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Industry: Email Alert RSS FeedThe lonely bird: claims of the earliest avian fossil launch a paleontologic flap - Cover Story
Science News, August 17, 1991 by Richard Monastersky
Sankar Chatterjee should be a happy man. A well-known paleontologist, he owns finder's rights to the world's only known specimens of Protoavis -- reputed to be the oldest bird ever discovered. According to Chatterjee, this discovery pushes back the origin of feathered fliers to about the same time as the appearance of the first dinosaurs -- the late Triassic period, 225 million years ago.
Such a drastic step backward would overturn the way a generation of scientists has viewed avian evolution. "If it were true, it would be one of the most dramatic discoveries ever made relating to the origin of birds," comments ornithologist Alan Feduccia at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.
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Five years after he first found the fossils (SN: 8/16/86, p.103), Chatterjee is now launching Protoavis' formal scientific debut through publication of a detailed monograph issued in June in the PHILOSOPHICAL TRANSACTIONS OF THE ROYAL SOCIETY OF LONDON. By the unwritten rules of paleontology, that paper opens up the game to other players; any scientist can now analyze the fossils in detail and publish his or her own interpretations of the specimens.
Therein lies the rub, for most other researchers don't see a bird when they look at Protoavis. And that fact must give Chatterjee pause.
In claiming Protoavis as the oldest bird, Chatterjee threatens to dethrone one of the most widely known animals in all of paleontology -- the fossil bird Achaeopteryx. Bearing the name "ancient wing," Archaeopteryx dates to the late Jurassic period about 150 million years ago, during the middle of the dinosaur's reign on Earth.
Paleontologists uncovered the first specimen of Archaeopteryx in 1861, just two years after Charles Darwin published The Origin of Species. Since then, only five other specimens of the pheasant-sized bird have turned up, all from a quarry near Solnhofen, Germany, famous for an extremely fine-grained limestone used in lithography. The character of this unique limestones is important because it has exquisitely preserved the Archaeopteryx remains, right down to the wing feathers -- providing the proof that this animal was a bird.
Protoavis had no such luck. Chatterjee and his colleagues at Texas Tech University in Lubbock discovered the fossils of at least two individuals in West Texas mudstones, a type of rock that wouldn't preserve soft feathers. So scientists cannot tell conclusively whether Protoavis indeed wore the telltale cloak of birds.
Lacking such clear evidence, Chatterjee turns to other parts of the Protoavis fossil in making his case that the animal was a flying bird. At the crux of his argument lies the Protoavis skull, which has 23 features, that he regards as fundamentally birdlike. In particular, the creature's skull appears to lack holes that are present on the skulls of dinosaurs and related reptiles of that period. In Protoavis, these holes have merged with the eye sockets, making it similar to modern birds, says Chatterjee.
The jaw of Protoavis holds another key place in the bird arguments. Bones that attach the lower jaw to the skull permit the jaw to slide forward. What's more, a hinge between the upper jaw and the braincase allows the upper jaw to elevate, Chatterjee says. Modern birds possess both these features, but ancient reptiles had neither.
Chatterjee also reports that Protoavis had enormous eyes, a finely developed sense of hearing and a highly specialized brain--all characteristics that extend the similarity with birds.
This first monograph describes only Protoavis' skull, but Chatterjee says the rest of the skeleton shows further avian elements, such as a wishbone, a shoulder modified for flying, and a keeled sternum, which serves as an attachment point for flight muscles on modern birds. While he plans to detail these features in a future monograph, Chatterjee believes the skull alone qualifies Protoavis as the oldest known bird.
On this tissue, Chatterjee sits out on a limb, pretty much by himself. "I didn't see anything about it that looked like a bird," comments palenthologist Jacques Gauthier of the California Academy of Sciences in San Franscisco.
Gauthier, who has examined the actual Protoavis specimens, says most of the bones are poorly preserved, making it extremely difficult to identify many of the features important to Chatterjee's argument. "It's crushed, smooshed and in really terrible shape," he says.
While some of the bones appear bird-like, they also look dinosaurian and could represent a new type of therapod dinosaur, says Gauthier. "It's obvious that there's some interesting animal there," he adds.
Gauthier believes the Protoavis fossils may actually represent bones for several different kinds of animals mixed together, an opinion shared by Storrs Olson, a leading authority on fossil birds with the Smithsonian Museum of Natural History in Washington, D.C. The Protoavis bones were unarticulated, meaning they lay in a jumble when Chatterjee and his colleagues found them. Because the skeletal remains were not preserved in a lifelike pose, with each bone in the proper orientation, pieces from several different species could be mixed together. If so, that would undermine Chatterjee's claim for Protoavis, say other researchers.
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