Archaeopteryx (from Ancient Greek ἀρχαῖος
archaios meaning 'ancient' and πτέρυξ pteryx
meaning 'feather' or 'wing'; pronounced "ar-kee-OP-ter-iks" [ɑː(ɹ)kiˈɒptəɹɪks]) is the earliest and most primitive bird known. It lived in the
late Jurassic Period around 155–150 million years ago
in what is now southern Germany. In German,
Archaeopteryx is also known as the Urvogel, a word meaning "original bird" or "first
bird". Although the name originated in Germany, it is also used in English-speaking
countries.
At the time Archaeopteryx lived, Europe was an archipelago of islands in a shallow warm
tropical sea, much closer to the equator than it is now. Archaeopteryx had
feathers and wings, but it also had teeth and a skeleton similar to a small carnivorous dinosaur; therefore, it had both bird and theropod dinosaur features. Similar in size and shape to a European
Magpie, it bore broad, rounded wings and a long tail. Archaeopteryx could grow to about half a metre (1.6 ft)
in length. Its feathers resembled the flight feathers of modern birds, suggesting not only capacity for flight but also homeothermy. Otherwise, its features were
reptilian, with jaws lined with sharp teeth, three 'fingers' ending in curved claws and a long bony tail. These features, which are consistent with theropod
dinosaurs, made Archaeopteryx the first clear candidate for a transitional
fossil. The first complete specimen was announced in 1862, only two years after Charles
Darwin published The Origin of Species, and became a key piece of
evidence in debate over evolution.[1][2][3]
The eleven fossils currently classified as Archaeopteryx are the oldest evidence of feathers on the planet and the only
ones dated from Jurassic times. Furthermore, their advanced nature and placement suggest their origins must have been even
earlier.[4] Most experts regard all the remains
that have been discovered as belonging to a single species, though this is still debated.
Description
Eight specimens compared to a human foot in scale
Archaeopteryx was a primitive bird that lived during the Kimmeridgian stage of the Jurassic
Period, around 155–150 million years ago.[5]
The only specimens of Archaeopteryx that have been discovered come from the area that is now Germany.[5]
Archaeopteryx was roughly the size of a medium-sized modern-day bird, with broad wings that were rounded at the ends
and a long tail compared to its body length. In all, Archaeopteryx could reach up to 500 millimetres (1.6 feet) in body length. Archaeopteryx
feathers, although less documented than its other features, were similar in structure and design to modern-day bird
feathers.[5] However, despite the presence of
numerous avian features,[6] Archaeopteryx
had many theropod dinosaur characteristics. Unlike modern birds, Archaeopteryx had
small teeth[5] as well as a long bony tail,
features which Archaeopteryx shared with other dinosaurs of the time.[7]
Because it displays a number of features common to both birds and dinosaurs, Archaeopteryx has often been considered a
link between them—possibly the first bird in its change from a land dweller to a bird.[5] In the 1970s, John Ostrom, following
T. H. Huxley's lead in 1868, argued that birds evolved from theropod dinosaurs and
Archaeopteryx was a critical piece of evidence for this argument; it preserves a number of avian features, such as a
wishbone, flight feathers, wings and a partially reversed first toe, and a number of dinosaur and theropod features. For
instance, it has a long ascending process of the ankle bone, interdental plates, an obturator process of the
ischium, and long chevrons in the tail. In particular, Ostrom found that
Archaeopteryx was remarkably similar to the theropod family Dromaeosauridae.[8][9][10][11][12][13][14][15][16][17][18][19]
The first remains of Archaeopteryx were discovered just two years after Charles
Darwin published The Origin of Species in 1862. Archaeopteryx
seemed to confirm Darwin's theories and has since become a key piece of evidence in the origin
of birds, transitional fossils debate and the confirmation of
evolution. Indeed, further research on dinosaurs from the Gobi
Desert and China has since provided more evidence of a link between Archaeopteryx
and the dinosaurs, such as the Chinese feathered dinosaurs. Archaeopteryx is
close to the ancestry of modern birds, and it shows most of the features one would expect in an ancestral bird. However, it may
not be the direct ancestor of living birds, and it is uncertain how much evolutionary divergence was already present among other
birds at the time.
Paleobiology
Plumage
Fossilized
Archaeopteryx feather.
