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Categories: Paleontology: Early Mammals and Birds
Published Hot-blooded T. rex and cold-blooded Stegosaurus: Chemical clues reveal dinosaur metabolisms (via sciencedaily.com)
Paleontologists have debated whether dinosaurs were warm-blooded, like modern mammals and birds, or cold-blooded, like modern reptiles. In a new paper, scientists are unveiling a new method for studying dinosaurs' metabolic rates, using clues in their bones.
Published First Australians ate giant eggs of huge flightless birds, ancient proteins confirm (via sciencedaily.com)
Scientists settle debate surrounding species that laid eggs exploited by early Australian people around 50,000 years ago. Shell proteins point to Genyornis, which was among the 'mega-fauna' to go extinct a few thousand years after humans arrived on the continent.
Published Aerodynamic analysis causes a rethink of the biggest pterosaur (via sciencedaily.com)
Researchers shed light on the way Quetzalcoatlus would have flown, finding that the dinosaur's flying dynamics were actually very different to how it has been depicted in popular culture.
Published Discovered: 150-year-old platypus and echidna specimens that proved some mammals lay eggs (via sciencedaily.com)
Jars of tiny platypus and echidna specimens, collected in the late 1800s by the scientist William Caldwell, have been discovered in the stores of Cambridge's University Museum of Zoology.
Published Brain size determined the chances of survival among large animals, study finds (via sciencedaily.com)
Researchers have examined the mass extinction of large animals over the past tens of thousands of years and found that extinct species had, on average, much smaller brains than species that survived.
Published Humans disrupting 66-million-year-old feature of ecosystems (via sciencedaily.com)
Human-related extinctions of the largest herbivores and carnivores are disrupting what appears to be a fundamental feature of past and present ecosystems, says a new study.
Published Brains and brawn helped crows and ravens take over the world (via sciencedaily.com)
Crows and ravens have great flying ability, which allows them to gain access to new places more easily. While these skills were key to their success, new research also shows that big bodies and big brains played an important role in helping crows and ravens survive in the new climates they occupied.
Published Pterosaur discovery solves ancient feather mystery (via sciencedaily.com)
Palaeontologists have discovered remarkable new evidence that pterosaurs, the flying relatives of dinosaurs, were able to control the color of their feathers using melanin pigments.
Published Research reveals human-driven changes to distinctive foraging patterns in North Pacific Ocean (via sciencedaily.com)
The first large-scale study of its kind has uncovered more than 4,000 years' worth of distinctive foraging behavior in a species once driven to the brink of extinction.
Published Climatic variability might not drive evolutionary change as much as previously thought (via sciencedaily.com)
A new study combining records of climate change during the last 3.5 million years with fossil evidence of mammals in Africa reveals that times of erratic climate change are not followed by major upheavals in evolution.
Published Dynamic rivers contributed to Amazon's rich bird diversity (via sciencedaily.com)
One of the most contentious questions in evolutionary biology is, how did the Amazon become so rich in species? A new study focused on birds examines how the movements of rivers in the Amazon have contributed to that area's exceptional biological diversity. The researchers found that as small river systems change over time, they spur the evolution of new species. The findings also reveal previously unknown bird species in the Amazon that are only found in small areas next to these dynamic river systems, putting them at high risk.
Published Mammals put brawn before brains to survive post-dinosaur world (via sciencedaily.com)
Prehistoric mammals bulked up, rather than develop bigger brains, to boost their survival chances once dinosaurs had become extinct, research suggests.
Published How new bird species arise (via sciencedaily.com)
Much of a centuries-old debate over where and how new bird species form has now been resolved. Researchers have provided evidence that birds in mountainous areas -- where the vast majority of the planet's species live -- have left lowland habitats for higher and higher mountain elevations throughout their evolution. Millions of years of climatic fluctuations have contributed to pushing bird species upslope -- as is probably happening now.
Published Forget mammoths: These researchers are exploring bringing back the extinct Christmas Island rat (via sciencedaily.com)
Dinosaurs went extinct 65 million years ago, mammoths 4,000 years ago, and the Christmas Island Rat 119 years ago. Since becoming a popular concept in the 1990s, de-extinction efforts have focused on grand animals with mythical stature, but now a team of paleogeneticists has turned their attention to Rattus macleari, and their findings provide insights into the limitations of de-extinction across all species.
Published Early killer whales ate fish -- not other marine mammals (via sciencedaily.com)
A new study provides vital clues on when killer whales began feeding on other marine mammals.
Published Mammoths, meet the metaverse (via sciencedaily.com)
Paleontologists from La Brea Tar Pits develop a whole herd of scientifically accurate extinct animals to use in AR and VR.
Published Gradual evolution is back: Darwinian theory of gradual process explained in new research (via sciencedaily.com)
Abrupt shifts in the evolution of animals -- short periods of time when an organism rapidly changes size or form -- have long been a challenge for theorists including Darwin. Now a newly published research paper supports the idea that even these abrupt changes are underpinned by a gradual directional process of successive incremental changes, as Darwin's theory of evolution assumes.
Published Fight or flight? How birds are helping to reveal the mysteries of evolution (via sciencedaily.com)
New research uncovers the negative link between flight-worthiness and fight-worthiness in birds. Evolutionary pressure demanded that birds could either fly or arm themselves -- but not both. Furthermore, the new research suggests that developing wings and not bony spurs involved both sexual and natural selection. This insight helps us better understand how the enormous diversity of life and earth came to be.
Published Balkanatolia: The forgotten continent that sheds light on the evolution of mammals (via sciencedaily.com)
A team of geologists and palaeontologists has discovered that, some 50 million years ago, there was a low-lying continent separating Europe from Asia that they have named Balkanatolia. At the time, it was inhabited by an endemic fauna that was very different from those of Europe and Asia. Geographical changes 40 to 34 million years ago connected this continent to its two neighbors, paving the way for the replacement of European mammals by Asian mammals.
Published New fossil birds discovered near China’s Great Wall – one had a movable, sensitive 'chin' (via sciencedaily.com)
Two new species of fossil birds that lived alongside the dinosaurs have ben discovered near the Great Wall of China. One of the new species had a sensitive, movable bony appendage at the tip of its lower jaw that it might have used to find food.