“…eggshell thickness, porosity, calcium content, water vapor conductance) with life history traits in birds (Attard & Portugal, 2021; Birchard & Deeming, 2009, 2015; McClelland et al, 2021; Portugal et al, 2014), dinosaurs including birds (Legendre & Clarke, 2021; Tanaka et al, 2015), archosaurs (Tanaka & Zelenitsky, 2014), squamates (Hallmann & Griebeler, 2015), non‐avian reptiles (D'Alba et al, 2021), or across amniotes, albeit with relatively small samples (Legendre, Rubilar‐Rogers, Musser, et al, 2020; Stein et al, 2019). Some of these studies have also reconstructed ancestral states for these traits – discretized in some cases – and identified correlates that influenced these evolutionary patterns (Attard & Portugal, 2021; D'Alba et al, 2021; Legendre & Clarke, 2021; Legendre, Rubilar‐Rogers, Musser, et al, 2020; McClelland et al, 2021; Norell et al, 2020; Portugal et al, 2014; Stein et al, 2019; Tanaka et al, 2015). These studies have initiated what is perhaps the most interesting and controversial debate in this new field of quantitative eggshell research (Lindgren & Kear, 2020): what was the structure of the ancestral eggshell in dinosaurs, archosaurs, and reptiles as a whole?…”