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{{short description|Dinosaur with feathers}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=September 2013}}
{{For|the book|Feathered Dinosaurs (book)}}
]
{{Use dmy dates|date=January 2022}}
Although growing evidence of the relationship of non-avian ]s to ]s raised the possibility of '''feathered dinosaurs''' over the twentieth century, it was not until the mid-1990s that clearly non-] dinosaur fossils were discovered with preserved feathers. Since then, feathers or feather-like integument have been discovered on dozens of genera of dinosaurs via both direct and indirect fossil evidence.
] of the feathered '']'' with colors inferred from preserved melanosomes]]
] is the largest living dinosaur.]]
A '''feathered dinosaur''' is any species of ] possessing ]. That includes all species of ], and in recent decades evidence has accumulated that many non-avian dinosaur species also possessed feathers in some shape or form. The extent to which feathers or feather-like structures were present in dinosaurs as a whole is a subject of ongoing debate and research.


It has been suggested that feathers had originally functioned as ], as it remains their function in the ] of infant birds prior to their eventual modification in birds into structures that support flight.
The fossil feathers of one specimen of the ] '']'' have tested positive for ], the main protein in bird feathers.<ref name="Schweitzeretal1999">{{cite journal | last1 = Schweitzer | first1 = M.H. | last2 = Watt | first2 = J.A. | last3 = Avci | first3 = R. | last4 = Knapp | first4 = L. | last5 = Chiappe | first5 = L. | last6 = Norell | first6 = M. | last7 = Marshall | first7 = M. | title = Beta-keratin specific immunological reactivity in feather-like structures of the Cretaceous Alvarezsaurid,Shuvuuia deserti | journal = Journal of Experimental Zoology | volume = 285 | issue = 2 | pages = 146–57 | year = 1999 | pmid = 10440726 | doi = 10.1002/(SICI)1097-010X(19990815)285:2<146::AID-JEZ7>3.0.CO;2-A }}</ref>


Since scientific research began on dinosaurs in the early 1800s, they were generally believed to be closely related to modern ]s such as ]. The word ''dinosaur'' itself, coined in 1842 by paleontologist ], comes from the Greek for 'terrible lizard'. That view began to shift during the so-called ] in scientific research in the late 1960s; by the mid-1990s, significant evidence had emerged that dinosaurs were much more closely related to birds, which descended directly from the ] group of dinosaurs.<ref name="brown2011">{{cite book |doi=10.1002/9781119990475.ch12 |chapter=Evolving Perceptions on the Antiquity of the Modern Avian Tree |title=Living Dinosaurs |pages=306–324 |year=2011 |last1=Brown |first1=Joseph W. |last2=Van Tuinen |first2=M. |isbn=9781119990475}}</ref>
Although the vast majority of feather discoveries have been for ], the discoveries of integument on at least three ornithschians raise the likelihood that proto-feathers were present in basal dinosaurs, and perhaps even a more ancestral animal, in light of the pycnofibers of ].

