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MISSING LINK?
By Sean Henahan, Access Excellence
Washington,
D.C. (May 23, 1997)- A new dinosaur discovery in Patagonia appears
to be the long-sought missing link between dinosaurs and the proto-feathered
Archaeopteryx.
A group of researchers from Argentina found a a small theropod
from the Cretaceous period with a number of bird-like characteristics.
The anatomical features the creature, dubbed Unenlagia (indian dialect
for "half-bird") may begin to enter one of the great lingering questions
in paleontology, how wings evolved from forelimbs. The animal held its
forelimbs much like a bird holds its wings, furling them so that the humerus
lay close to the body, and the limb as a whole was capable of the 'upstroke'
needed for flapping flight.
Although the two-meter long Unenlagia was probably flightless, the researchers
note that the structure of the all of the anatomical requirements for powered,
flapping flight were present in the animal. Moreover, several features,
including the shape of the pelvis and scapula resemble the morphology seen
in Archaeopteryx.
"Unenlagia may therefore be the closest thing we have to an intermediate
between dinosaurs and Archaeopteryx," the researchers note.
It is unlikely that Unenlagia flew, owing to its large size and relatively
small forelimbs. The anatomy of the newly discovered animal suggests that
there may have been an evolution from a flapping stage to a flying
stage. It is unknown whether the animal had feathers.
Archaeopteryx lithographica, the well-known feathered dinosaur, was
discovered only two years after Darwin published his "Origin of the Species".
Scientists have been arguing ever since about the evolutionary transition
between reptiles and birds. The growing consensus has been that birds were
morphologically closest to theropods such as Deinonychus and Veolciraptor.
Unenlagia has characteristics of both birds and dinosaurs, and it may
help to explain the functional transition from reptiles to birds. The new
findings will refine the ongoing argument as to the origin of birds, or
where the dividing line is between dinosaurs and birds, comments Lawrence
Witmer, department of biological sciences, Ohio University, adding:
"Regardless of the final interpretation of the functional transition,
Unenlagia is a critical testament of the
phylogenetic transition, and it is only after the phylogenetic players
are better known that the drama of the adaptive story will be truly comprehensible."
The research appeared in the May 22, 1996 issue of Nature
Related information on the Internet
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
Patagonia
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