Posted on 10/01/2002 8:32:43 AM PDT by SteveH
News in Science
News in Science 30/9/2002 Living dinosaurs
[This is the print version of story http://www.abc.net.au/science/news/stories/s687677.htm]
If we are to believe the message of a new exhibit demonstrating the evolutionary transition from dinosaurs to birds, dinosaurs are not extinct.
Four life-sized reconstructions of ferocious-looking, smart-thinking, flesh-eating feathered dinosaurs representing 125 million-year-old missing links between dinosaurs and birds have landed at the Australian Museum in Sydney as part of the Chinese Dinosaurs exhibition.
"The birds we see flying around our backyards are actually living dinosaurs, descendants of prehistoric beasts we all once presumed became extinct 65 million years ago," said museum director, Professor Mike Archer.
"But feathers were evolving as dinosaur attributes long before they became valuable as flight structures," he said.
"Indeed fossils uncovered in the Liaoning Province of China have provided a whole sequence of missing links in the dinosaur to bird story."
One of the earlier links is Sinosauropteryx prima. The creature is covered with what looks to be a fine fuzz but are really small barbs a link between scales and feathers.
"It's a metre-long, meat-eating, ground-dwelling predator, closely related to the dinosaur in Jurassic Park II which ate the little girl on the beach," said Professor Archer.
He speculated these very early feathers were probably for insulation since this group was almost certainly warm blooded.
The Sinornithosaurus millenii (top picture) embodies a later link.
"This is a very vicious little predator about a metre long. But here the feathers are much larger although they're not fully formed or capable of flight," said Professor Archer.
An interesting characteristic of the creature was its capacity to lift its arms over its head in a flapping motion. Professor Archer said scientists assumed its array of feathers had a purpose to frighten predators, help capture prey, attract mates or threaten male competitors.
The next stage the development of feathers for flight is seen in creatures like the Archseopteryx, a smaller animal than Sinornithosaurus millenii with longer and assymetrical feathers.
While there has been some debate as to whether dinosaurs (unlike other groups of reptiles) are the ancestors of birds, Professor Archer believes since 1996 there has been no strong argument against the hypothesis.
"I don't know anyone who is still holding out on this one," he said. "Other than the creationists of course who don't want anything to be ancestral to birds."
Chinese Dinosaurs is open until February next year. The dino-bird exhibit is sponsored by The Australian Skeptics.
Anna Salleh - ABC Science Online
More Info?
British Natural History Museum Dino-Birds Exhibition
Missing link from fur to feathers News in Science 27/4/2001
Dinosaur fossil with proto-feathers News in Science 8/3/2001
Dinosaur-bird theory defended News in Science 24/11/2000
© ABC 2002 | privacy
I did. It supports exactly what I'm saying. The emphasis is mine.
It is sometimes argued that though knowledge might in principle be innate, it must nonetheless be grounded in experience through evolutionary history there is no reason to require...that evolutionary adaptation play some special role. There is no reason to demand and little reason to suppose that genetically-determined properties result from specific selection
I suggest you also read what Chomsky has to say in my link at #479.
Oh, I agree. His books are very difficult to plow through.
It strikes me as ludicrous. I don't see how anyone who has come to know a few cats and dogs could say such a thing. They're not as smart as most humans. They basically can't talk. Nevertheless they're very expressive and have unique personalities.
This Jew agrees with you.
So now it appears that he's a punkeek. Instead of language emerging in tiny increments, through gradual selection, it popped out as a sport, a large scale mutation that became available for further refinement.
Or am I missing something? Does he really believe in special creation?
There is a difference between evolution (the truism) and the specifics, such as the development of language or zebra stripes. Each representation of evolution in the biological world may have a different evolutionary origin.
I was being sarcastic. I still think that in the field of linguistics -- his scientific specialty -- he will one day be regarded as an american Lysenko.
He's also been "America's greatest intellectual". However, his politics can be dismissed (closely situated with the anarcho-libertarians on this forum), his contributions to language, computation and automata will outlive him.
I doubt it. I just don't see a comparison. Chomsky's Syntactic Structures came out in 1957 and his theories are still going strong today. They enjoy empirical support, one big difference between his theories and Lysenko's, and they are not dependent on the political expediency of the day.
something about a prediction of Nostradamus---
concerning the demise of evolution!
Really...
do you think this madness/folly---
can go on for much longer?
We used to have a smart little Corgi dog. She loved to torment our other not-as-smart Elkhound and we'd sometimes play a game where I'd stay between them and push her away (the Elkhound of course had no idea it was a game). One time we were playing it in the kitchen when, all of the sudden, the Corgi turned, ran out through the living room then through the dining room then through another entry into the kitchen to get at the Elkhound from the other side. As soon as she'd run out I realized her intention (and I'm morally certain that's what it was) and moved to block her when she came in the other way. That really made an impression on me.
Another time we were having the fence replaced in our back yard. We'd have to take the dogs out in the back on a leash. Just after the fence was down and the two side gates had been removed, my daughter took the Corgi out. They went around to the side where one of the gates had been. My daughter said the Corgi immediately turned and dragged her to the other side "as if" to see if the other gate was missing. That's pretty damned abstract.
Just sharing.
I think it is a truism to say that languages have structural similarities. That is like saying bird wings and bat wings and insect wings have similarities. Sometimes form has to follow function.
Of course language requires brain structures, and of course these structures contrain language. It's probably fun to figure all this out.
But meanwhile, most of us communicate with hidden meanings, coded in body language, tone of voice, private meanings for common words, grunts and sentence fragments, etc. Chomsky is analyzing a subset of language that is as sterile and artificial as computer language.
Make that Chomsky's...
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