Knowledge of the origin of feathers developed as new fossils were discovered throughout the 2000s and the 2010s, and technology enabled scientists to study fossils more closely. Among ], feathers or feather-like ] have been discovered in dozens of ] via direct and indirect fossil evidence.<ref name="NYT-20190307">{{cite news |last=Farago |first=Jason |title=T. Rex Like You Haven't Seen Him: With Feathers |url=https://www.nytimes.com/2019/03/07/arts/design/t-rex-exhibition-american-museum-of-natural-history.html |date=7 March 2019 |work=] |access-date=7 March 2019}}</ref> Although the vast majority of feather discoveries have been in ], feather-like integument has also been discovered in at least three ]ns, suggesting that feathers may have been present on the last common ancestor of the ], a dinosaur group including both theropods and ornithischians.<ref name="Ornithoscelida">{{cite journal |last1=Baron |first1=Matthew G. |last2=Norman |first2=David B. |last3=Barrett |first3=Paul M. |title=A new hypothesis of dinosaur relationships and early dinosaur evolution |journal=Nature |date=23 March 2017 |volume=543 |issue=7646 |pages=501–506 |doi=10.1038/nature21700 |pmid=28332513 |bibcode=2017Natur.543..501B |s2cid=205254710}}</ref> It is possible that feathers first developed in even earlier ]s, in light of the discovery of vaned feathers in ].<ref>Michael Benton, A colourful view of the origin of dinosaur feathers. ''Nature'' 604, 630-631 (2022)</ref><ref>Cincotta, A., Nicolaï, M., Campos, H.B.N. et al. Pterosaur melanosomes support signalling functions for early feathers. Nature 604, 684–688 (2022). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-022-04622-3</ref> Fossil feathers from the dinosaur '']'' contain traces of beta-proteins (formerly called beta-keratins), confirming that early feathers had a composition similar to that of feathers in modern birds.<ref>{{Cite journal |last1=Slater |first1=Tiffany S. |last2=Edwards |first2=Nicholas P. |last3=Webb |first3=Samuel M. |last4=Zhang |first4=Fucheng |last5=McNamara |first5=Maria E. |date=2023-09-21 |title=Preservation of corneous β-proteins in Mesozoic feathers |url=https://www.nature.com/articles/s41559-023-02177-8 |journal=Nature Ecology & Evolution |volume=7 |issue=10 |pages=1706–1713 |language=en |doi=10.1038/s41559-023-02177-8 |s2cid=262125827 |issn=2397-334X}}</ref> ] also possess ] similar to those of birds, which suggests that they evolved from common ancestral genes.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Greenwold |first1=Matthew J. |last2=Sawyer |first2=Roger H. |title=Molecular evolution and expression of archosaurian β-keratins: Diversification and expansion of archosaurian β-keratins and the origin of feather β-keratins |journal=Journal of Experimental Zoology Part B: Molecular and Developmental Evolution |date=September 2013 |volume=320 |issue=6 |pages=393–405 |doi=10.1002/jez.b.22514 |pmid=23744807}}</ref><ref>{{Cite journal |last1=Alibardi |first1=L. |last2=Knapp |first2=L. W. |last3=Sawyer |first3=R. H. |date=2006-06-01 |title=Beta-keratin localization in developing alligator scales and feathers in relation to the development and evolution of feathers |url=https://europepmc.org/article/med/17784647 |journal=Journal of Submicroscopic Cytology and Pathology |volume=38 |issue=2–3 |pages=175–192 |issn=1122-9497 |pmid=17784647}}</ref>


==History of research== ==History of research==
{{main|Origin of birds}} {{main|Origin of birds}}

===Early=== ===Early===
] ]'']]
Shortly after the 1859 publication of ]'s '']'', British ] ] proposed that birds were descendants of dinosaurs. He compared the skeletal structure of '']'', a small ] dinosaur, and the 'first bird' '']'' (both of which were found in the ] ]n ] of ]). He showed that, apart from its hands and feathers, ''Archaeopteryx'' was quite similar to ''Compsognathus''. Thus ''Archaeopteryx'' represents a ]. In 1868 he published ''On the Animals which are most nearly intermediate between Birds and Reptiles'', making the case.<ref>{{cite journal |last= Huxley|first= T.H. |year=1868|title= On the animals which are most nearly intermediate between birds and reptiles |journal=Annals and Magazine of Natural History |volume=2 |pages=66–75 |series=4th |url=http://biodiversitylibrary.org/page/22247928}}</ref><ref>Foster, Michael; Lankester, E. Ray 1898–1903. ''The scientific memoirs of Thomas Henry Huxley''. 4 vols and supplement. London: Macmillan.</ref> The leading dinosaur expert of the time, ], disagreed, claiming ''Archaeopteryx'' as the first bird outside dinosaur lineage. For the next century, claims that birds were dinosaur descendants faded, with more popular bird-ancestry hypotheses including 'crocodylomorph' and ']' ancestors, rather than dinosaurs or other ].


