Dinosaur Forces Rethink Of Flight's Evolution 328
gollum123 writes "The BBC reports that a small dinosaur with a long, slender snout and wing-like limbs is forcing a rethink on bird evolution." From the article: "The 90 million-year-old reptile, called Buitreraptor gonzalezorum, belongs to the same sickle-clawed group of dinosaurs as Velociraptor and feathered dinosaurs from China. It may provide tantalising evidence that powered flight evolved twice. One theory suggests the lineage of dinosaurs the new animal belonged to, the dromaeosaurs, originated in the Cretaceous Period (144 to 65 million years ago). But this discovery suggests their lineage can be traced further back in time, to the Jurassic (206 to 144 million years ago), experts say."
This just in (Score:3, Funny)
Re:This just in (Score:2, Funny)
That begs the question .... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:That begs the question .... (Score:5, Funny)
I can't find a mention of them anywhere in my Bible. You folks and your alternative science!
Re:That begs the question .... (Score:4, Interesting)
Also, there are many very old history books in various libraries around the world that have detailed records of dragons and their encounters with people. Such as that of English King Morvidus. Surprisingly, many of these descriptions of dragons fit with how modern scientists would describe dinosaurs, even Tyrannosaurus.
Re:That begs the question .... (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:That begs the question .... (Score:3, Funny)
>_>
Er, bad example.
Re:That begs the question .... (Score:2)
Re:That begs the question .... (Score:5, Informative)
Text from the link:
Re:That begs the question .... (Score:3, Funny)
Older birds (Score:2, Funny)
Insect (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Insect (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Insect (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Insect (Score:5, Funny)
MOD PARENT UP INSIGHTUL (Score:2)
doesn't count (Score:2)
Re:doesn't count (Score:2)
Re:Insect (Score:4, Funny)
Snakes fly... (Score:2)
Re:Insect (Score:5, Informative)
http://oregonstate.edu/dept/ncs/newsarch/2005/Jun
They can hover, fly backwards/forwards, or even upsidedown.
Re:Insect (Score:3, Informative)
But not a single picture. So I did my own digging. Here's one. [eurekalert.org] And another. [futurefeeder.com]
From a Paleo Class (Score:4, Informative)
Passive flight
a. Gliding
b. Parachuting;
Soaring
Powered flight
Bugs
The first animals to take to the air under control.
Carboniferous
The only flying creatures that evolved flapping flight without sacrificing limbs to form the wings.
Parachuting can evolve in animals with rather low metabolic rates.
It does not require the high metabolic rate of birds and bats, which have powered flight.
Late Permian reptile Coelurosauravus
Bones jointed for folding
No gliding lepidosaur is known from the fossil record after the Triassic, so the living lizard Draco which also uses elongated ribs to support an airfoil, must represent yet another independent evolution of gliding
Re:From a Paleo Class (Score:3, Informative)
No Kidding. Evolution isn't a line slanting upward (Score:5, Insightful)
Knowing that things have branched more than once for a given trait isn't just interesting for paleontologists, either. For example, the group of flat worms that include modern tapeworms has evolved parasitism several different times over its history. Knowing that it didn't just happen once lets us find close living relations of tapeworms that aren't parasitic -- so we can develop treatments for tapeworms much more easily, because a lab doesn't need to deal with test worms that are paired with host animals. Viola, better medicines against tapeworms.
It's intuitive to think flight is somehow special because it places extreme physiological demands on the animals that use it, but it's just like any other evolutionary trait. Life is fertile, time is deep. That dinosaurs would maybe develop the trait twice isn't astonishing at all. They were around for a long time, and they maybe had some basic traits (bones with the potential for bird-like light internal structure or something) that made it more likely.
pterosaurs (Score:2)
sheesh...
you'd think a creature with a 20 foot wingspan [bbc.co.uk] wouldn't be forgotten about so easily when talking about flyers.
