Oh, juvenissun. If only you were as critical of young earth creationism are you are of evolutionary science.
OK, I see you are using a different definition of science.
I am using the definition of science agreed upon by the vast majority of scientists since the inception of the scientific method. This definition is espoused by the various societies to which I belong, and if I did not abide by it, I would not be allowed to publish in their journals or present at their meetings.
Interesting. I think your "prediction" could be too broad. Special texture on teeth could be made simply by taking ONE special plant, while the species could still share a large quantity of other plants with other species. Even it is possible that the special tooth mark could be made by a special part of a plant that other dinos do not care to eat. For example, could a particular dino be a root eater rather than a leave eater? So the "niche" hypothesis could be a very shaky one (please do not be discouraged. It would still be an acceptable study). In order to make a better argument, you would need to correlate the teeth textures with the type of plants. Are you doing that? It could be a hard job because you may not have the plant fossils in the same formation. Also, how would you prove some of the species are not omnivore? They do not have to eat a lot of meat. Just an occasional chew on bone or something hard would create a dominant mark on the teeth. How do you know some dinos do not chew rocks to help on their digestion? On this line, you may also elaborate that some prefer to chew silt, some chew sand, and some chew clay. They would all have different marks left on their teeth.
Poor paleontologist. A lot of work, but based on very simply logic and have to deal with a lot of variables. The study method is very scientific. But the nature of study can hardly be called a good science.
Thanks for your pity, juvenissun, but it is unwarranted. This being my PhD project, rest assured that I have done my homework so as not to waste the next 4-5 years of my life. Again, you're so quick to criticize my work when you do not even know what it is I am doing! My thesis proposal is 20 pages long and you think you can tear it to pieces after only reading the first two sentences!
To address your concerns, though, regardless of whether these herbivorous dinosaur species were feeding on different plants or different parts of the same plant,
that is still niche partitioning. The animals are still reducing competition via differential usage of resources. Even the amount of grit ingested, as you suggest, can give an indication of diet because low-feeding grazers will inevitably ingest more grit than high-feeding browsers. Moreover, the ingestion of stomach stones (gastroliths) is of little concern to me because (1) fossil finds suggest the herbivores of Late Cretaceous North America did not ingest them, and (2) animals that do ingest gastroliths do not normally chew on them first. Nor am I concerned about the likelihood that these dinosaurs may have eaten meat because there is absolutely nothing to suggest they did. Their tooth/jaw morphology, fossilized dung, and fossilized stomach contents all attest to the herbivorous diet of these dinosaurs.
And lastly, yes I am studying the palaeobotany of the area as well in order to get a better understanding as to what type of foodstuffs were available to the herbivores.
Hopefully now I have convinced you that I am doing "good science," though it is my project committee, supervisor, and scholarship committees that I must first convince. And they're all behind me so far!