Shortly after the 1859 publication of ]'s '']'', the British ] ] proposed that birds were descendants of dinosaurs. He compared the skeletal structure of '']'', a small ] dinosaur, and the "first ]" '']'' (both of which were found in the ] ]n ] of ]). He showed that, apart from its hands and feathers, ''Archaeopteryx'' was quite similar to ''Compsognathus''. Thus ''Archaeopteryx'' represents a ]. In 1868, he published ''On the Animals which are most nearly intermediate between Birds and Reptiles'', which made that case.<ref>{{cite journal |last=Huxley |first=T.H. |year=1868 |title=On the animals which are most nearly intermediate between birds and reptiles |journal=Annals and Magazine of Natural History |volume=2 |pages=66–75 |series=4th |url=https://www.biodiversitylibrary.org/page/22247928}}</ref><ref>Foster, Michael; Lankester, E. Ray 1898–1903. ''The scientific memoirs of Thomas Henry Huxley''. 4 vols and supplement. London: Macmillan.{{page needed|date=January 2020}}</ref>
In 1964, ] described '']'', a ] whose skeletal resemblance to birds seemed unmistakable. Ostrom became a leading proponent of the theory that birds are direct descendants of dinosaurs. Further comparisons of bird and dinosaur skeletons, as well as ] strengthened the case for the link, particularly for a branch of theropods called ]s. Skeletal similarities include the ], the ], the ]s (semi-lunate ]), the ']s' and ], the ], the ] and the ]. In all, over a hundred distinct anatomical features are shared by birds and theropod dinosaurs.


Other researchers drew on these shared features and other aspects of dinosaur biology and began to suggest that at least some theropod dinosaurs were feathered. The first restoration of a feathered dinosaur was Sarah Landry's depiction of a feathered "Syntarsus" (now renamed '']'' or considered a synonym of '']''), in ]'s 1975 publication ''Dinosaur Renaissance''.<ref name=GSP00b>{{cite book |last=Paul |first=Gregory S. |authorlink=Gregory S. Paul |editor=Paul, Gregory S. (ed.) |title=The Scientific American Book of Dinosaurs |year=2000 |publisher=St. Martin's Press |location=New York |isbn=0-312-26226-4 |pages=107–112 |chapter=A Quick History of Dinosaur Art }}</ref> Gregory S. Paul was probably the first ]ist to depict maniraptoran dinosaurs with feathers and protofeathers, starting in the late 1970s. The first restoration of a feathered dinosaur was Huxley's depiction in 1876 of a feathered ''Compsognathus'', made to accompany a bird evolution lecture he delivered in New York, in which he speculated that the aforementioned dinosaur might have had feathers.<ref name=GSP00b>{{cite book |last=Huxley |first=Thomas Henry |author-link=Thomas Henry Huxley |editor=Huxley, Thomas Henry |title=American Addresses, With A Lecture on Biology |chapter-url=https://archive.org/details/americanaddress01unkngoog |year=1877 |publisher=D. Appleton And Company |location=New York |chapter=The Hypothesis of Evolution. The Neutral and the Favourable Evidence.}}</ref>


===Dinosaur renaissance===
By the 1990s, most paleontologists considered birds to be surviving dinosaurs and referred to 'non-avialan dinosaurs' (all extinct), to distinguish them from birds (]). Before the discovery of feathered dinosaurs, the evidence was limited to Huxley and Ostrom's ]. Some mainstream ornithologists, including ] curator ], disputed the links, specifically citing the lack of fossil evidence for feathered dinosaurs.
A century later, during the ], ] began to create modern restorations of highly active dinosaurs. In 1969, ] drew a running ''Deinonychus''. His student ] depicted non-avian maniraptoran dinosaurs with feathers and protofeathers, starting in the late 1970s. <ref>{{cite web |title=1970s: Dinosaurs Redesigned |url=https://paleoartistry.webs.com/1970s.htm |website=Paleoartistry |access-date=15 June 2017 |archive-date=22 December 2019 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20191222045109/https://paleoartistry.webs.com/1970s.htm |url-status=dead }}</ref>