Re:Insect (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Insect (Score:3, Informative)
IIRC
Re:At least four to six (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:At least four to six (Score:4, Interesting)
There is an organism that does live only three days, but I do not recall which one it is. I think it is a mosquito of some variety.
Mayfly (Score:3, Informative)
"The mayflies are an order (Ephemeroptera meaning "but for a day wing") of insects that grow up in fresh water, and live very briefly as adults, as little as a few hours but more typically a day or two. About 2,500 species in 23 families are known. Other names for these insects include dayfly, shadfly, fishfly, and Canadian soldier."
From Wikipedia [wikipedia.org].
Hmm... (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Hmm... (Score:2)
Emu are true birds, and related (albeit not terribly closely) to ostriches and rheas (which are not found in oceana) as well as kiwis and cassowaries (which are native to oceana). They are birds, not an independently evolved lineage of dinosaurs.
No you can't recover the DNA (Score:5, Informative)
Fossilization occurs when carbon atoms are exchanged for silicon. There is a very high energy barrier to this chemical event - so it happens extremely slowly, over millions of years.
Nucleic acids, the building blocks of DNA, spontaneously decay (even in the absence of bacteria or degrading agents). The spontaneous decay of DNA is very slow by most standards - if kept under the proper conditions a DNA molecule can last for millennia. However, this spontaneous decay is a great deal faster than the exchange of carbon and silicon, especially when you consider that the carbon and silicon must exchange over the surface area of the sample (for example a bone several inches thick fossilizes very slowly from the outside in,) while the DNA is decaying continuously in the marrow. So, for a fossil millions of years old, even if you managed to recover something that looked like a nucleic acid base, it would be decayed to the point that the information content is completely gone.
Re:No you can't recover the DNA (Score:3, Insightful)
I'm not sure how much that changes things, but just pointing out that in the book they do not get it from bones!
The movie didn't use bones either. (Score:3, Funny)
Why not? (Score:5, Insightful)
They've found fossils with traces of blood, skin, flesh and feathers.
In terms of half-life, there's got to be some "dino-dna" around somewhere right now. At least, given a large enough mass of extant dinosaur remains.
The real question is just how much raw dino-mass it will take before any usable DNA can be expected to be found. Perhaps it would take many times more mass than that of every dinosaur that ever lived, but perhaps it's small enough that it's probable that in some museum somewhere is a realistically findable and usable strand of DNA.
I most certainly do not know the answer to that, but I'm not convinced you do either, and I suspect are just promoting as fact something that is more a belief on your part without any serious calculation to back it up.
Re:Why not? (Score:3, Interesting)
And you don't even need to find a single strand of dna... lots of pieces will do. It just takes computing power to calculate the original un-broken strand, and then work in the lab to recreate (I'm not saying it's easy).
Example: you can probably guess what these three dna strands came from:
- srethinkoffl
- offlightsevolution
- dinosaurfor
- urforcesrethin
- sevolut
Re:Why not? (Score:5, Interesting)
"However, kinetic calculations predict that
small fragments of DNA (100-500 bp) will survive for no
more than 10 kyr in temperate regions and for a maximum
of 100 kyr at colder latitudes owing to hydrolytic damage
(Poinar et al. 1996; Smith et al. 2001). Even under ideal
conditions, amplifiable DNA is not thought to survive for
longer than 1 Myr." - see reference below
As to your proposal, if I make enough random DNA out of monomers, eventually one of those artificial chains will form a complete dinosaur chromosome. How, exactly, do you propose that I identify this perfect chromosome from among the population in my (absolutely enormous) sample?
Reference:
http://www.journals.royalsoc.ac.uk/openurl.asp?ge
For what you *can* do with fossil DNA, read this:
http://www.pnas.org/cgi/content/full/102/39/13783 [pnas.org]
Re:Why not? (Score:2)
longer than 1 Myr.
"not thought to" is different from "not possible", although I'd accept adequately long odds as being essentially the same as "not possible".
