Bird-like fossil footprints from the Late Triassic
Ricardo N. Melchor (),
Silvina de Valais and
Jorge F. Genise
Additional contact information
Ricardo N. Melchor: CONICET
Silvina de Valais: Museo Paleontológico “Egidio Feruglio”
Jorge F. Genise: CONICET
Nature, 2002, vol. 417, issue 6892, 936-938
Abstract:
Abstract The study of fossilized footprints and tracks of dinosaurs and other vertebrates has provided insight into the origin, evolution and extinction of several major groups and their behaviour; it has also been an important complement to their body fossil record1,2,3,4. The known history of birds starts in the Late Jurassic epoch (around 150 Myr ago) with the record of Archaeopteryx5, whereas the coelurosaurian ancestors of the birds date back to the Early Jurassic6. The hind limbs of Late Triassic epoch theropods lack osteological evidence for an avian reversed hallux and also display other functional differences from birds7. Previous references to suggested Late Triassic to Early Jurassic bird-like footprints have been reinterpreted as produced by non-avian dinosaurs having a high angle between digits II and IV8,9 and in all cases their avian affinities have been challenged10. Here we describe well-preserved and abundant footprints with clearly avian characters from a Late Triassic redbed sequence of Argentina11,12, at least 55 Myr before the first known skeletal record of birds. These footprints document the activities, in an environment interpreted as small ponds associated with ephemeral rivers, of an unknown group of Late Triassic theropods having some avian characters.
Date: 2002
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:nat:nature:v:417:y:2002:i:6892:d:10.1038_nature00818
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DOI: 10.1038/nature00818
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