===Fossil discoveries=== ===Fossil discoveries===
] like '']'' and to include feather impressions around the belly (arrow), but that has been questioned.]]
]
The first known specimen of ''Archaeopteryx'', on the basis of which the genus was named, was an isolated feather, although whether or not it belongs to ''Archaeopteryx'' has been controversial.<ref name="kaye2019">{{cite journal |last1=Kaye |first1=T. G. |last2=Pittman |first2=M. |last3=Mayr |first3=G. |last4=Schwarz |first4=D. |last5=Xu |first5=X. |title=Detection of lost calamus challenges identity of isolated ''Archaeopteryx'' feather |journal=Scientific Reports |year=2019 |volume=9 |issue=1 |page=1182 |doi=10.1038/s41598-018-37343-7 |pmid=30718905 |pmc=6362147 |bibcode=2019NatSR...9.1182K |doi-access=free}}</ref><ref name="carney2020">{{cite journal |last1=Carney |first1=R. M. |last2=Tischlinger |first2=H. |last3=Shawkey |first3=M. D. |title=Evidence corroborates identity of isolated fossil feather as a wing covert of ''Archaeopteryx'' |year=2020 |journal=] |volume=10 |issue=1 |page=15593 |doi=10.1038/s41598-020-65336-y |pmid=32999314 |pmc=7528088 |bibcode=2020NatSR..1015593C |doi-access=free}}</ref> One of the earliest discoveries of possible feather impressions by non-avian dinosaurs is a ] ('']'') of the 195–199 million year old ] in the northeastern United States. Gierlinski (1996, 1997, 1998) and Kundrát (2004) have interpreted traces between two footprints in this fossil as feather impressions from the belly of a squatting ]. Although some reviewers have raised questions about the naming and interpretation of this fossil, if correct, that early ] fossil is the oldest known evidence of feathers, almost 30 million years older than the next-oldest-known evidence.<ref name=gierl1996>{{cite journal |last=Gierliński |first=G. |year=1996 |title=Feather-like impressions in a theropod resting trace from the Lower Jurassic of Massachusetts |journal=Museum of Northern Arizona Bulletin |volume=60 |pages=179–184}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |last1=Kundrát |first1=Martin |title=When did theropods become feathered?-evidence for pre-archaeopteryx feathery appendages |journal=Journal of Experimental Zoology Part B: Molecular and Developmental Evolution |date=15 July 2004 |volume=302B |issue=4 |pages=355–364 |doi=10.1002/jez.b.20014 |pmid=15287100}}</ref><ref>, ScienceBlogs</ref>


]'' fossil, the first fossil of a definitively non-avialan dinosaur with feathers]]
After a century of hypotheses without conclusive evidence, well-preserved fossils of feathered dinosaurs were discovered during the 1990s, and more continue to be found. The fossils were preserved in a ] — a ]ary deposit exhibiting remarkable richness and completeness in its fossils — in ], China. The area had repeatedly been smothered in volcanic ash produced by eruptions in ] 124 million years ago, during the ] epoch. The fine-grained ash preserved the living organisms that it buried in fine detail. The area was teeming with life, with millions of leaves, ]s (the oldest known), ]s, ], ]s, ]s, ]s, ]s, and ]s discovered to date.