Specimens of Archaeopteryx were most notable for their well-developed flight
feathers. They were markedly asymmetrical and showed the structure of flight feathers in modern birds, with vanes given
stability by a barb-barbule-barbicel arrangement. The
tail feathers were less asymmetrical, again in line with the situation in modern birds and also had firm vanes. The
thumb, however, did not yet bear a separately movable tuft of stiff
feathers.
The body plumage of Archaeopteryx is less well documented and has only been properly researched in the well-preserved
Berlin specimen. Thus, as more than one species seems to be involved, the research into the Berlin specimen's feathers does not
necessarily hold true for the rest of the species of Archaeopteryx. In the Berlin specimen, there are "trousers" of
well-developed feathers on the legs; some of these feathers seem to have a basic contour feather structure but are somewhat
decomposed (they lack barbicels as in ratites),[20] but in part they are firm and thus
capable of supporting flight.[21]
There was a patch of pennaceous feathers running along the back which was quite
similar to the contour feathers of the body plumage of modern birds in being symmetrical and firm, though not as stiff as the
flight-related feathers. Apart from that, the feather traces in the Berlin specimen are limited to a sort of
"proto-down" not dissimilar to that found in the dinosaur Sinosauropteryx, being decomposed and fluffy, and possibly even appeared more like fur than like
feathers in life (though not in their microscopic structure). These occur on the remainder of the body, as far as such structures
are both preserved and not obliterated by preparation, and the lower neck.[20]
However, there is no indication of feathering on the upper neck and head. While these may conceivably have been nude as in
many closely related feathered dinosaurs for which good specimens are available, this may still be an artifact of preservation.
It appears that most Archaeopteryx specimens became embedded in anoxic sediment
after drifting some time on their back in the sea — the head and neck and the tail are generally bent downwards, which suggests
that the specimens had just started to rot when they were embedded, with tendons and muscle relaxing so that the characteristic
shape of the fossil specimens was achieved. This would mean that the skin was already softened and loose, which is bolstered by
the fact that in some specimens the flight feathers were starting to detach at the point of embedding in the sediment. So it is
hypothesized that the pertinent specimens moved along the sea bed in shallow water for some time before burial, the head and
upper neck feathers sloughing off, while the more firmly attached tail feathers remained.[22]
Flight
Full view of a model of
Archaeopteryx lithographica.
As in the wings of modern birds, the flight feathers of Archaeopteryx were highly asymmetrical and the tail feathers
were rather broad. This implies that the wings and tail were used for lift generation. However, it is unclear whether
Archaeopteryx was simply a glider or capable of flapping flight. The lack of a bony breastbone suggests that Archaeopteryx was not a very strong flier, but flight muscles might have
attached to the thick, boomerang-shaped wishbone, the platelike coracoids, or perhaps to a
cartilaginous sternum. The sideways orientation of the
glenoid (shoulder) joint between scapula, coracoid and
humerus—instead of the dorsally angled arrangement found in modern birds—suggests that
Archaeopteryx was unable to lift its wings above its back, a requirement for the upstroke found in modern flapping flight.
Thus, it seems likely that Archaeopteryx was indeed unable to use flapping flight as modern birds do, but it may well have
utilized a downstroke-only flap-assisted gliding technique.[23]
Archaeopteryx wings were relatively large, which would have resulted in a low stall speed and reduced turning radius. The short and rounded shape of the wings would have increased drag, but could also have
improved Archaeopteryx' ability to fly through cluttered environments such as trees and brush (similar wing shapes are
seen in birds which fly through trees and brush, such as crows and pheasants). The presence of "hind wings", asymmetrical flight
feathers stemming from the legs similar to those seen in dromaeosaurids such as Microraptor, would also have added to the aerial mobility of Archaeopteryx. The first detailed
study of the hind wings by Longrich in 2006 suggested that the structures formed up to 12% of the total airfoil. This would have reduced stall speed by up to 6% and turning radius by up to 12%.[21]
In 2004, scientists analyzing a detailed CT scan of Archaeopteryx'
braincase concluded that its brain was significantly larger than that of most dinosaurs,
indicating that it possessed the brain size necessary for flying. The overall brain anatomy was reconstructed using the scan. The
reconstruction showed that the regions associated with vision took up nearly one-third of the brain. Other well-developed areas
involved hearing and muscle coordination.[24]
The skull scan also revealed the structure of the inner ear. The structure more closely resembles that of modern birds than the
inner ear of reptiles. These characteristics taken together suggest that Archaeopteryx had the keen sense of hearing,
balance, spatial perception and coordination needed to fly.[25]
Archaeopteryx continues to play an important part in scientific debates about the origin and evolution of birds. Some
scientists see it as a semi-arboreal climbing animal, following the idea that birds evolved from tree-dwelling gliders (the
"trees down" hypothesis for the evolution of flight proposed by O.C. Marsh). Other
scientists see Archaeopteryx as running quickly along the ground, supporting the idea that birds evolved flight by running
(the "ground up" hypothesis proposed by Samuel Wendell Williston). Still others
suggest that Archaeopteryx might have been at home both in the trees and on the ground, like modern crows, and this latter
view is what today is considered best-supported by morphological characters. Altogether, it appears that the species was not
particularly specialized for running on the ground or for perching. Considering the current knowledge of flight-related
morphology, a scenario outlined by Elżanowski in 2002, namely that Archaeopteryx used its wings mainly to escape
predators by glides punctuated with shallow downstrokes to reach successively higher perches,
and alternatively to cover longer distances by (mainly) gliding down from cliffs or treetops, appears quite reasonable.[22]
Paleoecology
The richness and diversity of the Solnhofen limestones in which all specimens of
Archaeopteryx have been found have shed light on an ancient Jurassic Bavaria strikingly different from the present day.
