Advertisement.

EnchantedLearning.com is a user-supported site.
As a bonus, site members have access to a banner-ad-free version of the site, with print-friendly pages.
Click here to learn more.

ad
(Already a member? Click here.)


T. rex skull ZoomDinosaurs.com
Dinosaur
News
New Chinese Dromaeosaur Covered with Downy Fibers
Sinornithosaurus millenii
September 24, 1999

Paleontologists have discovered a new meat-eating dinosaur fossil (a dromaeosaur) in northeast China that may have been covered with a coat of down-like fibers, early proto-feathers. This dinosaur dates from about 124 million years ago, during the middle Jurassic period.


Velociraptor is another dromaeosaurid dinosaur. Velociraptor was about 6 feet (2 m) long and was found in Mongolia.
Although other dinosaurs have already been found with feather-like coats, the previous finds belonged to a more advanced group of dinosaurs. This new dinosaur is a dromaeosaur, an earlier type of meat-eating dinosaur. Other dromaeosaurs include Velociraptor, Utahraptor, and Deinonychus. This new fossil suggests that these dinosaurs may not have had scaly, reptile-like skin, but perhaps had a softer, downy coat. No fossil skin impressions of these dinosaurs had been found previously.

This new find was described by paleontologist Xiao-Chun Wu of the Institute of Vertebrate Paleontology and Paleoanthropology of Beijing and the University of Calgary of Alberta, Canada. Wu and his colleagues named this new find Sinornithosaurus millenii, meaning "Chinese bird lizard of the millennium." Wu et al. describe this fossil in the September 16 issue of the magazine Nature.

Sinornithosaurus was found in the Yixian rock formation in northeast China near Sihetun. This area has yielded an enormous number of fossils in the last few years - it is one of the richest fossil beds yet discovered. A few years ago, dinosaurs like Sinosauropteryx prima, Caudipteryx zoui, and Beipiaosaurus (Xing Xu, et al., 1999) were found there. These advanced dinosaurs were also covered with fibers.

Wu contends, "This is further support for the idea that birds gradually evolved from the theropod dinosaurs." Birds may have branched off from the dromaeosaurid dinosaurs during the mid-Jurassic period, roughly 150 million years ago. Although there are scientific dissenters, the majority of paleontologists agree with Wu about the origin of birds.

RELATED LINKS:
A page on Dromaeosaurids, the dinosaurs that led to the birds.

Information on Velociraptor.

Information about Sinosauropteryx prima.

Information about Caudipteryx zoui.

A page on Protarchaeopteryx robusta.

Information on Unenlagia comahuensis.

Other fossils found in China.

A site about Birds.

A Chart of geological time.




Enchanted Learning®
Over 35,000 Web Pages
Sample Pages for Prospective Subscribers, or click below

Overview of Site
What's New
Enchanted Learning Home
Monthly Activity Calendar
Books to Print
Site Index

K-3
Crafts
K-3 Themes
Little Explorers
Picture dictionary
PreK/K Activities
Rebus Rhymes
Stories
Writing
Cloze Activities
Essay Topics
Newspaper
Writing Activities
Parts of Speech

Fiction
The Test of Time

Biology
Animal Printouts
Biology Label Printouts
Biomes
Birds
Butterflies
Dinosaurs
Food Chain
Human Anatomy
Mammals
Plants
Rainforests
Sharks
Whales
Physical Sciences: K-12
Astronomy
The Earth
Geology
Hurricanes
Landforms
Oceans
Tsunami
Volcano
Languages
Dutch
French
German
Italian
Japanese (Romaji)
Portuguese
Spanish
Swedish
Geography/History
Explorers
Flags
Geography
Inventors
US History

Other Topics
Art and Artists
Calendars
College Finder
Crafts
Graphic Organizers
Label Me! Printouts
Math
Music
Word Wheels

Click to read our Privacy Policy

E-mail


Enchanted Learning Search

Search the Enchanted Learning website for:



Advertisement.

Advertisement.



Copyright ©1999-2018 EnchantedLearning.com ------ How to cite a web page