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Brave warrior women on early flight
Chinese paleontologists have identified an extinct bird species from a 127 million-year-old fossil deposit in northeastern China.
A study published on Monday in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences provided new information about avian development during the early evolution of flight.
Zhou Zhonghe, Wang Min and Thomas Stidham from the institute of vertebrate paleontology and paleoanthropology of the Chinese Academy of Sciences described a well-preserved, complete skeleton and feathers in their study.
The analysis of this early Cretaceous fossil revealed that it was from a pivotal point in the evolution of flight: After birds lost their long bony tails, but before they evolved fans of flight feathers on their shortened tails.
They named this extinct species Jinguofortis perplexus.
The genus name 鈥淛inguofortis鈥 honors women scientists around the world, deriving from the Chinese word jinguo, meaning female warrior, and the Latin word 鈥渇ortis鈥 meaning brave.
The bird had a unique combination of traits, including a jaw with small teeth like its theropod dinosaur relatives; a short bony tail ending in a compound bone called a pygostyle; gizzard stones showing that it mostly ate plants; and a third finger with only two bones, unlike other early birds.
The fossil鈥檚 shoulder joint also lent clues to its flight capacity.
In flying birds, the shoulder, which experiences high stress during flight, is a tight joint between unfused bones.
By contrast, Jinguofortis perplexus preserves a shoulder girdle where the major bones of the shoulder, the shoulder blade and the coracoid are fused to one another.
The existence of a fused shoulder girdle in this short-tailed fossil suggested evolutionary variety during this stage of evolution, which probably resulted in different styles of flight, according to the researchers.
Therefore, Jinguofortis perplexus probably flew a bit differently than birds do today.
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