Santa Fe New Mexican

Fossil reveals bird caught in amber

- By Ben Guarino The Washington Post CHEUNG CHUNG TAT

Amber hunters in Myanmar dug up a remarkably complete bird hatchling that dates to the time of the dinosaurs. The bird’s side, almost half of its body, was dipped in tree sap, which hardened around the neck bones, claws, a wing and its toothed jaws.

Scientists identified the animal as a member of the extinct group called enantiorni­thes, and published their discovery in the journal Gondwana Research this week.

The chick died young and fell into a pool of sap. It died halfway through its first feather molt, suggesting that the animal broke out of its egg just a few days before it perished. Its life began in the moist tropics beneath conifer trees. It ended near a puddle of conifer gunk, called resin, which fossilized into amber. Diggers in Myanmar, formerly known as Burma, uncovered the amber 99 million years later.

“Enantiorni­thines are close relatives to modern birds, and in general, they would have looked very similar. However, this group of birds still had teeth and claws on their wings,” said Ryan McKellar, a paleontolo­gist at Canada’s Royal Saskatchew­an Museum. This animal lived during the Cretaceous Period, which came

to a cataclysmi­c close 65.5 million years ago and took the nonbird dinosaurs with it.

The enantiorni­thes, due to their distinct hip and ankle bones, may have flown differentl­y than modern birds. But they were capable fliers. (If you are wondering whether this bird relative was more bird or winged dinosaur, well, consider it both: Birds are avian dinosaurs, after all.)

Entombed in amber were details as fine as the hatchling’s eyelid and the outer opening of its ear. The resin recorded no sign of a struggle.

“The hatchling may have been dead by the time it entered” the resin pool, McKellar said. “One of the leg bones has been dragged away from its natural position, suggesting that the corpse may have been scavenged before it was covered by the next flow of resin.”

Evidence suggests that enantiorni­thes received little in the way of parental care, unlike more doting modern birds. The ancient chicks, born on the ground, had to scamper into trees to avoid being eaten. Scampering enantiorni­thes got stuck in resin fairly frequently, McKellar said, though this fossil is far more comprehens­ive than typical specimens.

Its 99-million-year-old claws appear almost as detailed as chicken feet you’d find in a supermarke­t. The foot, presumed at first to be a lizard’s by the amber miner who found it, was covered in golden scales and just under an inch long. “The preserved skin surface allows us to observe the feet in great detail,” McKellar said.

The resin trapped one of the bird’s wings as well. Despite its young age, the animal already had brown flight feathers on its wings. McKellar said it also had “a sparse coat of fluffy pale or white feathers across most of its belly, legs, and tail.”

McKellar and his colleagues probed the fossil using several types of imaging technology, including light microscope­s and X-ray micro-CT scanning. The researcher­s discovered that the feathers on the enantiorni­thes’ wings were quite similar to modern bird feathers.

But its tail and legs were covered by what McKellar described as tufts similar to “proto-feathers” or “dino-fuzz.”

In December, McKellar and his colleagues announced they’d found a dinosaur tail trapped in amber, also excavated from a mine in Myanmar.

 ?? LIDA XING ?? Amber hunters in Myanmar dug up a remarkably complete bird hatchling that dates to the time of the dinosaurs.
LIDA XING Amber hunters in Myanmar dug up a remarkably complete bird hatchling that dates to the time of the dinosaurs.
 ??  ?? A scientific reconstruc­tion of the bird.
A scientific reconstruc­tion of the bird.

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