The latitude was similar to Florida, though the climate was likely to have been drier as
evidenced by fossils of plants with adaptations for arid conditions and lack of terrestrial sediments characteristic of rivers.
Evidence of plants, though scarce, include cycads and conifers while animals found include a large
number of insects, small lizards, pterosaurs and Compsognathus.[26]
The excellent preservation of Archaeopteryx fossils and other terrestrial fossils found at Solnhofen indicates that they did not travel far before becoming preserved.[27] The Archaeopteryx specimens found are likely therefore to have lived on
the low islands surrounding the Solnhofen lagoon rather than been corpses that drifted in from further away. Archaeopteryx
skeletons are considerably less numerous in the deposits of Solnhofen than those of pterosaurs such as Rhamphorhynchus, the group which dominated the niche currently occupied by seabirds, yet are common enough that it is
unlikely that the specimens found are vagrants from the larger islands 50 km (31
miles) to the north.[28]
The islands that surrounded the Solnhofen lagoon were low lying, semi-arid and
sub-tropical with a long dry season and little rain.[29] The flora of these islands
was adapted to these dry conditions and consisted mostly of low (3 m [10 ft]) shrubs.[28] Contrary to reconstructions of Archaeopteryx climbing large trees,
these seem to have been mostly absent from the islands; few trunks have been found in the sediments and fossilised tree
pollen is also absent.
The lifestyle of Archaeopteryx is difficult to reconstruct and there are several theories regarding it. Some
researchers suggest that it was primarily adapted to life on the ground,[30] while other researchers suggest that it was principally arboreal. The absence of trees does not
preclude Archaeopteryx from an arboreal lifestyle; several species of extant bird live exclusively in low shrubs. Various
aspects of the morphology of Archaeopteryx point to either an arboreal or ground existence, the length of its legs, the
elongation in its feet; and some authorities consider it likely to have been a generalist capable of feeding in both shrubs, open
ground and even alongside the shores of the lagoon.[28] It most likely hunted small prey, seizing it with its jaws if it was small enough or with its
claws if it was larger.
History of discovery
Timeline of
Archaeopteryx discoveries. (Click to enlarge)
Over the years, ten body fossil specimens of Archaeopteryx and a feather that may belong to it have been found. All of
the fossils come from the limestone deposits, quarried for centuries, near Solnhofen, Germany.[31][26]
The initial discovery, a single feather, was unearthed in 1860 and described a year later by Christian Erich Hermann von Meyer. It is currently located at the Humbolt Museum für Naturkunde in Berlin. This is generally
assigned to Archaeopteryx and was the initial holotype, but whether it actually is a
feather of this species or another, as yet undiscovered, proto-bird is unknown. There are some indications it is indeed not from
the same animal as most of the skeletons (the "typical" A. lithographica).[32]
Soon after, the first skeleton, known as the London Specimen (BMNH 37001) was unearthed in 1861 near Langenaltheim, Germany and given to a local physician Karl Häberlein in return for medical services. He
then sold it to the British Museum of Natural History in London, where it
remains.[26] Missing most of its head and
neck, it was described in 1863 by Richard Owen as Archaeopteryx macrura, who assumed
it did not belong to the same species as the feather. In a subsequent edition of his Origin of Species (chap. 10, pp.335–336), Charles
Darwin acclaimed Owen's discovery as linking lizard-like reptiles with modern birds.
