JavaScript and Cookies are required to view this site. Please enable both in your browser settings.
Primitive Birds Shared Dinosaurs' Fate

Primitive Birds Shared Dinosaurs' Fate 

Current Rating:

Unlimited Views No Ads No Algorithms Lifetime Account

Documenting Reality

Community Forum · Est. 2006

Join Now
Thread Tools
  #1  
09-21-2011, 10:27 AM
Lee's Avatar
Lee
Offline:
All Seeing Eye
Poster Rank:228
Homosapien
Join Date: Nov 2009
Posts: 6,221
 
Mentioned: 1 Post(s)
Quoted: 19 Post(s)
Activity Longevity
0/20 17/20
Today Posts
0/11 sssss6221
Primitive Birds Shared Dinosaurs' Fate

A new study puts an end to the longstanding debate about how archaic birds went extinct, suggesting they were virtually wiped out by the same meteorite impact that put an end to dinosaurs 65 million years ago.

Name:  110919151315-large.jpg
Views: 124
Size:  5.6 KB
The bones are from the 17 species of Cretaceous birds which went extinct around the time of the dinosaurs. The two on the far left are foot bones and the rest are shoulder bones. (Credit: Courtesy Yale University)


For decades, scientists have debated whether birds from the Cretaceous period -- which are very different from today's modern bird species -- died out slowly or were killed suddenly by the Chicxulub meteorite. The uncertainty was due in part to the fact that very few fossil birds from the end of this era have been discovered.

Now a team of paleontologists led by Yale researcher Nicholas Longrich has provided clear evidence that many primitive bird species survived right up until the time of the meteorite impact. They identified and dated a large collection of bird fossils representing a range of different species, many of which were alive within 300,000 years of the impact.

"This proves that these species went extinct very abruptly, in terms of geological time scales," said Longrich. The study appears the week of Sept. 19 in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

The team examined a large collection of about two dozen bird fossils discovered in North America -- representing a wide range of the species that existed during the Cretaceous -- from the collections of Yale's Peabody Museum of Natural History, the American Museum of Natural History, the University of California Museum of Paleontology, and the Royal Saskatchewan Museum. Fossil birds from the Cretaceous are extremely rare, Longrich said, because bird bones are so light and fragile that they are easily damaged or swept away in streams.

"The birds that had been discovered hadn't really been studied in a rigorous way," Longrich said. "We took a much more detailed look at the relationships between these bones and these birds than anyone had done before."

Longrich believes a small fraction of the Cretaceous bird species survived the impact, giving rise to today's birds. The birds he examined showed much more diversity than had yet been seen in birds from the late Cretaceous, ranging in size from that of a starling up to a small goose. Some had long beaks full of teeth.

Yet modern birds are very different from those that existed during the late Cretaceous, Longrich said. For instance, today's birds have developed a much wider range of specialized features and behaviors, from penguins to hummingbirds to flamingoes, while the primitive birds would have occupied a narrower range of ecological niches.

"The basic bird design was in place, but all of the specialized features developed after the mass extinction, when birds sort of re-evolved with all the diversity they display today," Longrich said. "It's similar to what happened with mammals after the age of the dinosaurs."

Longrich adds that this study is not the first to suggest that archaic birds went extinct abruptly. "There's been growing evidence that these birds were wiped out at the same time as the dinosaurs," Longrich said. "But this new evidence effectively closes the book on the debate."

Other authors of the paper include Tim Tokaryk (Royal Saskatchewan Museum) and Daniel Field (Yale University).
3 Users Say Thank You For This Post:
Arkoquisa, Faline, kellyhound
▼ PROMO FROM DOCUMENTING REALITY
Cheaper than your OnlyFans addiction
Join Now
Hidden for upgraded members.
  #2  
09-21-2011, 10:48 AM
Faline's Avatar
Faline
Offline:
My Rank: MAJOR
Poster Rank:11
Join Date: Jun 2009
Posts: 93,130
Contributions: 226
 
Mentioned: 91 Post(s)
Quoted: 2009 Post(s)
Activity Longevity
0/20 18/20
Today Posts
0/11 ssss93130
Re: Primitive Birds Shared Dinosaurs' Fate

  #3  
09-21-2011, 03:13 PM
kellyhound's Avatar
kellyhound
Online
✝Mudderator from Hell✝
Poster Rank:10
e-mail
Join Date: Oct 2006
Posts: 94,870
Contributions: 817
 
Mentioned: 471 Post(s)
Quoted: 10062 Post(s)
Activity Longevity
18/20 20/20
Today Posts
11/11 ssss94870
Re: Primitive Birds Shared Dinosaurs' Fate

Without the meteorite impact we would have a complete arrange of "weird" animals walking/flying/swimming around nowadays.
This User Says Thank You For This Post:
juliemd
  #4  
09-22-2011, 11:47 PM
BryanXavier's Avatar
BryanXavier
Offline:
Fiscally Irresponsible
Poster Rank:103
Male
Join Date: Dec 2009
Posts: 15,944
Contributions: 1
 
Mentioned: 49 Post(s)
Quoted: 6753 Post(s)
Activity Longevity
0/20 17/20
Today Posts
0/11 ssss15944
Re: Primitive Birds Shared Dinosaurs' Fate

I never thought about that. Very true. I wonder if humans would have survived without the irradication of 90% (or whatever) of the other species.
  #5  
10-02-2011, 05:39 AM
**butterflylove**'s Avatar
Australia Mate!
Poster Rank:338
I have a map of Tasmania
Join Date: Aug 2009
Posts: 3,720
 
Mentioned: 1 Post(s)
Quoted: 86 Post(s)
Activity Longevity
0/20 17/20
Today Posts
0/11 sssss3720
Re: Primitive Birds Shared Dinosaurs' Fate



Powered by vBulletin Copyright 2000-2010 Jelsoft Enterprises Limited.

Search Engine Friendly URLs by vBSEO