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China fossils fill out bird story

To: <>
Subject: China fossils fill out bird story
From: "Alastair Smith" <>
Date: Sat, 17 Jun 2006 08:12:14 +1000
>From the BBC

China fossils fill out bird story 


It lived on a lake in what is now northwestern Gansu Province

Exquisite Chinese fossils support the idea that the ancestors of modern
birds may have lived on water. Five 110-million-year-old specimens of the
grebe-like Gansus yumenensis are described in the journal Science. 
The detail in their preservation, such as the bone structure and even foot
webbing, indicates the animals were well adapted to an aquatic existence. 
Scientists say Gansus is the oldest known member of the group that includes
modern birds. They believe this makes its story a critical one in
understanding the evolution of avian species. 
"Every bird living today, from ostriches... to bald eagles, probably evolved
from a Gansus-like ancestor," Matthew Lamanna, of Carnegie Natural History
Museum in Pittsburgh, US, told a news conference on Thursday. 
Modern look 
Gansus yumenensis was first described from a fossil leg found in 1983. 
The new finds, however, give scientists an almost complete view of the
animal. All they lack now is an example of a skull. 
The specimens come from a quarry near the town of Changma, in China's Gansu
Province, about 2,000km (1,200 miles) west of Beijing. 

It was a very well-adapted diving or swimming-type bird 
Co-author Jerald Harris, of Dixie State College of Utah, said the animal was
very modern in its appearance. 
"If you took most of the bones in its body, including famous pieces like the
breastbone and the wishbone, and put them next to those of a modern bird,
you'd have a lot of difficulty telling them apart," he told the BBC Radio
4's Leading Edge programme. 
"Gansus would probably have looked very much like a grebe or a diver, or
certain kinds of ducks. It had webbed feet and it had fairly powerful legs.
We can tell that from looking at the bones in the knee area. This tells us
it was a very well-adapted diving or swimming-type bird." 
Water to land 
According to Harris, these adaptations all demonstrate how the Gansus branch
of the family tree, the structurally modern birds called ornithuromorphs,
split from the enantiornitheans (or "opposite birds"). 
Enantiornitheans were among the famous feathered fossils found in
northeastern China during the 1990s. 

All scientists are missing now is an example of a Gansus skull
The analysis implies that the line that would become modern birds left the
land and became adapted to life on the water and then, at a later date, came
back onto land. 
"At the same time that Gansus was around, the types of birds you have found
living on land, perching in trees, belonged to a second branch of the bird
evolutionary tree that went extinct at the end of the Cretaceous," he
explained. 
"This is interesting because that means the lineage to modern birds had to
either out-compete these birds - which we call opposite birds - for the
niches of living on land, or wait for them to go extinct and then take over
those niches; to come back out of the water and go back to living again on
land." 






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