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首页> 外文期刊>Current Biology: CB >A Feathered Dinosaur Tail with Primitive Plumage Trapped in Mid-Cretaceous Amber
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A Feathered Dinosaur Tail with Primitive Plumage Trapped in Mid-Cretaceous Amber

机译:白垩纪中部琥珀困有原始羽毛的羽毛恐龙尾巴。

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In the two decades since the discovery of feathered dinosaurs [1-3], the range of plumage known from non-avialan theropods has expanded significantly, confirming several features predicted by developmentally informed models of feather evolution [4-10]. However, three-dimensional feather morphology and evolutionary patterns remain difficult to interpret, due to compression in sedimentary rocks [9, 11]. Recent discoveries in Cretaceous amber from Canada, France, Japan, Lebanon, Myanmar, and the United States [12-18] reveal much finer levels of structural detail, but taxonomic placement is uncertain because plumage is rarely associated with identifiable skeletal material [14]. Here we describe the feathered tail of a non-avialan theropod preserved in mid-Cretaceous (similar to 99 Ma) amber from Kachin State, Myanmar [17], with plumage structure that directly informs the evolutionary developmental pathway of feathers. This specimen provides an opportunity to document pristine feathers in direct association with a putative juvenile coelurosaur, preserving fine morphological details, including the spatial arrangement of follicles and feathers on the body, and micrometer-scale features of the plumage. Many feathers exhibit a short, slender rachis with alternating barbs and a uniform series of contiguous barbules, supporting the developmental hypothesis that barbs already possessed barbules when they fused to form the rachis [19]. Beneath the feathers, carbonized soft tissues offer a glimpse of preservational potential and history for the inclusion; abundant Fe2+ suggests that vestiges of primary hemoglobin and ferritin remain trapped within the tail. The new finding highlights the unique preservation potential of amber for understanding the morphology and evolution of coelurosaurian integumentary structures.
机译:自发现有羽毛的恐龙[1-3]以来的二十年中,从非阿瓦隆兽脚类动物已知的羽毛范围已大大扩展,证实了羽毛进化的知情模型预测的几个特征[4-10]。但是,由于沉积岩的压缩作用,三维羽毛形态和演化模式仍然难以解释[9,11]。来自加拿大,法国,日本,黎巴嫩,缅甸和美国的白垩纪琥珀的最新发现[12-18]显示出更精细的结构细节水平,但由于羽毛很少与可识别的骨骼材料相关联,因此分类学位置尚不确定[14]。 。在这里,我们描述了从缅甸克钦邦[17]保留在白垩纪中期(类似于99 Ma)琥珀中的非鸟足兽脚类动物的羽毛尾巴,其羽毛结构直接反映了羽毛的进化发育途径。该标本为记录原始羽毛与假定的少年腔骨龙直接联系提供了机会,保留了精细的形态学细节,包括身体上卵泡和羽毛的空间排列以及羽毛的微米级特征。许多羽毛表现出短而细长的轮轴,具有交替的倒钩和均匀的一系列连续的球茎,这支持了发展假设:当倒钩融合形成轴时,它们就已经拥有了球茎[19]。在羽毛下面,碳化的软组织提供了包含的保存潜力和历史的一瞥;丰富的Fe2 +提示初级血红蛋白和铁蛋白的痕迹仍留在尾巴中。新发现强调了琥珀在了解腔棘龙皮层结构的形态和演化方面的独特保存潜力。

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    《Current Biology: CB 》 |2016年第24期| 共9页
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