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It's a Bird, It's a Dinosaur...

By Sean Henahan, Access Excellence

Washington, DC (3/20/98)- New prehistoric finds in Madagascar and the Mongolian desert provide valuable new evidence for the dinosaur-bird link hypothesis.

In Madagascar, a team of researchers led by paleontologist/anatomist Catherine Forster of the State University of New York (SUNY) at Stony Brook found fossil remains of a sickle-clawed bird bearing a close relationship to therapod dinosaur anatomy.

The discovery of  the new raven-sized fossil bird "is a wonderful example of how the fossil record provides the basic data for formulating, testing, and revising ideas about life through time," says Chris Maples, director of National Science Foundation's geology and paleontology program, which funded the research.

The fossil bird, dubbed Rahona ostromi (Ostrom's menace from the clouds), is 65 to 70 million years old, dating from the Late Cretaceous period.

The forearm bone of Rahona is long and shows anatomic evidence of well-developed feathers, indicating it was a capable flyer. Perhaps the most amazing observation is the finding of a large, sickle-like killing claw at the end of a thick second toe on the hind foot. This unique toe and claw is identical to the one carried by a group of fast,
predaceous theropod dinosaurs called "maniraptorans". Viewers of  'Jurrasic Park' may remember this feature on the hook-clawed velociraptors.

"This new fossil is one of the strongest last nails in the coffin of those who doubt that dinosaurs had anything to do with the origin of birds. Rahona was at the base of the bird family tree, right next to Archaeopteryx. It had a feathered wing and many bird features in its hips and legs, including a perching foot. But it also kept the big killing claw of its theropod ancestors," Forster said.

"Paleontologists have suggested that theropods gave rise to birds, and the presence of this  "maniraptoran" toe and claw on the Malagasy bird "clinches it for us. This discovery lends a lot of weight to the idea that birds are a side-branch of the theropod family tree," she added.

More Clues from Bizarre Fossils in the Gobi Desert

A team of researchers from the American Museum of Natural History and George Washington University made another very important find in Mongolia- the first known skulls of an unusual group of prehistoric creatures called the Alvarezsauridae. This find provides further evidence in support of the theory that birds evolved from dinosaurs, revealing an advanced stage in this transition. Numerous physical characteristics in the fossil skulls show that these strange creatures were actually early birds. Their unusual appearance also challenges the traditional view that all primitive birds looked similar to their modern-day cousins.

The new fossils were found in the Gobi Desert and, like Rahona ostromidate, date from the late Cretaceous Period (approximately 70 million years ago). The researchers named the ancient bird Shuvuuia deserti, from the Mongolian word shuvuu, meaning "bird," and the Latin for desert, in reference to the ancient climate in which the animals lived. The flightless bird was about the size of a turkey, walked on two legs and had a long tail and neck. However, unlike most primitive birds, it had stubby forearms that ended in a single, blunt claw. The exact purpose of this appendage remains a mystery.

Paleontologists have found fossil remains of animals similar to Shuvuuia deserti, including the early bird Mononykus, in Mongolia, Argentina, and North America, but never a skull. Skulls contains key physical characteristics for tracing evolutionary history.

The skull of Shuvuuia deserti reveal an important physical characteristic found only in birds: the animal was capable of "prokinesis," the movement of the snout up and down independently of the rest of the skull. This allowed the animal to open its mouth quite wide enough to eat very large dinners. Shuvuuia's diet might have included insects, lizards and even small mammals.

These newly discovered fossils are the most primitive known fossil birds with the exception of the Archaeopteryx (pictured above). Interestingly, the more ancient Archaeopteryx resembles modern birds more closely than the more advanced Shuvuuia deserti. This riddle illustrates the complexity of the evolution of birds and is certain to stir debate.

Forster's article appears in the March 20, 1998 issue of the journal Science. The Shuvuuia deserti discovery is described in the March 19, 1998 issue of the journal Nature.


Related information on the Internet
AE: Missing Link?
AE: Early Bird Fossil
UC Berkeley- Bird Dino Link 
AE: Hands-On Dino Science
Prehistoric Times

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