The most important discoveries at Liaoning have been a host of feathered dinosaur fossils, with a steady stream of new finds filling in the picture of the dinosaur–bird connection and adding more to theories of the evolutionary development of feathers and flight. Turner ''et al''. (2007) reported quill knobs from an ulna of '']'', and these are strongly correlated with large and well-developed secondary feathers.<ref name="turneretal2007b">{{cite journal |last=Turner |first=A.H. |author2=Makovicky, P.J. |author3= Norell, M.A. |year=2007 |title=Feather quill knobs in the dinosaur ''Velociraptor'' |journal=Science |volume=317 |issue=5845 |pages=1721|url=http://www.sciencemag.org/cgi/reprint/317/5845/1721.pdf |format=pdf |doi=10.1126/science.1145076 |pmid=17885130 |bibcode = 2007Sci...317.1721T }}</ref> The most important discoveries at ] have been a host of feathered dinosaur fossils, with a steady stream of new finds filling in the picture of the dinosaur–bird connection and adding more to theories of the evolutionary development of feathers and flight. Turner ''et al''. (2007) reported quill knobs from an ] of '']'', and these are strongly correlated with large and well-developed secondary feathers.<ref name="turneretal2007b">{{cite journal |last1=Turner |first1=A. H. |last2=Makovicky |first2=P. J. |last3=Norell |first3=M. A. |title=Feather Quill Knobs in the Dinosaur Velociraptor |journal=Science |date=21 September 2007 |volume=317 |issue=5845 |pages=1721 |doi=10.1126/science.1145076 |pmid=17885130 |bibcode=2007Sci...317.1721T |doi-access=free}}</ref>
] osmolskae'' specimen, at the ].]]
Behavioural evidence, in the form of an ] on its nest, showed another link with birds. Its forearms were folded, like those of a bird.<ref name="norell1995">{{cite journal | author = Norell M.A., Clark J.M., Chiappe L.M., Dashzeveg D. | year = 1995 | title = A nesting dinosaur | url = | journal = Nature | volume = 378 | issue =6559 | pages = 774–776 |doi=10.1038/378774a0|bibcode = 1995Natur.378..774N | last2 = Clark | last3 = Chiappe | last4 = Dashzeveg }}</ref> Although no ]s were preserved, it is likely that these would have been present to insulate eggs and juveniles.<ref name="Hopp&Orsen04">Hopp, Thomas J., Orsen, Mark J. (2004) "Feathered Dragons: Studies on the Transition from Dinosaurs to Birds. Chapter 11. Dinosaur Brooding Behavior and the Origin of Flight Feathers" Currie, Koppelhaus, Shugar, Wright. Indiana University Press. Bloomington, IN. USA.</ref>


] osmolskae'' specimen, at the ]]]
Not all of the Chinese fossil discoveries proved valid however. In 1999, a supposed fossil of an apparently feathered dinosaur named "]", found in ], northeastern China, turned out to be a forgery. Comparing the photograph of the specimen with another find, Chinese paleontologist ] came to the conclusion that it was composed of two portions of different fossil animals. His claim made '']'' review their research and they too came to the same conclusion.<ref name="bbcarchaeoraptor">{{cite web |url=http://www.bbc.co.uk/science/horizon/2001/dinofooltrans.shtml |title=Transcript: The Dinosaur that Fooled the World |accessdate=22 December 2006 |work=BBC }}</ref> The bottom portion of the "Archaeoraptor" composite came from a legitimate feathered dromaeosaurid now known as '']'', and the upper portion from a previously-known primitive bird called '']''.
Behavioural evidence, in the form of an ] on its nest, showed another link with birds. Its forearms were folded, like those of a bird.<ref name="norell1995">{{cite journal |last1=Norell |first1=M. A. |last2=Clark |first2=J. M. |last3=Chiappe |first3=L. M. |last4=Dashzeveg |first4=D. |year=1995 |title=A nesting dinosaur |journal=Nature |volume=378 |issue=6559 |pages=774–776 |doi=10.1038/378774a0 |bibcode=1995Natur.378..774N |s2cid=4245228}}</ref> Although no feathers were preserved, it is likely that these would have been present to insulate eggs and juveniles.<ref name="Hopp&Orsen04">{{cite book |first1=Thomas P. |last1=Hopp |first2=Mark J. |last2=Orsen |chapter=Dinosaur Brooding Behavior and the Origin of Flight Feathers |pages=234–250 |chapter-url={{Google books |L-ZFPTKroVoC |page=234 |plainurl=yes}} |editor1-first=Philip J. |editor1-last=Currie |editor2-first=Eva B. |editor2-last=Koppelhus |editor3-first=Martin A. |editor3-last=Shugar |editor4-first=Joanna L. |editor4-last=Wright |title=Feathered Dragons: Studies on the Transition from Dinosaurs to Birds |date=2004 |publisher=Indiana University Press |isbn=978-0-253-34373-4}}</ref>


