Texarkana Gazette

Stripes? Spots? Scientists have new way to know appearance of dinos

- By Amina Khan

Los Angeles Times

Scientists studying ancient fossils of a small feathered dinosaur have discovered that it had a bandit’s mask as well as a striped tail, rather like today’s raccoons.

The eye-catching plumage of Sinosaurop­teryx, described in the journal Current Biology, illuminate­s the life and behavior of these ancient animals and sheds light on the diversity of the landscapes they inhabited.

“Our results show how reconstruc­ting the color of extinct animals can inform on their ecologies beyond what may be obvious from skeletal remains alone,” the study authors wrote.

Sinosaurop­teryx was a theropod dinosaur—in the same group as its massive cousin Tyrannosau­rus, but much smaller. It lived in the early Cretaceous period, as part of what’s known as the Jehol Biota, a temperate environmen­t in northeaste­rn China that existed from roughly 131 million to 120 million years ago. This dinosaur probably grew no larger than a meter or so from snout to its very long tail, and is known for being the first dinosaur (outside of theropods’ descendant­s, living birds) to be found with feathers.

These feathers were fuzzy, primitive and lacked structure—nowhere near flight-worthy. But they showed that many dinosaurs were feathered instead of scaled, and prompted scientists to probe what color they were and why dinosaurs had feathers in the first place. Was it to show off to mates? Purely for insulation? Perhaps for camouflage?

Thanks to the melanin pigment preserved on three well-preserved Sinosaurop­teryx fossils, University of Bristol scientists were able to reconstruc­t the pattern of dark-hued plumage on the animals’ bodies. (Those areas that did not have melanin remnants were assumed to have light-colored plumage.)

They found that the animals had a “mask” of dark feathers that wrapped over the eyes, and connected over the top of the skull to more dark feathers on its back. At the base of its ringed tail, the bands were thinner and packed closely together; closer to the tip, the bands grew wider and spaced farther apart.

While the dinosaurs’ backs were covered in dark feathers, their bellies were probably white.

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