Showing 20 articles starting at article 181
Categories: Paleontology: Early Mammals and Birds
Published What can a dinosaur's inner ear tell us? Just listen (via sciencedaily.com)
If paleontologists had a wish list, it would almost certainly include insights into two particular phenomena: how dinosaurs interacted with each other and how they began to fly.
Published Endangered songbird challenging assumptions about evolution (via sciencedaily.com)
New research looked at a newly discovered, endangered songbird located only in South America -- the Iberá Seedeater -- and found that this bird followed a very rare evolutionary path to come into existence at a much faster pace than the grand majority of species.
Published Mummified parrots point to trade in the ancient Atacama desert (via sciencedaily.com)
Ancient Egyptians mummified cats, dogs, ibises and other animals, but closer to home in the South American Atacama desert, parrot mummies reveal that between 1100 and 1450 CE, trade from other areas brought parrots and macaws to oasis communities, according to an international and interdisciplinary team.
Published Warriors' down bedding could ease journey to realm of the dead (via sciencedaily.com)
Feathers, an owl head and oars suggest the people in this Iron Age grave were prepared for a long journey.
Published Giant fossil's 'bird-brain' (via sciencedaily.com)
The largest flightless bird ever to live weighed in up to 600kg and had a whopping head about half a meter long - but its brain was squeezed for space. Dromornis stirtoni, the largest of the 'mihirungs' (an Aboriginal word for 'giant bird'), stood up to 3m and had a cranium wider and higher than it was long due to a powerful big beak, leading Australian palaeontologists to look inside its brain space to see how it worked.
Published Extinct Caribbean bird's closest relatives hail from Africa, South Pacific (via sciencedaily.com)
In a genetic surprise, ancient DNA shows the closest family members of an extinct bird known as the Haitian cave-rail are not in the Americas, but Africa and the South Pacific, uncovering an unexpected link between Caribbean bird life and the Old World.
Published Quartz crystals in the stomach of fossil bird complicates the mystery of its diet (via sciencedaily.com)
The fossil of a bird that lived alongside the dinosaurs was found with some sort of rocks in its stomach. Previously, researchers thought that these rocks were swallowed on purpose to help clean its stomach, like modern birds of prey do, giving a hint at its diet. But in a new study, scientists discovered that these rocks are quartz crystals that likely formed after the bird died -- its diet is still a mystery.
Published Genetic evolution doesn't always take millions of years (via sciencedaily.com)
Love them or hate them, there's no doubt the European Starling is a wildly successful bird. A new study examines this non-native species from the inside out to learn what exactly happened at the genetic level as the starling population exploded across North America?
Published Fossil pigments shed new light on vertebrate evolution (via sciencedaily.com)
This new paper shows that melanin is more than just something that gives colour to the body. It played an important role in the evolution of warm-blooded animals and helped defined what birds and mammals look like today. By studying where melanin occurs in the body in fossils and modern animals researchers have produced the first model for how melanin has evolved over the last 500 million years.
Published Unusual sex chromosomes of platypus, emu and pekin duck (via sciencedaily.com)
Three studies uncovered the unusual sex chromosomes of platypus, emu and Pekin duck. Platypus have five pairs of sex chromosomes forming an unusual chain shape, while the sex chromosomes of emu and duck are not as different between sexes as those of human.
Published Why crocodiles have changed so little since the age of the dinosaurs (via sciencedaily.com)
New research explains how a 'stop-start' pattern of evolution, governed by environmental change, could explain why crocodiles have changed so little since the age of the dinosaurs.
Published New dinosaur showed descendants how to dress to impress (via sciencedaily.com)
Scientists have found the most elaborately dressed-to-impress dinosaur ever described and say it sheds new light on how birds such as peacocks inherited their ability to show off.
Published Archaeopteryx fossil provides insights into the origins of flight (via sciencedaily.com)
Molting is thought to be unorganized in the first feathered dinosaurs because they had yet to evolve flight, so determining how molting evolved can lead to better understanding of flight origins. Recently researchers discovered that the earliest record of feather molting from the famous early fossil bird Archaeopteryx found in southern Germany in rocks that used to be tropical lagoons ~150 million years ago.
Published Flightless bird species at risk of extinction (via sciencedaily.com)
Bird species that have lost the ability to fly through evolution have become extinct more often than birds that have retained their ability to fly, according to new research.
Published Ancient blanket made with 11,500 turkey feathers (via sciencedaily.com)
New research sheds light on the production of an 800-year-old turkey feather blanket and explores the economic and cultural aspects of raising turkeys to supply feathers in the ancient Southwest.
Published Henderson island fossils reveal new Polynesian sandpiper species (via sciencedaily.com)
Fossil bones collected in the early 1990s on Henderson Island, part of the Pitcairn Group, have revealed a new species of Polynesian sandpiper. The Henderson Sandpiper, a small wading bird that has been extinct for centuries, is formally named Prosobonia sauli after Cook Islands-based ornithologist and conservationist Edward K Saul.
Published New genome alignment tool empowers large-scale studies of vertebrate evolution (via sciencedaily.com) Original source
Three new articles present major advances in understanding the evolution of birds and mammals, made possible by new methods for comparing the genomes of hundreds of species. Researchers developed a powerful new genome alignment method that has made the new studies possible, including the largest genome alignment ever achieved of more than 600 vertebrate genomes.
Published Giant lizards learnt to fly over millions of years (via sciencedaily.com) Original source
Most detailed every study into how animals evolve to better suit their environments shows that pterosaurs become more efficient at flying over millions of years before going extinct with the dinosaurs.