The Greek term "pteryx" (πτερυξ) primarily means "wing", but can also designate merely
"feather". Von Meyer suggested this in his description. At first he referred to a single feather which appeared like a modern
bird's remex (wing feather), but he had heard of and been shown a rough sketch of the
London specimen, to which he referred as a "Skelet eines mit Federn bedeckten Thiers" ("skeleton of an animal covered in
feathers"). In German, this ambiguity is resolved by the term Schwinge which does not necessarily mean a wing used for
flying. Urschwinge was the favored translation of Archaeopteryx among German scholars in the late 19th century. In
English, "ancient pinion" offers a rough approximation.
The London
Archaeopteryx, 1863, detail: note the feathers
The Berlin
Archaeopteryx, 1881
Since then nine specimens have been recovered:
The Berlin Specimen (HMN 1880) was discovered in 1876 or 1877 on the Blumenberg near Eichstätt, Germany, by Jakob Niemeyer. He exchanged this precious fossil for a
cow, with Johann Dörr. Placed on sale in 1881, with potential buyers including O.C.
Marsh of Yale University's Peabody Museum, it was bought by the Humbolt Museum für Naturkunde, where it is now displayed.
The transaction was financed by Ernst Werner von Siemens, founder of the
famous company that bears his name.[26] Described in 1884 by Wilhelm Dames, it is the most
complete specimen, and the first with a complete head. Once classified as a new species, A. siemensii, a recent evaluation
supports the A. siemensii species definition.[22]
Composed of a torso, the Maxberg Specimen (S5) was discovered in 1956 or 1958 near Langenaltheim and described in 1959
by Heller. It is currently missing, though it was once exhibited at the Maxberg Museum in
Solnhofen. It belonged to Eduard Opitsch, who loaned it to the museum. After his death in
1991, the specimen was discovered to be missing and may have been stolen or sold. The specimen is missing its head and tail,
although the rest of the skeleton is mostly intact.
The Haarlem Specimen (TM 6428, also known as the Teyler Specimen) was discovered in 1855 near Riedenburg, Germany and described as a Pterodactylus crassipes
in 1875 by von Meyer. It was reclassified in 1970 by John Ostrom and is currently located at
the Teyler Museum in Haarlem, the Netherlands. It was
the very first specimen, despite the classification error. It is also one of the least complete specimens, consisting mostly of
limb bones and isolated cervical vertebrae and ribs.
The Eichstätt Specimen (JM 2257) was discovered in 1951 or 1955 near Workerszell, Germany and described by
Peter Wellnhofer in 1974. Currently located at the Jura
Museum in Eichstätt, Germany, it is the smallest specimen and has the second best head.
It is possibly a separate genus (Jurapteryx recurva) or species (A. recurva).
The Solnhofen Specimen (BSP 1999) was discovered in the 1960s near Eichstätt,
Germany and described in 1988 by Wellnhofer. Currently located at the Bürgermeister-Müller-Museum in Solnhofen, it was originally classified as
Compsognathus by an amateur collector. It is the largest specimen known and may
belong to a separate genus and species, Wellnhoferia grandis. It is missing only
portions of the neck, tail, backbone, and head.
The Munich Specimen (S6, formerly known as the Solnhofen-Aktien-Verein Specimen) was discovered in 1991 near
Langenaltheim and described in 1993 by Wellnhofer. It is currently located at the Paläontologische Museum München in Munich. What was
initially believed to be a bony sternum turned out to be part of the coracoid,[33] but a
cartilaginous sternum may have been present. Only the front of its face is missing. It may be
a new species, A. bavarica.
An eighth, fragmentary specimen, the Bürgermeister-Müller Specimen was discovered in 1997 and it is currently kept at
the Bürgermeister-Müller Museum. Other than the above remains discovered, a further fragmentary fossil was found in 2004.