]'' includes impressions of feathered wings (see arrows)]]
In 2011, samples of ] were discovered to contain preserved feathers from 75 to 80 million years ago during the Cretaceous era, with evidence that they were from both dinosaurs and birds. Initial analysis suggests that some of the feathers were used for insulation, and not flight.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/edmonton/story/2011/09/15/science-dinosaur-feathers.html|title=Dinosaur feathers found in Alberta amber|author=Emily Chung|date=12 September 2011|publisher=CBC|accessdate=16 September 2011}}</ref> More complex feathers were revealed to have variations in coloration similar to modern birds, while simpler protofeathers were predominantly dark. Only 11 specimens are currently known. The specimens are too rare to be broken open to study their ]s, but there are plans for using non-destructive high-resolution X-ray imaging.<ref name="naturenews">{{cite web|url=http://www.nature.com/news/2011/110915/full/news.2011.539.html?WT.ec_id=NEWS-20110920|title=Amber inclusions showcase prehistoric feathers|author=Brian Switek|date=15 September 2011|publisher=Nature News|accessdate=22 September 2011|doi=10.1038/news.2011.539 }}</ref>
Not all of the Chinese fossil discoveries proved valid however. In 1999, a supposed fossil of an apparently feathered dinosaur named '']'', also found in Liaoning, turned out to be a forgery. Comparing the photograph of the specimen with another find, Chinese paleontologist ] came to the conclusion that it was composed of two portions of different fossil animals. His claim made '']'' review their research and they too came to the same conclusion.<ref name="bbcarchaeoraptor">{{cite web |url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/science/horizon/2001/dinofooltrans.shtml |title=Transcript: The Dinosaur that Fooled the World |access-date=22 December 2006 |publisher=BBC}}</ref>


In 2011, samples of ] were discovered to contain preserved feathers from 75 to 80 million years ago during the ] Period, with evidence that they were from both dinosaurs and birds. Initial analysis suggests that some of the feathers were used for insulation, and not flight.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Bock |first1=Walter J. |title=Explanatory History of the Origin of Feathers1 |journal=American Zoologist |date=August 2000 |volume=40 |issue=4 |pages=478–485 |doi=10.1668/0003-1569(2000)0402.0.co;2|s2cid=198155047 }}</ref><ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.cbc.ca/news/science/dinosaur-feathers-found-in-alberta-amber-1.1086765 |title=Dinosaur feathers found in Alberta amber |first=Emily |last=Chung |date=12 September 2011 |publisher=Canadian Broadcasting Corporation |access-date=16 September 2011}}</ref> More complex feathers were revealed to have variations in coloration similar to modern birds, while simpler protofeathers were predominantly dark. Only 11 specimens are currently known. The specimens are too rare to be broken open to study their ]s (pigment-bearing organelles), but there are plans for using non-destructive high-resolution X-ray imaging.<ref name="naturenews">{{cite journal |last1=Switek |first1=Brian |title=Amber inclusions showcase prehistoric feathers |journal=Nature |date=15 September 2011 |doi=10.1038/news.2011.539|doi-access=free }}</ref> Melanosomes produce colouration in feathers; as differently-shaped melanosomes produce different colours, subsequent research on melanosomes preserved in feathered dinosaur specimens has led to reconstructions of the ]. These include '']'',<ref name="li2010">{{cite journal |last1=Li |first1=Q. |last2=Gao |first2=K.-Q. |last3=Vinther |first3=J. |last4=Shawkey |first4=M. D. |last5=Clarke |first5=J. A. |last6=D'Alba |first6=L. |last7=Meng |first7=Q. |last8=Briggs |first8=D. E. G. |last9=Prum |first9=R. O. |title=Plumage Color Patterns of an Extinct Dinosaur |journal=] |year=2010 |volume=327 |issue=5971 |pages=1369–1372 |doi=10.1126/science.1186290 |pmid=20133521 |url=http://doc.rero.ch/record/210394/files/PAL_E4402.pdf |bibcode=2010Sci...327.1369L |s2cid=206525132}}</ref> ''Sinosauropteryx'',<ref name="smithwick2017">{{cite journal |last1=Smithwick |first1=F. M. |last2=Nicholls |first2=R. |last3=Cuthill |first3=I. C. |last4=Vinther |first4=J. |title=Countershading and Stripes in the Theropod Dinosaur Sinosauropteryx Reveal Heterogeneous Habitats in the Early Cretaceous Jehol Biota |journal=Current Biology |year=2017 |volume=27 |issue=21 |pages=3337–3343.e2 |doi=10.1016/j.cub.2017.09.032 |pmid=29107548 |doi-access=free|hdl=1983/8ee95b15-5793-42ad-8e57-da6524635349 |hdl-access=free }}</ref> ''Microraptor'',<ref name="li2012">{{cite journal |last1=Li |first1=Q. |last2=Gao |first2=K.-Q. |last3=Meng |first3=Q. |last4=Clarke |first4=J. A. |last5=Shawkey |first5=M. D. |last6=D'Alba |first6=L. |last7=Pei |first7=R. |last8=Ellison |first8=M. |last9=Norell |first9=M. A. |last10=Vinther |first10=J. |title=Reconstruction of ''Microraptor'' and the Evolution of Iridescent Plumage |journal=Science |year=2012 |volume=335 |issue=6073 |pages=1215–1219 |doi=10.1126/science.1213780 |pmid=22403389 |bibcode=2012Sci...335.1215L |s2cid=206537426 |url=https://pdfs.semanticscholar.org/58f0/0bcda8da889ba578e944e91eb8f336e934db.pdf |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180831072106/https://pdfs.semanticscholar.org/58f0/0bcda8da889ba578e944e91eb8f336e934db.pdf |archive-date=2018-08-31}}</ref> and ''Archaeopteryx''.<ref name="carney2020"/>
==Current knowledge==


