Posted on 09/17/2005 3:35:39 AM PDT by SeaLion
THE popular image of Tyrannosaurus rex and other killer dinosaurs may have to be changed as a scientific consensus emerges that many were covered with feathers.
Most predatory dinosaurs such as tyrannosaurs and velociraptors have usually been depicted in museums, films and books as covered in a thick hide of dull brown or green skin. The impression was of a killer stripped of adornment in the name of hunting efficiency.
This week, however, a leading expert on dinosaur evolution will tell the British Association, the principal conference of British scientists, that this image is wrong.
Gareth Dyke, a palaeontologist of University College Dublin, will tell the BA Festival of Science being held in the city that most such creatures were coated with delicate feathery plumage that could even have been multi-coloured. Fossil evidence that such dinosaurs were feathered is now irrefutable.
The way these creatures are depicted can no longer be considered scientifically accurate, he said. All the evidence is that they looked more like birds than reptiles. Tyrannosaurs might have resembled giant chicks.
The latest visualisation suggests that parts of Walking with Dinosaurs, the acclaimed BBC series, cannot be seen as scientifically valid. Similar criticisms might also be levelled at the Hollywood blockbuster Jurassic Park.
The Natural History Museum in London, which has a popular exhibition of robot dinosaurs, conceded this weekend that some of its permanent displays may have to be adapted to reflect the new findings.
The feather revelation follows a series of discoveries in fossil beds at Liaoning in northeast China where a volcanic eruption buried many dinosaurs alive. It also cut off the oxygen that would otherwise have rotted them away.
Some theropod (beast-footed) dinosaurs were preserved complete with feathery plumage. Theropod is the name given to predatory creatures that walked upright on two legs, balanced by a long tail.
The feathered finds include an early tyrannosaur, a likely ancestor of Tyrannosaurus rex, two small flying dinosaurs and five other predators. Feathers are thought to have evolved first to keep dinosaurs warm and only later as an aid to flight.
Such finds are significant in linking dinosaurs to modern birds. Most palaeontologists accept that birds are descended from dinosaurs but there is fierce debate over how this happened. At the Dublin conference, Dyke will present new evidence suggesting that dinosaurs evolved the ability to fly and that some even developed all four limbs into wings.
What bird living in a warm climate does not have feathers.?
I'm always curious when a creationist tells me a fossil ias a hoax. How do you know? What line of reasoning would lead you to determine that a fossil is a fraud?
ah: you have selected Option #5. Very good.
Most likely a CS/ID page told them so. I don't think most of them are willing to actually study the intricate details of the fossil record.
Placemarker also---->
I'm always curious when scientists change their "theory"(such an interesting word).
First dinosaurs are green and brown, then multicolored, now with feathers. And we are supposed to accept these "theories" as fact?
Fun to read, but I take every latest theory with a grain of salt.
And the evidence is that they were also warm-blooded?
That is scary. Please don't invite me along, I'll stick to my own bar!
:-)
Yes, it is strange to find people who modify their ideas on the basis of new evidence.
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