It would seem to me that the idea of a half-life would apply (although not necessarily linearly), in that after so much time, there would be half the original DNA left, and so on, so that even after hundreds millions of years there would be some amount of intact DNA around, given
Re:Why not? (Score:2)
It's really simple actually. It's the same way we sequence genomes. Shotgun style. You have a whole bunch of samples and they all degrade in different ways. As long as most of your breaks are overlapping you can piece everything back together.
----X----X----
--X---X----X--
In this simple diagram you can see how I wouldpast together the overlapping regions.
Re:Why not? (Score:3, Interesting)
The DNA in the dinosaur bone (or mosquito), if there is any, is now essentially random - it contains no information content.
Re:No you can't recover the DNA (Score:2)
Re:No you can't recover the DNA (Score:2)
There weren't permanent icecaps in the Cretaceous. There hasn't been anywhere continuously frozen since then.
Re:No you can't recover the DNA (Score:2, Interesting)
Well, of course they didn't use a fossil in Jurassic Park, they used a mummy. Even the Wikipedia article makes this confusion. Old and/or preserved does not mean fossil. Fossil is as you have stated, the replacement of the original tissues by a mineral (say, calcium carbonate or anything else capable of forming sedimentary rock. You don't often find large quantities of silicon in solution. Lots and lots of carbon though, as well as the carbon
Re:Jurassic park's other principle (Score:2)
Dinoaves (Score:4, Interesting)
Which came first, the chicken or the dromeaosaur?
And flight has three other instances, if you don't count flying squirrels and gliding snakes: both major kinds of bats, and the monotreme ptero"saurs" - they were warm-blooded furry and laid eggs. That is a monotreme, like the spiny echidna and duck-bill platypus.
Re:Dinoaves (Score:2, Interesting)
Not really. You've picked two of the defining features of monotremes, but it takes much more than that to group creatures together. And the "fur" from pterosaurs is almost certainly very different from mammalian hair.
Pterosaurs are a group related to dinosaurs. They're both part of the Archosaurs - a group that contains modern crocodiles and birds and their extinct relatives.
more than once? yup! (Score:2, Funny)
Flight Evolved Twice? (Score:5, Informative)
It may provide tantalising evidence that powered flight evolved twice.
As I recall, powered flight has evolved independantly a number of times.
Insects
Birds
Pterosaurs
Bats
and if I not mistaken, fruit bats evolved flight separately to insect-eating "true" bats. That's at least four if not five times.
Don't forget Penguins! (Score:2)
Re:Flight Evolved Twice? (Score:2)
Re:Flight Evolved Twice? (Score:2)
Hummingbirds fly quite differently than your normal variety bird.
And don't forget the cornerstone of Canada's army: the flying squirrel.
Re:Flight Evolved Twice? (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Flight Evolved Twice? (Score:2)
Now that's what I call 'intelligent design'! (Score:4, Funny)
Nah (Score:5, Funny)
Didn't you read that bit in the bible? In Genesis? In that footnote 4 or 5 pages in?
"And the Lord brought forth the remains of many, many varied animals and plants, different to what existed on the newly-fashioned earth. And lo, He crafted a fossil record that suggested they did indeed exist far in the past, and planted it so that men of Science, with their need to understand with Hard Facts and Reason and Logic, would have something to explain the Creation with. For the Lord looks after all His children, even those of little Faith."
It's all in there people. You just have to read and interpret it a little bit.
And change a few words here and there. And possibly fragment and rearrage sections. But it's all in there.
Big Bird (Score:2, Informative)
http://www.fieldmuseum.org/museum_info/press/press _sinovenator.htm [fieldmuseum.org]
And here's a link to a non-subscription site that's carrying the Chicago Tribune's article, which a lot of outlets seem to be carrying because it compares the dinosaur to Sesame Street's Big Bird:
http://www.newsday.com/news/health/chi-0510130118o ct13, [newsday.com]
Not Flight, Intelligent Falling (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Not Flight, Intelligent Falling (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Not Flight, Intelligent Falling (Score:2)
You are using the wrong definition of theory [stephenjaygould.org]. Nothing is ever "just" a theory; a theory is the very pinnacle of truth, explaining numerous facts, data, and observations.
