Dung Beetle Balls
Here we have two ancient Egyptian scarabs admiring the casts of beetle brooding balls left by distant relatives some 30 million years ago. So what do these have to do with coprolites? I'm glad you asked! You see, modern dung beetles roll balls of dung collected from poo piles (usually from herbivores) into their burrows. They then lay an egg in each dung ball, which the beetle larva (grub) feeds on once it hatches (YUM-my).