Long in a private collection, the Thermopolis Specimen (WDC CSG 100) was discovered in Germany and described in 2005 by
Mayr, Pohl, and Peters. Donated to the Wyoming Dinosaur Center in
Thermopolis, Wyoming, it has the best-preserved head and feet; most of the neck and
the lower jaw have not been preserved. The "Thermopolis" specimen was described in the December 2, 2005 Science journal
article as "A well-preserved Archaeopteryx specimen with theropod features"; it shows that the Archaeopteryx lacked
a reversed toe—a universal feature of birds—limiting its ability to perch on branches and implying a terrestrial or
trunk-climbing lifestyle.[34] This has been interpreted
as evidence of theropod ancestry. The specimen also has a hyperextendible second toe. "Until
now, the feature was thought to belong only to the species' close relatives, the deinonychosaurs."[35] This tenth and latest specimen was assigned to Archaeopteryx siemensii in 2007.[36] The specimen itself, currently on loan to the
Forschungsinstitut Senckenberg in Frankfurt, is
considered the most complete and well preserved Archaeopteryx remains yet.[36]
Some reports claim that they provide evidence to prove that Archaeopteryx is a fake.[37] However, such reports are not confirmed.[38][39] The issue is further discussed below.
Taxonomy
Today, the fossils are usually assigned to a single species A. lithographica, but the taxonomic history is complicated.
Dozens of names have been published for the handful of specimens, most of which are simply spelling errors (lapsus).
Originally, the name A. lithographica only referred to the single feather described by von Meyer. In 1960, Swinton
proposed that the name Archaeopteryx lithographica be officially transferred from the feather to the London
specimen.[40] The ICZN did suppress the
plethora of alternative names initially proposed for the first skeleton specimens,[41] which mainly resulted from the acrimonious dispute between von Meyer and
his opponent Johann Andreas Wagner (whose Griphosaurus
problematicus—"problematic riddle-lizard"—was a vitriolic sneer at von Meyer's
Archaeopteryx).[42] In addition, descriptions of
Archaeopteryx fossils as pterosaurs before their true nature was realized were also
suppressed.[43]
The relationships of the specimens are problematic. Most subsequent specimens have been given their own species at one point
or another. The Berlin specimen has been designated as Archaeornis siemensii, the Eichstätt specimen as Jurapteryx
recurva, the Munich specimen as Archaeopteryx bavarica and the Solnhofen specimen was designated as Wellnhoferia
grandis.
Recently, it has been argued that all the specimens belong to the same species.[44] However, significant differences exist among the specimens. In
particular, the Munich, Eichstätt, Solnhofen and Thermopolis specimens differ from the London, Berlin, and Haarlem specimens in
being smaller or much larger, having different finger proportions, having more slender snouts, lined with forward-pointing teeth
and possible presence of a sternum. These differences are as large as or larger than the differences seen today between adults of
different bird species. However, it is also possible that these differences could be explained by different ages of the living
birds.
Finally, it is worth noting that the feather, the first specimen of Archaeopteryx described, does not agree well with
the flight-related feathers of Archaeopteryx. It certainly is a flight feather of
a contemporary species, but its size and proportions indicate that it may belong to another, smaller species of feathered theropod, of which only this feather is so far known.[32] As the feather was the original type
specimen, this has created significant nomenclatorial confusion.
Synonyms
If two names are given, the first denotes the original describer of the "species", the second the author on whom the given
name combination is based. As always in zoological
nomenclature, putting an author's name in parentheses denotes that the taxon was originally
described in a different genus.
