Feathered Behemoth

2012-10-14 05:11ThelatestdiscoveryinChinafuelspeopleimaginationaboutthedinosaurByBaiShi
Beijing Review 2012年19期

The latest discovery in China fuels people’s imagination about the dinosaur By Bai Shi

Feathered Behemoth

The latest discovery in China fuels people’s imagination about the dinosaur By Bai Shi

The next time people see a science fiction film like Hollywood’sJurassic Park, dinosaurs in the movie may look very different, especially the Tyrannosaurus rex. They could be feathered.

Recently, paleontologists discovered fossils of a new tyrannosauroid species from the Middle-Upper Jurassic and Lower Cretaceous deposits of northeast China’s Liaoning Province. Three specimens of this new Tyrannosaurus recovered by scientists show that at least one kind of much larger dinosaur had a feathery coat.

Scientists have named the new species, Yutyrannus huali, which means “beautiful feathered tyrant” in a combination of Latin and Chinese. The bus-sized Tyrannosaurus is the largest feathered animal ever found.

NEW FINDING: A fossil of the skull of Yutyrannus huali is found in west Liaoning Province

Xu Xing, the lead scientist of the study and researcher at the Beijing-based Institute of Vertebrate Paleontology and Paleoanthropology at the Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS), said in a statement, “It was possible that feathers were much more widespread, at least among carnivorous dinosaurs, than most scientists would have imagined even a few years ago.” The new finding was reported by Chinese and Canadian scientists in the journalNatureon April 4, 2012.

Why feathered?

For more than a decade, scientists have known that some dinosaur species had birdlike feathers through fossils discovered around the world, but most of them were small ones. Therefore, scientists previously thought feathers only grew on small dinosaurs.

It is the first time that scientists have found feathers on large predators like the Tyrannosaurus. The team found three specimens of Yutyrannus huali—an adult and two juveniles. The adult was at least 30 feet long and weighed 1.5 tons, about 40 times the heft of Beipiaosaurus, the largest previously known feathered dinosaur. The two juveniles were a mere half ton each.

“The feathers of Yutyrannus huali were simple filaments,” explained Xu. “They were more like the fuzzy down of a little chicken than the stiff plumes of an adult bird.”

Due to the large size and heavy weight, it was impossible for Yutyrannus huali to fly with the fuzzy feathers. So why did the large predator have feathers?

Through an oxygen isotope analysis on the teeth fossils, researchers found that the Lower Cretaceous was much colder than other periods of the Cretaceous. For this reason, dinosaurs like Yutyrannus grew feathers to keep warm from the cold weather.

“The idea that primitive feathers could have been for insulation rather than flight has been around for a long time,” said Corwin Sullivan, a Canadian paleontologist who participated in the study. “However, large-bodied animals typically can retain heat quite easily, and actually have more of a potential problem with overheating. That makes Yutyrannus, which was large and downright shaggy, a bit of a surprise.”

About 125 million years ago, when Yutyrannus lived, the climate in some areas of the Earth might have turned cold. Scientists estimated that the west Liaoning Province in that ancient time might be as cold as it is now. Yutyrannus living in that period might have had to grow feathers to maintain its body temperature.

The significance

The newly discovered specimens of Yutyrannus push the feathered dinosaurs to a broader range. “Yutyrannus dramatically increases the size range of dinosaurs for which we have definite evidence of feathers,” Xu said.

The finding could also give more clues about climate change. In most people’s view, dinosaurs had smooth skin. But creatures have inherent abilities to adapt themselves to environmental changes. Dinosaurs are not an exception. Throughout the Mesozoic Era, the Earth underwent drastic changes of climate and geological environment. The filaments of Yutyrannus can be regarded as an indication for the cold climate of the period when they lived.

The feathered Yutyrannus is also useful to understand the mysterious link between dinosaurs and birds. Based on the discovery of Archaeopteryx, which lived about 150 million years ago, in south Germany in 1862, scientists guessed that there must be close links between dinosaurs and birds because they have so many similar biological features, such as feathers. Birds might have evolved from dinosaurs, and Archaeopteryx might be the middle link, many scientists speculated. But the argument was controversial because there had not been much evidence to prove the hypothesis.

Thanks to a large volcanic ash layer left from 145 million to 125 million years ago in west Liaoning, fossils of various animals and plants of that period were well preserved. In 1996, Ji Qiang, a Chinese paleontologist, published a paper about the discovery of Sinosauropteryx, a kind of feathered Compsognathus, providing more evidence for the evolution of birds from dinosaurs. From then on, Chinese scientists have been making important discoveries of feathered dinosaurs in west Liaoning. By observing the composition and structures, scientists found the feathers from the two creatures, birds and dinosaurs, are very similar.

Today, most paleontologists have accepted the hypothesis that birds originated from dinosaurs. But the new findings call into question the status of Archaeopteryx as the ancestor of birds.

Last year, Xu published a paper inNature, pointing out that Archaeopteryx was a kind of Deinonychus rather than primitive bird. The argument was based on the analysis on the phylogeny of Deinonychus and early birds.

“We unearthed the fossil of a small Deinonychus in west Liaoning, which had a very close genetic relationship with Archaeopteryx,” Xu said. “Deinonychus once lived widely on the continents of Asia, America and Africa. They went extinct in the late Cretaceous.”