Dinosaurs' Living Descendants
China's spectacular feathered fossils have finally answered the century-old question about the ancestors of today's birds
- By Richard Stone
- Photographs by Stefen Chow
- Smithsonian magazine, December 2010, Subscribe
(Page 4 of 5)
One of the most beguiling specimens to emerge from Liaoning's shale beds is Microraptor, which Xu discovered in 2003. The bantamweight beast was a foot or two long and tipped the scales at a mere two pounds. Microraptor, from the Dromaeosaur family, was not an ancestor of birds, but it was also unlike any previously discovered feathered dinosaur. Xu calls it a "four-winged" dinosaur because it had long, pennaceous feathers on its arms and legs. Because of its fused breastbone and asymmetrical feathers, says Xu, Microraptor surely could glide from tree to tree, and it may even have been better at flying under its own power than Archaeopteryx was.
Last year, Xu discovered another species of four-winged dinosaur, also at Liaoning. Besides showing that four-winged flight was not a fluke, the new species, Anchiornis huxleyi, named in honor of Thomas Henry Huxley, is the earliest known feathered dinosaur. It came from Jurassic lakebed deposits 155 million to 160 million years old. The find eliminated the final objection to the evolutionary link between birds and dinosaurs. For years, skeptics had raised the so-called temporal paradox: there were no feathered dinosaurs older than Archaeopteryx, so birds could not have arisen from dinosaurs. Now that argument was blown away: Anchiornis is millions of years older than Archaeopteryx.
Four-winged dinosaurs were ultimately a dead branch on the tree of life; they disappear from the fossil record around 80 million years ago. Their demise left only one dinosaur lineage capable of flight: birds.
Just when did dinosaurs evolve into birds? Hard to say. "Deep in evolutionary history, it is extremely difficult to draw the line between birds and dinosaurs," says Xu. Aside from minor differences in the shape of neck vertebrae and the relative length of the arms, early birds and their Maniraptoran kin, such as Velociraptor, look very much alike.
"If Archaeopteryx were discovered today, I don't think you would call it a bird. You would call it a feathered dinosaur," says Carrano. It's still called the first bird, but more for historic reasons than because it is the oldest or best embodiment of birdlike traits.
On the other hand, Confuciusornis, which possessed the first beak and earliest pygostyle, or fused tail vertebrae that supported feathers, truly looks like a bird. "It passes the sniff test," Carrano says.
Since the last of the non-avian dinosaurs died out 65 million years ago during the mass extinction that closed the curtain on the Cretaceous period, birds have evolved other characteristics that set them apart from dinosaurs. Modern birds have higher metabolisms than even the most agile Velociraptor ever had. Teeth disappeared at some point in birds' evolutionary history. Birds' tails got shorter, their flying skills got better and their brains got bigger than those of dinosaurs. And modern birds, unlike their Maniraptoran ancestors, have a big toe that juts away from the other toes, which allows birds to perch. "You gradually go from the long arms and huge hands of non-avian Maniraptorans to something that looks like the chicken wing you get at KFC," says Sues. Given the extent of these avian adaptations, it's no wonder the evolutionary link between dinosaurs and birds as we know them remained hidden until paleontologists started analyzing the rich fossil record from China.
Chaoyang is a drab Chinese city with dusty streets; in its darker corners it's reminiscent of gritty 19th-century American coal-mining towns. But to fossil collectors, Chaoyang is a paradise, only a one-hour drive from some of the Yixian Formation's most productive beds.
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Related topics: Birds Dinosaurs Fossils China
Additional Sources
"Four-Winged Fossil Bridges Bird-Dinosaur Gap," by Sid Perkins, Science News, in Wired, September 25, 2009.
"Dinosaur Fossil Reveals True Feather Colors" by Sid Perkins, Science News, in Wired, February 4, 2010









Comments (9)
is it a four legged bird?cool i've never seen anything like that, or a cat with feathers, or anything other than the basic stuff you find on the internet.but' i thought man was biblical, being the greatest sreation and predator in history. makes you wonder what something that much older was realyy like.really
Posted by steven on July 3,2011 | 12:08 AM
Very informative. I liked this article very much.
Posted by Prasun Bhattacharyya on February 16,2011 | 01:16 AM
DINOSAURS LIVING DESCENDANTS Dec 2010
I get annoyed at paleoscience' constant efforts to take land "lizards" (dinos, amphibios, reptos, etc.) up into the trees without realistic visual forethought. Its a great leap for a ground pounder to perch. So, what makes more sense in between.....lizards could run but not yet fly (various degrees of flapping, guidance, etc.)!
Lizards had almost zero reasons to climb or perch in trees! Fruit/flowers/honey....not! Eat birds eggs...not even around yet! Escape predators....maybe? Which predator outlasted the other--tree v. ground?
Water draws plants and animals! It makes most sense for lizards to hang around water...hence most, if not all, pre-perch lizards remains are found at, in, near water sediments. Hence, ca-zillions of near water cliff dwelling/breeding birds still exist today. Where are the modern perch features on penguins, ducks, sea gulls, etc.?
Lizards learned to leap, jump, run off cliffs near water 1st...to escape danger; find &/or pounce on prey in/by water; scoop fish, protect offlings in cliffs, etc! Pre-fly lizards began to glide first--perching is a modern physical capability as pointed out in the article. Pre-fly lizards had strong run/leap/climb cliff capability/features coupled with weak (compared with today) fly feathers/stems for gliding/steerage....they didn't need to cavort and fly from tree to tree yet!
SO, LET'S NOT DO THE GROUND TO TREE LEAPING LIZARDS SPIN TOO SOON!
George Stevenson
Portland, Oregon
Posted by George Stevenson on December 9,2010 | 02:00 AM
What a great article!
Posted by Tom on December 1,2010 | 03:43 PM
Was the comment about Taiwan being on the map really necessary? You just had to voice your political opinions while talking about these amazing feathered dinosaurs from millions of years ago?
Posted by Adou on November 28,2010 | 10:34 PM
The illustration of the archaepteryx clearly has the leg joints wrong compared to the fossil image.
Posted by walt laramie on November 27,2010 | 07:47 PM
Some classic imitations or pritendings that they are strange. Can Irian-Papua island be one biggest dinosaur; can Turkey Salt and Eğridir lakes be biggest birds at history before deluvions? Some mauntains were full of buffalos due to some ignorante abrodal villagers. Can the biggest elephants or swans be bigger two times more and can they live two times more? Best sea can be similer to fish shape relatively that kind of hyphothese. The creatures were at craters. The origen of shape of the animals were the pharalel star groups relatively to same hyphothese. The important is being rational, realist and thruer guesses, imaginations. Valor Alexander
Posted by Valor Alexander on November 21,2010 | 09:31 PM
Extraordinaire...
Posted by Lucien Alexandre Marion on November 20,2010 | 09:22 PM
The article is very well written and covers much information that wasn't known when I was a zoology student. Thanks for making it available online.
Posted by Raymond Holderman on November 19,2010 | 10:51 AM