The real was a lapdog-sized predator covered in feathers.
The Conversation
Tens of millions of people have flocked to theatres this summer to see Jurassic World, an action flick “starring” a team of trained that hunt genetically modified dinosaurs on command of their human master.
It’s a of course, but . I study dinosaurs for a living and it didn’t bother me to see being for the sake of good cinema. What I didn’t like, however, was that the were depicted as big, drab-coloured, scaly brutes.
That’s because the real was a lapdog-sized predator covered in feathers. Palaeontologists have known this for a while. If you look at the arm bones of you can see a row of bumps, identical in size and shape to the quill knobs of living birds: the anchor points for . But because hasn’t been found in the perfect geological settings that fossilise soft tissues, we don’t know exactly what its feathers would have looked like.
But we have a better idea now, thanks to the discovery of a from northeastern China that I studied with my colleague, Junchang Lü of the Chinese Academy of Geological Sciences.
is covered in feathers. Simple hairy filaments coat much of the body, larger veined feathers stick out from the tail, and big quill-pen-feathers line the arms, layered over each other to form a wing. This is a dinosaur that looks just like a bird. If you could see it alive you would probably make no distinction between it and, say, a turkey or a vulture.
Look at and you see what the real would have been like. Far from being a scaly-skinned reptilian monster, would have been a fluffy, feathered poodle from hell.
Dinosaurs such as and are some of my favourite fossils to study. because they capture evolution in action. These small, fast-running, brainy predators are some of the closest relatives of birds. They are chapters in one of the greatest stories in the history of life: the evolutionary transition between fearsome carnivorous dinosaurs and their 10,000 feathered descendants , all over the world.
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