I was reading your site and thinking to myself, "Okay, so this is different than the usual take on the universe from creationists..."
And then I hit on the following line, and I realized you're taken in with the frauds just like the rest of your ilk.
The answer is as clear here as it is in dealing with
Ahem - Obligatory Toy Story Quote (Score:2)
Re:Not Flight, Intelligent Falling (Score:5, Informative)
And if you're actually serious about the flamebait mod, and you're now thinking, "but it is serious, ID as scientific theory is a serious subject," you're wrong. It is not a scientific theory. I'm not saying it isn't true(*) so don't get your panties in a bunch. I'm just saying it is not science. Science is the search for natural explanations to non-intuitive phenomena. Scientific theories make predictions that are disprovable(**). ID is a supernatural explanation to a non-intuitive phenomena which does not make predictions and is not disprovable. As such, ID is philosophy of religion, or mysticism, or faith, or whatever term you feel is appropriate for the study of supernatural explanations to non-intuitive phenomena. Not a better field, not a worse field, not more true, not less true, just a different field of study than science.
So get over it. Laugh. Or are you afraid that the shared behaviour of laughing will betray your common ancestry with the great apes? Yes, ferchrissakes, that's a joke too.
Sorry about the "ferchrissakes" thing - I didn't mean to blaspheme. The editors of that paragraph have been sacked.
* Typically supernatural explanations are inherently not disprovable, and this is the case with ID. Any scientist worth his salt will not say that something is false if it can't be disproven. Listen closely next time, you'll not hear a serious scientist say "ID is not true." The scientists aren't trying to kill God, they're just working in a different field than philosophy of religion.
** For a great example of hardcore science-like research that is not science, check out game theory. It is a fascinating area of economic research, but since it can only be used to analyze and not predict, it is not science. There's a very good article on the topic here [businessweek.com].
Re:Not Flight, Intelligent Falling (Score:2)
I've always thought that this is a poor choice of words to explain scientific theories to the masses. How about just plain old "testable"? Everyone knows what that means.
ID is not testable. Scientific theories are.
Re:Not Flight, Intelligent Falling (Score:2)
It was a joke anyways. But in any case, IIRC, in layman's terms, a Hypothesis is a wild-assed guess that might be based on insight, experiences, or beliefs about something. When you formalize that Hypothesis into a statement of specific testable claims (as in, there must be some plausible way to prove or disprove your claims experimentally), then you have a Theory, which then needs to be proven or disproven if possible (of course, for some theories they are disprovable but not provable, so the longer we g
Dinosaur Forces Rethink Of Flight's Evolution? (Score:2, Funny)
Bird/Dinosaur (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Bird/Dinosaur (Score:4, Informative)
Not at all. Birds, capable of real powered flight, are known from lower Cretaceous already (even upper Jurassic, if you count Archaeopteryx, which might infact come from a relic island population). Check out what has been found and is still being found from Liaoning, China. I study vertebrate paleontology and I'm not aware of any earlier bird-like creatures than middle or upper Jurassic. Can you give a reference? Longisquama might have had feathers (many paleontologists don't agree), but otherwise it's not very bird-like. Feathers might even have been a trait that many reptiles of certain kind had in those times.
The evidence for birds evolving from dinosaurs (and actually being dinosaurs) is nowadays overwhelming. The anatomical similarities between birds and maniraptoran dinosaurs are as obvious as those of apes and humans. Genera like Buitreraptor (a dromaeosaur) are actually very strong candidates of being secondarily flightless creatures (meaning, their ancestors had the ability to fly but reverted to flightlessness). Also, this new find also makes it clear that an earlier find, Rahonavis from Madagascar, is actually a dromaeosaur, and Rahonavis is generally considered having been capable of flight. Thus, we have a flying dromaeosaur! These are fantastic finds, and our picture of the evolution of birds becomes clearer by every one of them. And it is a very controversial field of study, we are probably still in for quite many suprises in near future. But that's what makes all of this so interesting.
