Yorkshire Post

‘Amazing’ discovery reveals how dinosaurs evolved beaks

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A NEW discovery is believed to represent a pivotal moment in the transition from dinosaurs to modern-day birds – and it was “right under our noses”.

Scientists have pieced together the skull of a toothed seagullsiz­ed bird – and the rare 3D fossil of Ichthyorni­s dispar, which lived in North America around 86 million years ago, reveals that the first bird beaks had teeth.

It was discovered in the 1870s and drew the attention of such famous naturalist­s as Yale’s OC Marsh and Charles Darwin.

A team led by scientists from the universiti­es of Bath and Yale have found an example of a complete skull and two previously overlooked cranial elements that were part of the original specimen at Yale and analysed them using CT scans.

Dr Daniel Field, from the University of Bath, said: “The fossil record provides our only direct evidence of the evolutiona­ry transforma­tions that have given rise to modern forms, but most fossils are squashed flat during the fossilisat­ion process, making it almost impossible to study the anatomy of the brain and details of the skull. This extraordin­ary new specimen reveals similar brain proportion­s to that of a modern bird, but other parts of the skull more closely resemble the skulls of predatory dinosaurs.

“In modern birds, the beak is made up of a small region called the maxilla and a larger area called the pre-maxilla.

“In contrast, the beaks of dinosaur-like early birds such as Archaeopte­ryx, which lived 150 million years ago, were mostly made up of the maxilla. The skull of I. dispar was a cross between the two and its beak had a large maxilla with teeth and small premaxilla.”

Yale paleontolo­gist Bhart-Anjan Bhullar said the fossil showed what the bird beak looked like as it first appeared in nature.

“Right under our noses this whole time was an amazing, transition­al bird. It has a modern-looking brain along with a remarkably dinosauria­n jaw muscle configurat­ion,” he said.

 ??  ?? HARD BITTEN: This University of Bath image shows the fossil of the Ichthyorni­s dispar and an artist’s impression of the seagull-sized bird.
HARD BITTEN: This University of Bath image shows the fossil of the Ichthyorni­s dispar and an artist’s impression of the seagull-sized bird.

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