The Munich specimen of Archaeopteryx – distinct from the Daiting specimen? ESRF / Pascal Goetgheluck
A new species of Archaeopteryx, the famous 鈥渇irst bird鈥, has been identified. The discovery supports the idea that Archaeopteryx really is a transitional species between dinosaurs and their bird descendants, and not an evolutionary dead end as has been suggested.
Archaeopteryx was first recognised as a species in the 1860s. It was immediately seized on as evidence for Darwin鈥檚 theory of evolution, because it appeared to be a bird with dinosaur-like traits. It had wings and feathers, but teeth instead of a beak. The obvious implication was that Archaeopteryx was a transitional fossil, showing how birds evolved from dinosaur ancestors.
It was about the size of a raven and may have had black feathers. It鈥檚 been suggested that it only flew in short bursts like a pheasant, and hunted at night.
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However, over the last decade聽its position in the evolutionary tree of birds has been called into question, following the discovery of similar dino-birds in China. A 2011 study built a family tree and concluded that Archaeopteryx was a dinosaur, not a bird.
Martin Kundr谩t at the University of Pavol Jozef 艩af谩rik in Slovakia and his colleagues have now studied a hitherto-unexamined Archaeopteryx fossil.
Phantom fossil
It was found in the early 1990s, apparently in a quarry near Daiting, Germany, and ended up with a private collector. For years it remained unknown and was nicknamed 鈥渢he Phantom鈥, until in 2009 palaeontologist Raimund Albersd枚rfer bought it. It is now on long-term loan to the Bavarian State Collection of Paleontology and Geology in Munich.
The fossil contains most of the skull, plus parts of the shoulders and left wing. It is encased in rock and has been squashed, but Kundr谩t scanned it using high-powered X-rays. 鈥淲e can see every preserved bone,鈥 says Kundr谩t. 鈥淣ot only that, we can see these bones from inside.鈥
The team found subtle differences in the bones and teeth not seen in the other known fossils of聽Archaeopteryx. Kundraat鈥檚 team has put the specimen in a new species, Archaeopteryx albersdoerferi.
Some of the bones are hollow, which makes them lighter. Modern birds have similar bones to help them fly, implying the species could fly.
Early bird
When the team built a new family tree of birds and related dinosaurs, it placed the new species of Archaeopteryx at the base of the bird (or avian) line. 鈥淚t鈥檚 in an important position to tell us about the early evolution of avian dinosaurs,鈥 says Kundr谩t.
鈥淚t looks more and more likely that Archaeopteryx really is somewhere on the lineage towards recent birds,鈥 says Oliver Rauhut of the Bavarian State Collection of Paleontology and Geology in Germany. 鈥淚t鈥檚 very unlikely that it is an ancestor to later birds,鈥 he says, because the odds are against a direct ancestor being fossilised, but 鈥渋t gives us a good idea what a very early bird might have looked like鈥.
Flight arose 鈥減robably three times鈥 and maybe more among bird-like dinosaurs, says Rauhut. He points to Microraptor, a dinosaur with flight feathers on its legs as well as its wings that probably glided. 鈥淚t had nothing to do with the origin of birds.鈥 Another dinosaur, Yi qi, had membranous wings like those of a bat.
Historical Biology
Read more: Lost treasures: The Maxberg Archaeopteryx
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