Birds, Bats, And Bugs (Score:2)
> twice.
At least three times: birds, bats, and bugs.
Re:Disappointing (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Disappointing (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Disappointing (Score:2)
Those of us unwilling to challenge him must bow to his superior dorkage.
Re:Disappointing (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Disappointing (Score:2)
Re:Mega-size fossil found in Iran (Score:3, Interesting)
If this is a legit fossil, my guess is that its an ocean-going creature. If that thing flew, it would have needed enormous amounts of energy to keep itself aloft. It probably would have had to eat constantly. Unless, as one fantasy author speculated about dragons, they were lighter-than-air flyers, full of hydrogen or methane or something.
Re:Mega-size fossil found in Iran (Score:2)
Re:Mega-size fossil found in Iran (Score:2)
If it was an earth going creature, it would have needed enourmous amounts of energy to stay up. I'm going to guess this thing is either a sea-going dino, crocodile, shark or mammal. Dang, that thing is huge.
Re:Mega-size fossil found in Iran (Score:3, Interesting)
This article [bbc.co.uk] claims about a seperate, confirmed dinosaur find that
Local palaeontologists said the dinosaur was a herbivore measuring up to 51 metres (167 ft) long - beating its nearest rival, the 100-tonne Argentinosaurus huinculensis, by a good eight metres (26 ft).
So the current vertebrate record is 167 ft. If this thing is hundreds of feet long... Christ, that's enourmous. They say that these giant sauropods had t
Very obviously a fake (Score:2)
Plus the images - both of them - were photoshopped. the backbones in the first are obviously superimposed onto what I suspect is an ancient ruined building, and in the second the different lighting on the bones and the dodgy edges where they've been pasted in are very evident.
Re:Very obviously a fake (Score:2)
It would be a cool find, of course, but I just don't buy it (yet).
Re:Mega-size fossil found in Iran (Score:5, Interesting)
"...But is it a dinosaur? Despite my limited knowledge in that area of inquiry, it seems unlikely, for a variety of reasons - but primarily, the condition of the bones suggests a fossil much younger than the Cretaceous Era. It is, based on my understanding of human skeletal remains, possibly even contemporaneous with humans, or at any rate, early hominids. And yet, that is impossible. Unfortunately, proper carbon dating will have to wait - the local government is notoriously shy about allowing any historical or archaeological material out of country for any reason. "
Okay, let's review.
Either this is a hoax, or this guy is totally naive when it comes to fossils. Having a bachelors in anthropology, I can say that option #2 is totally plausible.
Re:Mega-size fossil found in Iran (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Mega-size fossil found in Iran (Score:2)
Re:Mega-size fossil found in Iran (Score:2)
Re:Mega-size fossil found in Iran (Score:2)
Re:Either that or.... (Score:2, Informative)
I'm not sure you know what you're talking about. Traits that are similar to each other are known to have evolved many times during biological evolution. Like powered flight.
Re:Either that or.... (Score:2)
Over 99% of Biologists agree that evolution is fact.
Secondly, they eye didn't suddenly evolve fully formed. you can read lots of links here if you are inclined: http://www.origins.tv/darwin/eyes.htm [origins.tv]
About your comment about all the dif
Re:Either that or.... (Score:5, Insightful)
The only "controversy" on the subject of the evolution of the eye is that which creationists have attempted to manufacture. Do you have specific problems with any of the published research on this subject since 1994? If not, then what is the problem, exactly?
Or perhaps what you mean by "controversy" is that scientists are still researching the specifics of the mechanisms by which the eye might have evolved, and thus we have multiple papers on the subject? If so, I think you are mischaracterizing as "controversy" what scientists would call "discussion". Why on earth would you expect this? Perhaps you just have strange expectations.
