Manawatu Standard

Lasers unlock secrets of feathery ancestor

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CHINA: A technique using highpowere­d lasers to reveal hidden soft tissue alongside bones in fossils is giving scientists insight into one of the major evolutiona­ry transition­s in the history of life: small feathered dinosaurs taking flight as birds.

Scientists said yesterday they used the method on fossils of the chicken-sized, feathered, bird-like dinosaur Anchiornis, which lived in China about 160 million years ago. They found that it possessed drumstick-shaped legs, arms similar to the wings of some modern gliding and soaring birds, and a long, slender tail.

There has been a debate over whether to classify the Jurassic Period creature as a bird, considerin­g its avian features. Either way, it boasts numerous skeletal and soft tissue characteri­stics found in birds, and lived close to the time when birds diverged from their bird-like dinosaur ancestors.

Archaeopte­ryx, which lived in Germany about 150 million years ago, has long been considered the earliest-known bird.

If a person had a chance to see Anchiornis alive, the reaction might be, ‘‘That’s a weird-looking bird,’’ said University of Hong Kong paleontolo­gist Michael Pittman, who helped to lead the study, published in the journal Nature Communicat­ions.

The scientists employed a technique called laser-stimulated fluorescen­ce, or LSF, which directs high-powered lasers at the fossils in a dark room to make unseen soft tissues like skin and the shape of the muscles beneath it glow.

The study produced the first highly detailed body outline of such a feathered dinosaur, ‘‘a real landmark in our understand­ing of avian origins’’, Pittman said.

The study revealed tht Anchiornis had a shallow area of soft tissue in front of the elbow, called the propatagiu­m, which is the leading edge of bird wings and is crucial for flight. But it is unclear whether Anchiornis could have become airborne.

‘‘Some scientists believe it could glide, based on the long, robust and feathered arms - wings it has, but others disagree because its flight feathers are not well designed for flight,’’ said the study’s other co-leader, paleontolo­gist Xiaoli Wang of Linyi University in China.

‘‘We believe it probably had some kind of aerodynami­c capability.’’

Anchiornis was covered in feathers resembling those of modern birds. It had foot scales like those of a chicken. But it lacked the bony breastbone, or sternum, and short tail skeletons found in modern birds.

It had small, sharp teeth like those of the earliest birds, and may have eaten small animals like lizards. - Reuters

 ?? PHOTOS: REUTERS ?? A reconstruc­tion of the bird-like feathered dinosaur Anchiornis, based on the new body outline laser-stimulated fluorescen­ce data.
PHOTOS: REUTERS A reconstruc­tion of the bird-like feathered dinosaur Anchiornis, based on the new body outline laser-stimulated fluorescen­ce data.
 ??  ?? The wing of the bird-like feathered dinosaur Anchiornis is pictured under laserstimu­lated fluorescen­ce. The folds of skin in front of the elbow and behind the wrist, called patagia, were covered in feathers, just like in modern birds.
The wing of the bird-like feathered dinosaur Anchiornis is pictured under laserstimu­lated fluorescen­ce. The folds of skin in front of the elbow and behind the wrist, called patagia, were covered in feathers, just like in modern birds.

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