A team of paleontologists last fall completed the extraction of two dinosaur nests containing some 30 fossilized titanosaur eggs at a site in Loarre, in northern Spain—the continuation of an earlier 2020 campaign. The fossil gathering project was led by the Aragosaurus-IUCA Group of the University of Zaragoza and the Portuguese NOVA University Lisbon, with 25 paleontologist and student participants from Spanish, Portuguese, and German institutions. This latest extraction work in September 2021 involved removal of one large nest, containing at least 12 eggs, conglomerated into a mass of rock that weighed over two tons. In 2020, the block was protected with cellulose and plaster and reinforced with a metal structure to facilitate later removal. The eggs themselves are spherical in shape, each measuring about 15 centimeters (approx. 6 inches) across, according to the University of Zaragoza. They are in an optimal state for conservation and were grouped in such …