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Feathery Velociraptor

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(@erika-the-ocelot)
Posts: 1037
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www.livescience.com/anima...thers.html

Quote:


Tiny bumps on the fossilized arm bone of a Velociraptor specimen show that the carnivorous dinosaurmade infamous in the movie "Jurassic Park"had feathers.

The finding, detailed in the Sept. 21 issue of the journal Science, confirms what scientists have long suspected about the creature as fossils of some of its close relatives bear imprints of feathers.

The researchers believe the bumps on the arm bone are remnants of quill knobs, places where the quills of secondary feathersimportant for flight in many modern birdswere anchored to the bone.

"Finding quill knobs on Velociraptor means that it definitely had feathers," said study team member Alan Turner, a paleontology graduate student at the American Museum of Natural History and at Columbia University in New York. "This is something we'd long suspected, but no one had been able to prove."

Not for all birds

Quill knobs are most evident in modern birds that are strong flyers, such as falcons and hawks. Birds that have lost the ability to fly or that primarily soar, like broad-winged albatrosses, typically lack quill knobs.

While studying the forearm of a Velociraptor specimen unearthed in Mongolia in 1998, the researchers noticed six regularly spaced indentations in the fossilized bone that appeared remarkably similar to the quill knobs of modern birds.

In modern birds, secondary feathers are connected to the forearm by way of ligaments. When the feathers move, they place stress on the bone. The bones respond to the tug of the feathers by developing these little bumps, Turner explained. The quill knobs are a side effect of how the feathers anchor.

Velociraptor lived during the late Cretaceous Period about 85 million years ago and belonged to a group of agile, bipedal dinosaurs called Dromaesoaurs that were closely related to birds. It was roughly the size of a turkey and weighed about 30 pounds.

A prehistoric turkey

Despite having feathers, Velociraptor could not fly or even glide, Turner said.

Even though it had really long arms compared to most carnivorous dinosaurs, theyre not long enough compared to the rest of its body, Turner told LiveScience.

The researchers suggest that an ancestor of Velociraptor might have lost the ability to fly but retained its feathers anyway. The feathers might also have been used for display, to shield nests, for temperature control or to help the dinosaur maneuver while running.

The new finding is just the latest example of how remarkably alike modern day birds and their closely related dinosaur ancestors were, said study team member Mark Norell, a curator in the AMNHs Division of Paleontology.

Both have wishbones, brooded their nests, possess hollow bones and were covered in feathers, Norell said. "If animals like Velociraptor were alive today our first impression would be that they were just very unusual looking birds.


Interesting to see that modern birds aren't really all that different after all.

 
(@darkest-light)
Posts: 1376
Noble Member
 

::Cries as his dreams are ruined every day he reads stuff like this::

-.- I gotta get on the ball, I could have been the one to discover that. Its fascinating, yes. Stupid grad school prices kill me though -.-... One day >O!

 
(@spiner-storm)
Posts: 2016
Noble Member
 

This has put into my head the most awesome idea of raptors trying to fly.

It involves feathers, lots of glue, plenty of flapping, and for some reason, maple syrup.

 
(@darkest-light)
Posts: 1376
Noble Member
 

Why flap.

Just make them run really fast off clIffs and hope for gliding first :O.

 
(@chibibecca_1722585688)
Posts: 3291
Famed Member
 

Quote:


Just make them run really fast off clIffs and hope for gliding first :O.


perhaps we'll see evolution happen really quickly in the process!

anyone remember the fake fossil that they got all hyped up about without running proper tests on it? i hope it doesn't happen again, dissappoints the poor scientists.

 
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