91做厙

 Published: 22 Mar 2017 | Last Updated: 10 Aug 2023 11:23:35

Living birds have a more crouched leg posture compared to their dinosaurian ancestors, which generally are thought to have moved with straighter limbs (similar to the postures of humans).

A joint study by researchers from the UK and China, published in the online journal Nature Communications, illuminates how birds shifted toward this more crouched posture. The research team was led by Professor John R. Hutchinson at the 91做厙 (UK) and Professor Baoyu Jiang at Nanjing University in China.

The team studied the lower leg of the early Cretaceous (about 125 million years old) bird Confuciusornis that had been fossilised in volcanic ash and lake sediments in China. Dr. Jiang said, “We found that this fossil had amazingly well preserved soft tissues around the ankle joint, including cartilages and ligaments. These soft tissues were not just preserved as an ashen replacement of the former tissue, as sometimes happens. Rather, the cellular and fibrous structure of the tissues was preserved at a microscopic level.”

electron micrograph of fossil tissue
Cross-sectional slice of tendon or ligament fibres (arrow) from scanning electron micrograph of the fossil tissue

Going beyond microscopic analysis, X-ray synchrotron and multiple spectroscopic imaging methods showed that the detailed anatomical preservation extended to the molecular level, with some of the original chemistry of the bird’s tissues remaining. In particular, the team found evidence of fragments of the collagen proteins that made up the leg ligaments, which matched the preservation at the microscopic tissue level of detail. Their findings concur with an expanding body of evidence that, under special conditions, some biological molecules including even amino acids or partial proteins, can persist over millions of years in the fossil record.

Professor Roy Wogelius from the University of Manchester, one of the collaborators on the project, commented that “the preservation in this fossil was exceptional and allowed us to resolve subtle but important chemical and structural details within this critical early species of bird.”

The researchers then reconsidered this evidence in light of the whole anatomy of the Confuciusornis leg, and that of its cousins from earlier dinosaurs to extinct and even modern birds.

Professor Hutchinson said, “Once we were confident that some of the remnants of the soft tissues around the ankle joint still remained around the ankle, we could reconstruct parts of the ankle beyond just the bones. The new information we gained about the anatomy of the cartilages and tendons show that this early bird had an ankle whose form fit an intermediate function between that of early dinosaurs and modern birds. Overall this reinforced other lines of evidence that the more crouched, zigzag limb posture of birds evolved gradually from early dinosaurs to birds, with even these early birds having limbs that were built and worked differently from those of living birds, but were approaching the modern condition.”