And last I checked, the arthropod phylum even today offers a wide variation among its members in number of legs. If you are interested in the evolutionary paths that lead to a specific number of limbs, perhaps the phylogeny of the arthropods would be a good place to start looking? So let us say someone comes in and says that we should, with certainty, keep an open mind about the idea that maybe the earth is flat after all. "Round earth" fanatics clinging to the theory that the earth is sort of roundish need to realize how history repeats itself; our beliefs can and have been turned on their head surprisingly in the past. Yes, of course all available, non-discredited data and theory we have with which to explain the world around us suggests the earth is a slightly lumpy sphere. But maybe we've just fundamentally misunderstood things about the shape of the earth; there could be possibilities we haven't considered yet.
Do we bother to give this person the time of day?
Or do we just say, screw that, we're going to stay with the round earth theory-- as well as the theory of evolution-- because it explains all the data we have, and no competing theories for that data exist.
Saying "maybe your theory is wrong" is effectively meaningless to someone working in the field of science unless you can immediately answer the question "then what is right?". Theories aren't overturned by "I don't like that theory, give me another". They're overturned only by alternate theories. And no, half a post on slashdot about how maybe space is a looping 3-manifold, and the space photos showing a round earth are an elaborate optical illusion, and we can figure out the details of why this is some other time, don't mean you have an alternate theory. If you cannot form your ideas in terms of falsifiable, rigorously defined models with predictive power, you do not have anything scientists can do anything with.
P.S.: If IHBT then my hat goes off to you.
Re:Either that or.... (Score:4, Informative)
Historical evidence shows that most people have known the world is round for thousands of years. That everyone thought it was 'flat' until Columbus is a combination of promotion by himself and the Spanish royal family who sponsored him and the Roman Catholic church. In fact the route taken by Columbus was not the most obvious one. Its more like the route that would be taken by someone who *knows* there's a large landmass in the north Atlantic and wants to go under it to go around to the far east. Northern Europeans had been sailing the north Atlantic all the way to Canada for hundreds of years by then.
He just wanted to get to the edge (Score:2)
Re:Either that or.... (Score:2)
Ic oudl support this idea. It doesn't deny facts, doesn't try to confuse legitimate science with religious rationalization. God designed evolution and set it on it's course.
I don't claim that it is impossible that evolution is the actual explanation for how life came to be
Re:Either that or.... (Score:3, Informative)
Well, you know what - organisms just don't develop that way. Evolution isn't about randomly growing an extra arm on your side and waiting for it to evolve into something us
Re:Either that or.... (Score:2)
Re:Either that or.... (Score:2)
Re:Either that or.... (Score:2)
Great point. How come we never see "nature's" mess-ups. No entropy. If we evolved into this stable state then how come there is NO evidence to support it. I mean we should have half-human looking things, not short people(erm hobbits apparently, children in non-scientific literature). We should have one eyed humans, no eyed humans, humans with a more primitive skeletal system(not something that looks likebad posture). Humans with radically different genetic makeup, I mean 5% difference from an ape, and 2% fr
Re:Lets just go to the basics (Score:3, Insightful)
I never understood this. OK, creationists are by definition not especially bright, but why do they consistently misspell 'prove', and always in the same way?
Perhaps there is some classic, standard work of creationist material that they all memorise and regurgitate as required, and which contains this error of spelling? Has this small mutation of the language propagated itself in this isolated and self-contained colony, and are we seeing a case of linguistic speciation here?
Re:As we all know, the secret to flying... (Score:2)
I often wondered about this. Douglas Adams wasn't a scientist, but he had a decent layman's knowledge of scientific ideas. Did he realise that 'missing the ground' is exactly how, for instance, a Soyuz manages to stay up?
Re:As we all know, the secret to flying... (Score:2)
Re:Slashdot at its best (worst?) (Score:2)
BTW, am I the only one who read the name of that dinosaur and wondered "Why would they name a that thing Butt-raper Gonzolez?"
Re:Slashdot at its best (worst?) (Score:3, Funny)
I could be wrong however.