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80beats
« No Shoes, No Problem? Barefoot Runners Put Far Less Stress on Their Feet
Engineered E. Coli Bacteria Produces Road-Ready Diesel »

New Analysis Reveals Color of Dinosaur Feathers for the First Time

dinoColorAs much as paleontologists have sorted out about the dinosaurs, one of the main aspects of their appearance—what color they were—has remained mysterious. But in a new Nature study, a team of British and Chinese scientists report that they found a way to unlock the color patters of one of the earliest feathery dinosaurs—it had a red mohawk, they say, with a red and white striped tail.

The dino in question is called Sinosauropteryx, which lived about 125 million years ago. Looking at fossils found in China, the team led by Mike Benton found what they think are the remains of feathers. And they found something inside the feathers that matches modern birds: melanosomes. These structures provide the melanin pigment in bird feathers (and human hair), and what color they are depends on the shape. “A ginger-haired person would have more spherical melanosomes, and a black-haired or grey-haired person would have more of the sausage-shaped structures,” said Professor Benton [BBC News].

Analyzing the Sinosauropteryx remains, the team found that spherical and sausage-shaped melanosomes alternated in its tail, which indicated to them that it would have been striped red and gray. Why would a dinosaur need a striped tail? Many birds, the living descendants of non-avian dinosaurs, use brightly colored tails for courtship displays. [National Geographic News]. They also found a “mohawk” of feathers running down its head to its back, but these showed just signs of red, not stripes.

You have to get lucky to find such evidence. Dinosaur fossils are mostly drab collections of mineralized bones. A few preserve traces of skin, and fewer still preserve structures that many scientists have argued are feathers [The New York Times]. But, Benton argues, his team’s stroke of good fortune lends more weight to the idea that birds descended from the dinosaurs called theropods, of which Sinosauropteryx was one: “Critics have said that these visible spiny structures could be shredded connective tissue. But the discovery of melanosomes within the bristles finally proves that some early dinosaurs were indeed feathered” [BBC News].

Related Content:
80beats: Model Suggests 4-Winged Dino Glided Like a Flying Squirrel
80beats: How Dinosaur Feet Evolved Into Bird Wings: New Fossil Provides Clues
80beats: Study: Velociraptor’s Cousin Had a Venomous Bite and Saber Teeth
The Loom: Moving Dinosaurs Into Technicolor
DISCOVER: Did T-Rex Taste Like Chicken?

Image: Chuang Zhao and Lida Xing

Share

January 28th, 2010 10:54 AM Tags: birds, dinosaurs, fossils
by Andrew Moseman in Living World | 7 comments | RSS feed | Trackback >

7 Responses to “New Analysis Reveals Color of Dinosaur Feathers for the First Time”

  1. 1.   NewEnglandBob Says:
    January 28th, 2010 at 11:50 am

    This is at least the sixth blog to cover this.

  2. 2.   Sundance Says:
    January 28th, 2010 at 3:31 pm

    @NewEnglandBob; That’s probably because it’s incredibly cool news. I’m surprised more news sources aren’t covering it.

    So, there’s plenty of hadrosaur mummies. Which species will be next to have its colours identified?

  3. 3.   Zachary Says:
    January 28th, 2010 at 4:39 pm

    Anyone else play Primal Rage growing up, cause this means “Talon” was real haha!

  4. 4.   woundedduck Says:
    February 3rd, 2010 at 3:03 pm

    Photo caption should read:

    “Sinosauropteryx, here pictured in mid-doe-si-doe.”

  5. 5.   Music De Techno Says:
    May 8th, 2011 at 10:47 am

    It’s best to take part in a contest for the most effective blogs on the web. I will advocate this site!

  6. 6.   Plasma TV Forum Says:
    May 13th, 2011 at 5:42 am

    Very good visual appeal on this site, I’d rate it 10 10.

  7. 7.   generator service Says:
    July 31st, 2011 at 3:13 pm

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