In 2016, the discovery was announced of a feathered dinosaur tail preserved in amber that is estimated to be 99 million years old. Lida Xing, a researcher from the ] in ], found the specimen at an amber market in ]. It is the first definitive discovery of dinosaur material in amber.<ref name="NYT-20161208">{{cite news |last=St. Fleur |first=Nicholas |title=That Thing With Feathers Trapped in Amber? It Was a Dinosaur Tail |url=https://www.nytimes.com/2016/12/08/science/dinosaur-feathers-amber.html |date=8 December 2016 |work=] |access-date=8 December 2016}}</ref><ref name="NGS-20161208">{{cite news |last=Romey |first=Kristin |title=First Dinosaur Tail Found Preserved in Amber |url=https://www.nationalgeographic.com/animals/article/feathered-dinosaur-tail-amber-theropod-myanmar-burma-cretaceous |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210225114107/https://www.nationalgeographic.com/animals/article/feathered-dinosaur-tail-amber-theropod-myanmar-burma-cretaceous |url-status=dead |archive-date=25 February 2021 |date=8 December 2016 |work=] |access-date=12 December 2016}}</ref><ref>{{cite news |last=Rincon |first=Paul |title='Beautiful' dinosaur tail found preserved in amber |date=8 December 2016 |url=https://www.bbc.com/news/science-environment-38224564 |access-date=8 December 2016 |publisher=BBC News}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |last1=Xing |first1=Lida |last2=McKellar |first2=Ryan C. |last3=Xu |first3=Xing |last4=Li |first4=Gang |last5=Bai |first5=Ming |last6=Persons |first6=W. Scott |last7=Miyashita |first7=Tetsuto |last8=Benton |first8=Michael J. |last9=Zhang |first9=Jianping |last10=Wolfe |first10=Alexander P. |last11=Yi |first11=Qiru |last12=Tseng |first12=Kuowei |last13=Ran |first13=Hao |last14=Currie |first14=Philip J. |title=A Feathered Dinosaur Tail with Primitive Plumage Trapped in Mid-Cretaceous Amber |journal=Current Biology |date=December 2016 |volume=26 |issue=24 |pages=3352–3360 |doi=10.1016/j.cub.2016.10.008 |pmid=27939315 |doi-access=free|hdl=1983/d3a169c7-b776-4be5-96af-6053c23fa52b |hdl-access=free }}</ref>
===List of dinosaur species preserved with evidence of feathers===
]'', the first evidence of feathers in ]]]
]
]
]'' fossil]]
A number of non-avialan<ref>{{cite journal | author = Stephen L. Brusatte, Graeme T. Lloyd, Steve C. Wang, Mark A. Norell | year = 2014 | title = Gradual assembly of avian body plan culminated in rapid rates of evolution across the dinosaur-bird transition | url = | journal = Current Biology | volume = 24 | issue = 20| pages = 2386–2392 |bibcode = |doi = 10.1016/j.cub.2014.08.034}}</ref> dinosaurs are now known to have been feathered. Direct evidence of feathers exists for the following species, listed in the order currently accepted evidence was first published. In all examples, the evidence described consists of feather impressions, except those genera inferred to have had feathers based on skeletal or chemical evidence, such as the presence of quill knobs (the anchor points for wing feathers on the forelimb) or a ] (the fused vertebrae at the tail tip which often supports large feathers).