- Pterodactylus crassipes Meyer, 1857 [suppressed in favor of A. lithographica 1977 per ICZN Opinion
1070]
- Rhamphorhynchus crassipes (Meyer, 1857) (as Pterodactylus (Rhamphorhynchus) crassipes) [suppressed in
favor of A. lithographica 1977 per ICZN Opinion 1070]
- Archaeopteryx lithographica Meyer, 1861 [nomen conservandum]
- Scaphognathus crassipes (Meyer, 1857) Wagner, 1861 [suppressed in favor of A. lithographica 1977 per
ICZN Opinion 1070]
- Archaeopterix lithographica Anon., 1861 [lapsus]
- Griphosaurus problematicus Wagner, 1861 [nomen oblitum 1961 per ICZN Opinion 607]
- Griphornis longicaudatus Woodward, 1862 [nomen oblitum 1961 per ICZN Opinion 607]
- Griphosaurus longicaudatum (Woodward, 1862) [lapsus]
- Griphosaurus longicaudatus (Owen, 1862) [nomen oblitum 1961 per ICZN Opinion 607]
- Archaeopteryx macrura Owen, 1862 [nomen oblitum 1961 per ICZN Opinion 607]
- Archaeopterix macrura Owen, 1862 [lapsus]
- Archaeopterix macrurus Egerton, 1862 [lapsus]
- Archeopteryx macrurus Owen, 1863 [unjustified emendation]
- Archaeopteryx macroura Vogt, 1879 [lapsus]
- Archaeopteryx siemensii Dames, 1897
- Archaeopteryx siemensi Dames, 1897 [lapsus]
- Archaeornis siemensii (Dames, 1897) Petronievics, 1917[36]
- Archaeopteryx oweni Petronievics, 1917 [nomen oblitum 1961 per ICZN Opinion 607]
- Gryphornis longicaudatus Lambrecht, 1933 [lapsus]
- Gryphosaurus problematicus Lambrecht, 1933 [lapsus]
- Archaeopteryx macrourus Owen, 1862 fide Lambrecht, 1933 [lapsus]
- Archaeornis siemensi (Dames, 1897) fide Lambrecht, 1933? [lapsus]
- Archeopteryx macrura Ostrom, 1970 [lapsus]
- Archaeopteryx crassipes (Meyer, 1857) Ostrom, 1972 [suppressed in favor of A. lithographica 1977 per
ICZN Opinion 1070]
- Archaeopterix lithographica di Gregorio, 1984 [lapsus]
- Archaeopteryx recurva Howgate, 1984
- Jurapteryx recurva (Howgate, 1984) Howgate, 1985
- Archaeopteryx bavarica Wellnhofer, 1993
- Wellnhoferia grandis Elżanowski, 2001
The last 4 taxa may be valid genera and species.
"Archaeopteryx" vicensensis (Anon. fide Lambrecht, 1933) is a nomen
nudum for what appears to be an undescribed pterosaur.
Controversies
Authenticity
Beginning in 1985, a group including astronomer Fred
Hoyle and physicist Lee Spetner published a series
of papers claiming that the feathers on the Berlin and London specimens of Archaeopteryx were forged.[45][46][47][48] Their claims were repudiated by Alan J. Charig and others at the British Museum (Natural
History).[49] Most of their evidence
for a forgery was based on unfamiliarity with the processes of lithification; for example,
they proposed that based on the difference in texture associated with the feathers, feather impressions were applied to a thin
layer of cement,[46] without realizing that feathers themselves would have caused a textural difference.[49] They also expressed disbelief that slabs would
split so smoothly, or that one half of a slab containing fossils would have good preservation, but not the counterslab.[47][45] These, though, are common properties of Solnhofen fossils because the dead animals would fall
onto hardened surfaces which would form a natural plane for the future slabs to split along, leaving the bulk of the fossil on
one side and little on the other.[49] They
also misinterpreted the fossils, claiming that the tail was forged as one large feather,[46] when this is visibly not the case.[49] In addition, they claimed that the other specimens of
Archaeopteryx known at the time did not have feathers,[46][45] which is
untrue; the Maxberg and Eichstätt specimens have obvious feathers.[49] Finally, the motives they suggested for a forgery are not strong, and contradictory; one is
that Richard Owen wanted to forge evidence in support of Charles Darwin's theory of evolution, which is unlikely given Owen's
views toward Darwin and his theory. The other is that Owen wanted to set a trap for Darwin, hoping the latter would support the
fossils so Owen could discredit him with the forgery; this is unlikely because Owen himself wrote a detailed paper on the London
specimen, so such an action would certainly backfire.[39]
Charig et al. pointed to the presence of hairline cracks in the slabs running through both rock and fossil impressions,
and mineral growth over the slabs that had occurred before discovery and preparation, as evidence that the feathers were
original.[49] Spetner et al. then
attempted to show that the cracks would have naturally propagated through their postulated cement layer,[50] but neglected to account for the fact that the cracks were old and had
been filled with calcite, and thus were not able to propagate.[39] They also attempted to show the presence of cement on the London specimen
through X-ray spectrometry, and did find something that was not rock.[50] However, it was not cement, either, and is most
probably from a fragment of silicone rubber left behind when molds were made of the specimen.[39] Their suggestions have not been taken seriously by paleontologists, as their
evidence was largely based on misunderstandings of geology, and they never discussed the other feather-bearing specimens, which
have increased in number since then.
