Transitional Fossils indicate early birds flew on four wings - Nature

by cantleave 5 Replies latest watchtower beliefs

  • cantleave
    cantleave

    Sorry it's cut and paste ......................

    Nature 14 March 2013

    Modern birds have two fewer wings than their ancestors.

    • Instead of two wings, the first birds might have used four feathered limbs to stay aloft, according to research published today in Science 1 .

    Birdlike dinosaurs, such as Microraptor and Sinornithosaurus, are known to have had long, sturdy feathers on their hindlimbs 2 . But until now, researchers were not sure whether the earliest birds had already abandoned this extra plumage when they emerged to take to the Cretaceous skies over 100 million years ago.

    The researchers, led by Xing Xu, a palaeontologist at the Institute of Geology and Paleontology in Shandong, China, found evidence of feathers on the hindlimbs of 11 basal bird specimens (gathered from the Lower Cretaceous Jehol Group in China) 3 . On some of the individuals, these feathers appeared to be veined flight feathers that stood perpendicular to the leg bones, similar to those in the basal bird Archaeopteryx.

    One specimen, attributed to the Sapeornis genus, had at least one hindlimb feather longer than 50 millimetres. Feathers on the feet were shorter, but were still more than 30 millimetres long.

    "It is amazing that so many early birds had large leg feathers," Xu says. The first winged dinosaurs were discovered just 10 years ago, he notes. These findings "are important for both flight origin and feather evolution".

    These fossil traces, however, do not indicate how these ancient animals used their rear set of feathers — whether for gliding assistance, steering or both. And this small sampling does not prove that four wings was the rule for all early birds, says Mark Norell a palaeontologist at the American Museum of Natural History in New York. "Flight is many things to many people," he notes. "The origin of flight is not going to come from just one discovery."

    Since the era of these early four-winged fowl, scales have replaced most feathers on modern birds' legs. But with a few genetic changes, these coverings can turn back into feathers, such as in Silkie chickens 4 , which have feathered feet. One specimen from the latest study, belonging to the genusYanornis, already had some scales below its feathered parts. And modern fowl have not lost all their rear plumage, which is now downier and used for warmth.

    Downsizing from four wings might have helped early birds out by allowing the hindlimbs to become dedicated legs that could help them get around better on the ground, the researchers suggest. And as exciting as the discovery of hind-leg flight feathers might be, says Norell, other clues are needed to really understand the locomotion of birds. “What would really be a smoking gun is if they found footprints.”

  • Londo111
  • soontobe
    soontobe

    Seems like it could be a lot of semantics to me. Modern birds have a bunch of primary feathers used for flying sticking out behind, and yet we generally don't call it a wing.

  • cantleave
    cantleave

    Modern birds have a bunch of primary feathers used for flying sticking out behind, and yet we generally don't call it a wing.

    Quite right we call it a tail. However, it still has flight functionality. Wings are modified limbs, so calling rear legs with flight feathers "wings" may be semantics but it is an accurate term.

  • Apognophos
    Apognophos

    Psh, that's just Roadrunner with legwarmers on.

  • return of parakeet
    return of parakeet

    It's feathers I need, more feathers

    for the life to come. And these iron teeth

    I want away, and a smooth beak

    to cut the air. And these claws

    on my wings, what use are they

    except to drag me down, do you imagine

    I am ever going to crawl again?

    -- Edwin Morgan,

    The Archaeopteryx's Song (1977)

Share this

Google+
Pinterest
Reddit