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New Fossil a Dinosaur of Another Feather

Posted on: Monday, 20 March 2006, 06:00 CST

By Matt Crenson

NEW YORK -- A 150 million-year-old fossil from southern Germany has paleontologists ruffled over how feathers arose in the line of dinosaurs that eventually produced birds.

The fossil is a juvenile carnivorous dinosaur about 2 feet long that paleontologists have named Juravenator for the Jura mountains in southern Germany where it was found. It would have looked similar in life to the fleet-footed predators that menaced a young girl on the beach during the opening scene of "The Lost World," the second Jurassic Park movie.

The fossil's exceptionally well-preserved bone structure clearly puts it among feathered kin on the dinosaur family tree. Because all of its close relatives are feathered, paleontologists would expect Juravenator to follow suit.

A small patch of skin on Juravenator's tail shows no sign of feathers, though, and the skin doesn't have the follicles typical of feathered dinosaurs, said Luis Chiappe, director of the Dinosaur Institute at the Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County. "It has a typical scaly dinosaurian skin," Chiappe said.

He and Ursula B. Gohlich of the University of Munich describe the fossil in Thursday's issue of the journal Nature. The paleontologists believe Juravenator's closest known relative may have been a fully feathered dinosaur from China, Sinosauropterix.

There are a number of possible explanations for Juravenator's nakedness. Feathers could have been lost on the evolutionary line leading to Juravenator after arising in an ancestor to both it and its feathered relatives. Feathers also could have evolved more than once in dinosaurs, cropping up in sister species at different times and places. It is possible, too, that this particular fossil of Juravenator, which appears to be a juvenile, grew feathers only as an adult or lost its feathers for part of the year.

There is another possibility as well, said Mark Norell, curator of paleontology at the American Museum of Natural History: Juravenator may have had feathers which simply failed to fossilize. "Feathers are really just difficult things to preserve," Norell said.

To support his hypothesis he pointed out that several fossils of the oldest known bird, archaeopteryx, lack feathers.


Source: Cincinnati Post

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