Archaeopteryx and Protoavis
In 1984, Sankar Chatterjee discovered fossils which he claimed in 1991 belonged to
a fossil bird far older than Archaeopteryx. These fossils, believed to be around 210 to 225 million years old, have been
assigned the name Protoavis.[51] The fossils are too badly preserved to allow an estimate of flying ability; although
Chatterjee's reconstructions usually show feathers, many paleontologists, including Paul (2002) and Witmer (2002) have rejected
the claims that Protoavis was an earlier bird (or, alternately, that it existed at all).[28][52] The fossils were found disarticulated, and were collected from different locations. Because
the fossils are in poor condition, Archaeopteryx remains the earliest universally recognized bird.[53]
In popular culture
Archaeopteryx is the best known early bird and has thus received widespread attention. Its easily recognizable
appearance and the intense public interest in dinosaurs have caused Archaeopteryx to become a feature of worldwide popular
culture. For example, the second book in the Time Machine series,
Search for Dinosaurs, takes the reader on a journey to the Mesozoic to find and photograph an Archaeopteryx.[54] In one of the "strangest" appearances of Archaeopteryx in popular culture, Alfred Jarry's play Ubu cocu, ou l'Archéopteryx ('Ubu cuckolded, or the
Archaeopteryx') includes an Archaeopteryx as an important character.[55] The iconic appearance of the Berlin Specimen has been adapted into the
logo of Arc'teryx Equipment Inc. The company's name is a contraction of Archaeopteryx.
A main belt asteroid discovered in 1991, 9860 Archaeopteryx, was named in honor of the genus.[56][57]
See also
Footnotes
- ^ Archaeopteryx at The Grave Yard - Jamie Headden, Scott Hartman, and Rutger Jansma's
skeletal restorations of most of the specimens. Eight scaled to each other at this site (both retrieved 2007-01-22)
- ^ Archaeopteryx: An Early Bird - University of California, Berkeley Museum of Paleontology. Retrieved 2006-OCT-18
- ^ Archaeopteryx lithographica - Nick Longrich, University of Calgary. Discusses how many wings an Archaeopteryx had and other
questions.
- ^ Wellnhofer P
(2004). "The Plumage of Archaeopteryx", in Currie PJ, Koppelhus EB, Shugar MA, Wright JL: Feathered Dragons.
Indiana University Press, 282–300. ISBN 0-253-34373-9.
- ^ a b c d e Lambert, David (1993). The Ultimate Dinosaur Book. New York: Dorling Kindersley, 38–81.
ISBN 1-56458-304-X.
- ^ Holtz, Thomas, Jr. (1995). Archaeopteryxs Relationship With
Modern Birds. Journal of Dinosaur Paleontology. Retrieved on 2007-03-01.
- ^ Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology 130 (1997) 275-292
- ^ Bühler, P. & Bock, W.J. (2002). Zur Archaeopteryx-Nomenklatur:
Missverständnisse und Lösung. Journal of Ornithology. 143(3): 269–286. [Article in German, English abstract]
doi:10.1046/j.1439-0361.2002.02006.x (HTML abstract)
- ^ Feduccia, A. (1993). Evidence from claw geometry indicating arboreal
habits of Archaeopteryx. Science. 259(5096): 790–793.
- ^ Feduccia, A. & Tordoff, H.B. (1979). Feathers of Archaeopteryx:
Asymmetric vanes indicate aerodynamic function. Science. 203(4384):
1021–1022.
- ^ Huxley T.H. (1868). On the animals which are most nearly intermediate
between birds and reptiles. Geol. Mag. 5, 357–65; Annals & Magazine of Nat Hist 2, 66–75; Scientific
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Further reading
- de Beer, G.R. (1954). Archaeopteryx lithographica: a study based upon the British Museum specimen. Trustees of the
British Museum, London.
- Chambers, P. (2002). Bones of Contention: The Fossil that Shook Science. John Murray, London. ISBN 0-7195-6059-4.
- Feduccia, A. (1996). The Origin and Evolution of Birds. Yale University Press, New Haven. ISBN 0-300-06460-8.
- Heilmann, G. (1926). The Origin of Birds. Witherby, London.
- Huxley T.H. (1871). Manual of the anatomy of vertebrate animals. London.
- von Meyer, H. (1861). Archaeopteryx litographica (Vogel-Feder) und Pterodactylus von Solenhofen. Neues Jahrbuch für
Mineralogie, Geognosie, Geologie und Petrefakten-Kunde. 1861: 678–679, plate V [Article in German] Fulltext at Google
Books.
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