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avatar_suspsy

Meet Ambopteryx!

Started by suspsy, May 08, 2019, 06:18:39 PM

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ceratopsian

Very exciting and satisfying to have corroboration of the original interpretation of Yi's wing structure.

ITdactyl


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uamQubNzb1Q

'video has a brief discussion of the find, and a short animation of the animal gliding from a tree.  The animated model is ok, the glide pattern - not so much.

Halichoeres

The preservation is insane. Nice to have corroboration for the wing-membrane hypothesis so quickly. I guess this suggests Epidexipteryx probably had something similar going on, even though the crazy wrist bone isn't preserved.

Paper seems to be open access, by the way: https://www.nature.com/articles/s41586-019-1137-z
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Shonisaurus

From what you see the dinosaurs had their Yi qi and ambopteryx (flying dinosaurs) the equivalent of today's bats.

Ravonium

#5
Excellent find, especially preservation-wise. This and Callichimaera are good signs that 2019 is going to be yet another excellent year for paleontology. Additionally, as ceratopsian says, it's good corroborating evidence of Yi's wing structure.

ITdactyl

On one hand:
Loving this crazy mess of evolution - with small theropods 'evolving' different types of 'wings' and using them in different ways.  Sure, Ambopteryx is not a transitional species, but do we really still need those?  We already have a nice snapshot of branches being pruned off the tree of life (in a manner of speaking, I'm not suggesting "intelligent design") - skin-wings coexisting with feathered wings, and then fading to extinction.  Same with toothed and fully beaked 'birds'.

On the other hand:
All reconstructions I've seen have a rather narrow wing chord.  I wonder how effective those (really) are as gliding surfaces.  Considering all the tests done with Microraptor before, I hope people also start the same mechanical tests with Scansoriopterygids (oof, that was a mouthful).

Faelrin

It is so cool that we have not one, but two of these critters discovered in only the span of a couple of years apart, while also further supporting that the holotype fossil of Yi was not a fluke, in regard to those odd wrist rods, membranous wings aside.
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