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New dinosaur fossils ignite old controversy
By Frank Gaglioti
16 July 1998
Two unusual fossils unearthed recently in the geological beds
of China's Liaoning province by Ji Qiang, from the National Geological
Museum of China, and his team of researchers, have provided further
fuel for a long-standing controversy over the evolution of birds.
Both were small theropod dinosaurs -- about the size of a turkey.
But unlike other dinosaur specimens, these two, named Protarchaepteryx
robusta and Caudpteryx zoui by the scientists, had feathers in
the form of down. At the same time, they were incapable of flight
and definitely not birds. Estimates of the age of the fossils
are in dispute but later evidence indicates they are about 145
million years old.
Theropod dinosaurs, which include the tyannosaurs, were carnivorous,
had small forelimbs and walked on their hind-legs. They commonly
existed during the Cretaceous period about 135 million years ago.
Previous studies of their stomach contents and hands show they
were active predators.
The fossil indicates that Protarchaeopteryx had feathers on
its body and tail -- with a curious fan-like pattern of feathers
at the end of its tail. Caudipteryx had primary feathers attached
to one of its fingers. Its arms were shorter than those of a bird.
Both fossils have down-like, vaned, and barbed feathers.
If the scientists' claim is proven correct then the feather,
previously thought to be a characteristic unique to birds, actually
evolved in dinosaurs. According to Ji Qiang, "They [the fossils]
represent a missing link between dinosaurs and birds, which we
had expected to find."
But there is an ongoing scientific debate over the origin of
birds. Those who claim a dinosaur-origin for birds are opposed
by scientists who postulate a more ancient reptilian ancestor
that gave rise to both dinosaurs and birds and hence to the similarities
shared by the two groups of animals.
Alan Feduccia from the University of North Carolina is the
best known critic of the dinosaur-origin theory. He recently stated
that feathered wings were "the most complex appendage produced
by vertebrates and it's implausible that an animal would have
developed feathers if it did not fly." He and his co-thinkers
call into doubt the recent discoveries of feathered dinosaurs
by pointing to the considerable difficulties in interpreting the
fossil evidence.
Feduccia has discovered a fossil in China which he claims to
be the oldest known example of a bird living in the same period
as another primitive bird Archaeopteryx. His conclusion is that
"Archaeopteryx and most other early birds were a side line
of avian evolution". That is, an earlier bird-like ancestor
produced a number of side-branches, which are seen in the fossil
record as the various primitive birds -- one of which evolved
into the modern bird.
This controversy in evolutionary biology has a long history.
As early as 1860, T.H.Huxley, Charles Darwin's scientific defender,
proposed that Archaeopteryx, which had just been discovered that
year in Bavaria, was the ancestor of modern birds. This primitive
bird fossil had bird-like characteristics, such as feathers and
a wing, but also, atypically of birds, had a long bony tail and
a toothed jaw.
Huxley noted that Archaeopteryx's un-birdlike features were
similar to theropod dinosaurs and drew the conclusion that the
dinosaurs must have been ancestors of birds. He suggested that
the small forelimbs gradually lengthened and evolved into the
wings of modern day birds.
The noted English paleontologist Harry Govier Seeley disputed
Huxley's claim by proposing that the similarities between birds
and theropods were due to a common ability to walk on two legs
-- not the result of birds evolving from dinosaurs.
In 1916, Gerhard Heilmann, a Danish medical doctor and amateur
paleontologist published "The Origin of Birds" in which
he developed on Seeley's criticisms of Huxley's theory and postulated
that birds had actually evolved from an ancient reptilian ancestor.
He noted the lack of any other common characteristics between
theropod dinosaurs and birds -- other than walking on two feet.
Modern birds share a number of unique characteristics such
as feathers, toothless beaks, hollow bones, perching feet, wishbones,
deep breast bones and a stumpy tail bone. Most of these features
are associated with the birds' ability to fly. For example, hollow
bones serve to lighten the bird's skeleton and the stumpy tail
bone gives the birds' tail feathers greater maneuverability in
flight. The question that has constantly driven the various scientists
for over a century is how did the distinctly bird-like features
evolve?
The issue is complicated by further questions about the evolution
of the feather and the likely origin of flight. Charles Darwin
wrote in a letter dated 1860 to the famous botanist Asa Gray on
his inability to explain the evolution of the feather: "I
remember well the time when the thought of the eye made me cold
all over, but I have got over this stage of the complaint, and
now small trifling particulars of structure often make me very
uncomfortable. The sight of a feather in a peacock's tail, whenever
I gaze at it, makes me sick!" How the feather evolved has
perplexed scientists ever since.
Some scientists think that feathers may have first evolved
for reasons other than flight. Paleontologist Robert Bakker of
Casper College in Wyoming has suggested that a feather may have
evolved in warm-blooded dinosaurs as a form of insulation. Other
scientists have postulated that feathers may have been an adornment
for courtship display, as is commonly found in modern birds.
Two main theories have emerged as the likely origins of flight.
One is that an arborial ancestor of birds developed the ability
to glide from the trees and then evolved powered flight. The contending
hypothesis is that powered flight developed from running -- that
is, the extended forelimb gave the bird ancestor some lift, enabling
it to run faster as it ran.
In 1973, the controversy over the evolution of birds was re-ignited
in favor of the dinosaur-origin theory by John H. Ostrom, a scientist
from Yale University, who had examined the 115 million-year-old
fossil of the theropod dinosaur, Deinonychus, which inhabited
Montana. He noted a number of features shared between birds, including
Archaeopteryx, and Deinonychus and other theropod dinosaurs --
but not with other reptiles. In other words, birds and theropods
are closer in ancestry than other reptiles.
More recently discovered fossils from China, Madagascar, Spain
and Argentina also lend greater weight to a dinosaur origin. Many
bird characteristics have now been found in theropod dinosaur
fossils. Paleontologist Fernando Novas from the Argentine Museum
of Natural Science has reported a 90-million-year old dinosaur
found in Patagonia that has a shoulder and upper arm that could
be tucked under the body -- as birds do. Such a fossil may have
been a link to the evolution of the wing.
While the latest fossil finds add further weight to the dinosaur-origin
theory, the debate is not at an end. Feduccia refuses to concede
that Protarchaepteryx robusta and Caudpteryx zoui are even dinosaurs.
They could, he says, be flightless birds like ostriches and emus
which descended from more conventional flying ancestors.
Whatever the verdict on the current fossil finds, it is likely
that the 140-year-old controversy will continue for a few years
yet.
See Also:
The first image of a possible
extrasolar planet
[4 June 1998]
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