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EARLY BIRD FOSSIL
By Sean Henahan, Access Excellence
Washington,
D.C. (June 6, 1997)- The earliest known fossil of a baby bird
is providing valuable information regarding the evolution of the bird world,
providing new support for the idea that birds evolved from dinosaurs.
An international team of scientists working in the Spanish Pyrenees
uncovered the fossilized remains of a bird hatchling dating to the Lower
Cretaceous, approximately 130 million years ago. The researchers believe
the bird hatchling falls between the very early Archaeopteryx (approximately
150 million years old) and the more modern fossil birds Hersperonis and
Ichthyornis, both of which are approximately 85 million years old. The
four inch long hatchling is thought to be a new bird species classified
as an Enantiornithes (a member of a diverse group of birds
that were capable of flight and that arose in the Cretaceous Period).
Discoveries during the last seven years have more than tripled the number
of recognized early bird species. Nonetheless, the understanding
of the evolution of the modern bird skull has not advanced significantly
since the first complete fossil bird skull was found a century ago. The
new fossil was found in a remarkably good state of preservation, particularly
of the head and neck.
The discovery is already providing new information about the skull anatomy
of early birds, and is shedding new light on the skull of Archaeopteryx,
the earliest bird ever discovered. For example, the skull of this new hatchling
contains teeth, which early birds shared with their reptile antecedents,
but modern birds have since lost. In addition, openings surrounding the
hatchling's braincase are larger than those of modern birds. This could
indicate that its skull muscles were very different from modern birds and
were almost fully reptilian. This also suggest that the hatchling's brain
would have been significantly smaller than that of modern birds.
The hatchling specimen also include well-preserved neck, wings,
shoulders, and sternum sections, along with evidence of feathers.
The shoulder and wing reveal advanced anatomical features, suggesting that
this bird had a much better mastery of flight than Archaeopteryx. This
also reinforces the idea that the development of flight took precedence
over any other anatomical system in early bird evolution, and that birds
retained a skull very similar to that of a meat-eating dinosaur even after
they evolved a sophisticated flight capacity, notes Luis Chiappe, from
the American Museum of Natural History.
Also of interest, the neck and wing bones, and the area near where the
jaw attaches to the skull, all display clusters of tiny holes, very similar
to the pattern found in the nestlings of modern birds. This suggests the
hatchling grew steadily and rapidly while young, like modern birds. The
researchers believe that the bird would have grown more slowly were it
to have reached adulthood, as previous research has indicated that, unlike
adult, modern birds, primitive birds may have matured slowly and experienced
seasonal growth cycles.
The combination of both advanced and primitive physical characteristics
exhibited by the new hatchling fossil provides
a window onto the evolutionary transition between theropods and birds and
provides further evidence for
the position that modern birds are in fact short-tailed, feathered
descendants of meat-eating dinosaurs, notes Chiappe.
The research appears in the June 6, 1997 issue of Science.
Related information on the Internet
AE: New
Dinosaur-Bird Link
AE
Activity: Hands-on Dinosaur Science
AE:
Flying Dinosaur Graveyard
AE:
Jurassic Park Projects
AE:
Jurassic Park Lesson Plan
UC
Berkeley: Birds & Dinosaurs
Darwin's
Origin of the Species
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