Printer Friendly
The Free Library
14,507,740 articles and books
Member login
User name  
Password 
 
Join us Forgot password?

Oldest bird and longest dinosaur.


Oldest bird and longest dinosaur

Just as the 150-million-year-old Archaeopteryxfossil is being reinstated as the earliest known bird after considerable controversy (SN:5/3/86, p.276), along come two crow-size skeletons that are not only 75 million years older than Archaeopteryx Archaeopteryx (är'kēŏp`tərĭks) [Gr.,=primitive wing], most primitive known bird, a 150 million-year-old fossil of which was first discovered in 1860 and described the following year in the late Jurassic limestone of Solnhofen,  but also more birdlike, according to the paleontologists who discovered them. The Washington, D.C.-based National Geographic Society National Geographic Society

U.S. scientific society founded in 1888 in Washington, D.C., by a small group of eminent explorers and scientists “for the increase and diffusion of geographic knowledge.
, which funded the work, announced this week that Sankar Chatterjee and his colleagues at Texas Tech University in Lubbock found the 225-million-year-old fossils near Post, Tex.

According to paleontologist John Ostromat Yale University, "the material is so fragmentary that the identification [as a bird] cannot be certified, but it certainly looks as though that's the right interpretation." If so, then the fossils, to which Chatterjee has given the genus name Protoavis (ancestral bird), add credence to the notion that birds originally arose from dinosaurs. Protoavis, like Archaeopteryx, has distinctly dinosaurian di·no·sau·ri·an  
adj.
Of, relating to, or characteristic of a dinosaur.

n.
A dinosaur.
 features, such as clawed fingers, a tail and teeth, as well as avian characteristics, such as a wishbone wishbone

see furcula.
.

However, Chatterjee says that Protoaviswas a much more advanced bird than the Archaeopteryx fossils, which lack keel-like breastbones and were poorly suites for flight. "The wing structures of Protoavis are so well developed, there's no doubt it could fly," he adds. "And the skull is entirely like that of modern birds." Moreover, with no teeth in the back part of its jaws, Protoavis had started down the evolutionary path that enabled later birds, unencumbered by the heavy jaws needed to support teeth, to become masterful fliers, according to Chatterjee.

In Ostrom's view there is not enoughfossil evidence to say that Protoavis was indeed more advanced. But if Chatterjee is correct, his find lends support to scientists who have argued that Archaeopteryx was too primitive to be a direct ancestor of modern birds--that there was too little time for the Archaeopteryx to evolve into the great variety of birds, some closely resembling modern species, that developed in the next tens of millions of years.

"Scientists have speculated that somebodywould find [a much older bird]," says Chatterjee. "And that is where Protoavis fits in."

No impressions of feathers were foundwith the Texas fossils, but Chatterjee says there are bumps on the forearm and "hand" to which feathers were probably attached. He thinks that Protoavis could fly between trees in the tropical forest it lived in, but not much farther.

Ostrom calls the Protoavis fossils "anextraordinarily improbable discovery" because the fragil bones of birds are rarely preserved this well. Chatterjee suspects the birds were drowned in a flash flood and were not crushed or deformed because they were entombed Entombed, or entomb, may refer to:
  • To entomb is to inter a body in a tomb.
  • Entombed, a pioneering Scandinavian death metal band.
  • Entombed, a video game from Ultimate Play The Game.
 by a blanket of mud.

At the other end of the soze spectrumfrom birds are the dinosaur giants. In recent years, scientists have unearthed the remains of Supersaurus and Ultrasaurus
This article is about Ultrasaurus, a dubious dinosaur from South Korea. The article on the invalid giant dinosaur genus from Utah, in the United States, is at Ultrasauros. For the fictional Zoid based on this dinosaur, see Ultrasaurus (Zoids).
, animals weighing in at about 75 or 80 tons and measuring about 90 to 100 feet long. Now paleontologist David Gillette unveils Seismosaurus Noun 1. Seismosaurus - genus of large herbivorous dinosaurs of Cretaceous found in western North America
genus Seismosaurus

reptile genus - a genus of reptiles

family Titanosauridae, Titanosauridae - herbivorous dinosaurs of the Cretaceous
, or "earthshaker," a dinosaur he thinks was even longer and possibly even larger.

Seismosaurus's bones were discoveredby three hikers at a site about 60 miles northwest of Albuquerque. Last year a team led by Gillette, curator of paleontology paleontology (pā'lēəntŏl`əjē) [Gr.,= study of early beings], science of the life of past geologic periods based on fossil remains.  at the New Mexico Museum of Natural History in Albuquerque, excavated eight joined vertebrae Vertebrae
Bones in the cervical, thoracic, and lumbar regions of the body that make up the vertebral column. Vertebrae have a central foramen (hole), and their superposition makes up the vertebral canal that encloses the spinal cord.
 from a 10-foot midsection mid·sec·tion
n.
A middle section, especially the midriff of the body.
 of the animal's tail, as well as fragments of a thighbone thigh·bone
n.
See femur.
 and other as-yet-unidentified bones. The researchers plan to excavate more bones this fall.

In an announcement last week, Gilletteestimated that Seismosaurus was 100 to 120 feet long, 18 feet tall at the shoulder and 15 feet tall at the hip, and weighed 80 to 100 tons--about 12 times heavier than a modern bull elephant. The 150-million-year-old bones were discovered in the Morrison formation, in which Supersaurus and other large, long-necked dinosaurs of the Sauropod sauropod

Any species of four-legged, herbivorous, saurischian dinosaur in the suborder Sauropoda. The sauropods include the largest of all dinosaurs and the largest land animals that ever lived.
 family have been found. Paleontologists are not sure whether the recently discovered Sauropods represent new species or are just unusually large individuals of a known species. Gillette's find, says Ostrom, "reinforces the image that many dinosaurs seem to have been very large--larger than any living animal. One can't help wonder why. What's the biological importance of being so huge?"
COPYRIGHT 1986 Science Service, Inc.
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 1986, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

 Reader Opinion

Title:

Comment:



 

Article Details
Printer friendly Cite/link Email Feedback
Title Annotation:Protoavis and Seismosaurus fossil discoveries
Author:Weisburd, Stefi
Publication:Science News
Date:Aug 16, 1986
Words:688
Previous Article:A plasma 10 times as hot as the sun. (research at Tokamak Fusion Test Reactor)
Next Article:Schroeder's struggle lasts 620 days. (artificial heart recipient William J. Schroeder)
Topics:



Related Articles
Finding a family for an Ultrasaurus. (classification of tallest dinosaur ever discovered)
Rare find: a teething dinosaur embryo.
The lonely bird: claims of the earliest avian fossil launch a paleontologic flap. (Cover Story)
Paleontologists deplume feathery dinosaur.(research indicates chicken-size fossil found in China did not have feathers)(Brief Article)
Dinosaurs kept warm in the polar chill. (study of Australian dinosaur bones shows rapid growth, revealing an ability to keep warm even during frigid...
Fossil feud.(connection between birds and dinosaurs)(includes related article)
Fantastic Fossil Finds.
A Ticklish Debate.(disagreement about the origin of feathers)
Forged fossil is a fish-eating fowl. (Paleontology).(Brief Article)
Feathery find: scientists unearth evidence that some dinosaurs sported feathers.(EARTH: FOSSILS)

Terms of use | Copyright © 2009 Farlex, Inc. | Feedback | For webmasters | Submit articles