Friday, 10 March 2017

Laser scanning could reveal when dinosaurs started flying

March 1, 2017

by John Hopton 

Scientists have revealed details of a chicken-like dinosaur that existed around the same time birds first appeared on Earth.

Chinese and American researchers believe the Jurassic creature named Anchiornis, a feathered dinosaur from about 160 million years ago, could hold important information on the missing link between land-bound and flying creatures.

Fossilized Anchiornis bones were studied using lasers, and traces of soft tissue were observed.

"We shone violet lasers at Anchiornis specimens in a dark room to cause them to glow in the dark, revealing amazing details," said Michael Pittman of the University of Hong Kong, who co-authored the study in Nature Communications. "This revealed the first quantitative high-detail outline of a feathered dinosaur."

The process involved a new technique called laser-stimulated fluorescence (LSF).

A flap at the front of the dinosaur's elbow was revealed by the lasers, a feature which in present day birds is called the propatagium, a feathered, boneless leading edge of a wing. It is important for flight.

"The fact that we find this really neat wing in an older bird-like animal is really exciting," said Pittman.

Equally interesting is the fact that Anchiornis appeared to have four wings rather than two.

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