Els' conclusions are based entirely on pure inferences, because no fossil specimen of dinosaur soft tissue is needed to confirm this hypothesis. He applied only the phylogenetic similarity (philogenetic) in combination with the scientific theory of the presence of different animals, derived from the same position in the phylogenetic diagram.