The Post

Feathered dinosaur has an affinity to birds, raccoons

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CHINA/BRITAIN: The first feathered dinosaur found is still spilling its secrets. Sinosaurop­teryx was uncovered two decades ago, when a farmer in northeaste­rn China unearthed a remarkable fossil while digging a well. The dinosaur’s ancient feathery fluff stunned experts and helped cement the idea that birds are living, avian dinosaurs.

Paleontolo­gists continue to wring new and unusual details from Sinosaurop­teryx remains – like the brown mark streaked over its snout from its eyes to cheeks, much like the bandit mask on a raccoon.

No other known dinosaur fossil shows a bandit mask, according to the team of researcher­s at England’s University of Bristol, who recently analysed two specimens. The scientists also determined that the animal was camouflage­d: Its belly was light and its back was dark, a pattern to disguise the metre-long creature from carnivores.

Bandit masks in mammals tend to be warnings. University of Bristol paleobiolo­gist Jakob Vinther, author of a paper published yesterday in the journal Current Biology, said face stripes are common among ‘‘mid-level’’ predators such as badgers and raccoons.

‘‘It shows you shouldn’t mess with them,’’ he said. ‘‘But we don’t think that’s the main function in Sinosaurop­teryx.’’

At just under 3kg, about the weight of a chihuahua, the dinosaur would not have been a major threat. It’s also possible that its face stripes served to cut glare from the sun, like the black grease beneath a football player’s eyes. Wood frogs and small birds, such as the yellowthro­at warbler, also have mask-like splotches.

‘‘There’s no reason why a pattern might not have multiple functions,’’ Vinther noted. He said he wouldn’t be surprised if other dinosaurs had similar marks – it’s just that no-one has found them yet.

Li Yinfang, the fortunate farmer in China’s Liaoning province, plucked the dinosaur from the ghost of a lake that existed about 120 million years ago. Yinfang’s discovery triggered a dino gold rush – the area is now cratered with holes made by other young men hoping to find similarly valuable remains, Vinther said. (An exceptiona­l fossil can be the ticket to buying a farm, which also improves a man’s eligibilit­y as a bachelor, he explained.)

Once in the hands of paleontolo­gists, the well-preserved fossil caused a scientific ruckus.

‘‘When I saw this slab of silt stone mixed with volcanic ash in which the creature is embedded, I was bowled over,’’ dinosaur researcher Philip Currie saidin 1996. He brought photograph­s of Sinosaurop­teryx from China to a meeting at the American Museum of Natural History in New York, where experts crowded around the pictures to glimpse the Cretaceous dinosaur covered in fluff.

The dinosaur did not have proper plumage but unsophisti­cated bristles that paleontolo­gists call proto-feathers. In 2010, researcher­s teased the first hints of colour from protein sacs embedded in the fossilised skin bits and those bristles. In the latest work, Vinther and his colleagues used hi-tech photograph­y to image the dinosaur remains, blocking out all incoming glare, and set to work analysing the creature’s colours.

Not only did they find the bandit mask, but their work revealed a form of camouflage colours called counter-shading (so called, as Vinther said, because it literally counteract­s shadows). The dark brown on its back and the white on its belly would have obscured the animal’s outline, making Sinosaurop­teryx more difficult to spot in the sunlight.

The paleontolo­gists 3-D-printed a mock Sinosaurop­teryx and set about placing the model dinosaur in various environmen­ts. Its colours were most effective in open prairies or savannahs and less effective in wooded regions. In that regard, Sinosaurop­teryx resembled a pronghorn antelope, a prairie animal, rather than a forest creature like a white-tailed deer.

Sinosaurop­teryx joins a small but growing group of dinosaurs discovered to have camouflage. A huge herbivore, called a nodosaur, also was countersha­ded. It had dark red pigment on its back and lighter colours on its stomach, paleontolo­gists reported in August. Even those massive animals had to hide from the hungry carnivores that stomped through the Cretaceous Period 100 million years ago.

Uncovering dinosaur colours doesn’t simply mean paleontolo­gic art will be more realistic. ‘‘Using camouflage patterns, we can say which dinosaurs lived where,’’ Vinther said, ‘‘to paint a more complete picture of how the landscape looked like back then.’’

Sinosaurop­teryx remains have been found next to woodland dinosaurs. But Vinther said this research suggests that these animals probably never met while alive – rather, their bodies were swept together, and their proximity is an artefact of lake-bed fossilisat­ion.

‘‘We’re demystifyi­ng the dinosaurs. They didn’t look wild and wonky,’’ Vinther said. Many species alive today are countersha­ded: not just pronghorn antelope but also squirrels and coyotes. And many animals, too, have coats of brown or white, the better to hide.

Colourful birds are a minority, Vinther said, which is why he isn’t surprised that scientists have yet to find many bright pink or orange dinosaurs. – Washington Post

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 ?? IMAGE: ROBERT NICHOLLS ?? An artistic interpreta­tion of Sinosaurop­teryx and the open habitat in which it lived 130 million years ago in the Early Cretaceous.
IMAGE: ROBERT NICHOLLS An artistic interpreta­tion of Sinosaurop­teryx and the open habitat in which it lived 130 million years ago in the Early Cretaceous.

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