==Current knowledge==
# '']'' (inferred 1987: quill knobs)<ref name="kurzanov1987">Kurzanov, S.M. (1987). "Avimimidae and the problem of the origin of birds." ''Transactions of the Joint Soviet-Mongolian Paleontological Expedition'', '''31''': 5-92. </ref><ref name="chiappe&witmer2002">Chiappe, L.M. and Witmer, L.M. (2002). ''Mesozoic Birds: Above the Heads of Dinosaurs.'' Berkeley: University of California Press, 536 pp. ISBN 0-520-20094-2</ref>
===Non-avian dinosaur species preserved with evidence of feathers===
# '']''? (1994)<ref name="perez=morenoetal1994">{{cite journal | author = Perez-Moreno B. P., Sanz J. L., Buscalioni A. D., Moratalla J. J., Ortega F., Raskin-Gutman D. | year = 1994 | title = A unique multitoothed ornithomimosaur from the Lower Cretaceous of Spain | url = | journal = Nature | volume = 370 | issue = 6488| pages = 363–367 |bibcode = 1994Natur.370..363P |doi = 10.1038/370363a0 | last2 = Luis Sanz | last3 = Buscalioni | last4 = Moratalla | last5 = Ortega | last6 = Rasskin-Gutman }}</ref>
{{main|List of non-avian dinosaur species preserved with evidence of feathers}}
# '']'' (1996)<ref name="jiji1996">{{cite journal | author = Ji Q., Ji S. | year = 1996 | title = On discovery of the earliest bird fossil in China and the origin of birds | url = | journal = Chinese Geology | volume = 10 | issue = 233| pages = 30–33 }}</ref>
]'', the first evidence of feathers in ]]]
# '']'' (1997)<ref name="ji&ji1997">Ji, Q., and Ji, S. (1997). "A Chinese archaeopterygian, ''Protarchaeopteryx'' gen. nov." ''Geological Science and Technology (Di Zhi Ke Ji)'', '''238''': 38-41. Translated By Will Downs Bilby Research Center Northern Arizona University January 2001</ref>
]'' fossil with feather impressions and stomach content]]
# ] (1997)<ref name=jiji1997>{{cite journal |last=Ji |first=Q. |author2=Ji, S. |year=1997 |title=Advances in ''Sinosauropteryx'' research |journal=Chinese Geology |volume=7 |pages=30–32}}</ref>
]'']]
# '']'' (1998)<ref name="Qiang_et_al_1998">{{cite journal | last1 = Currie | doi = 10.1038/31635 | first1 = Philip J. | title = Two feathered dinosaurs from northeastern China | year = 1998 | last2 = Qiang | first2 = Ji | last3 = Norell | first3 = Mark A. | last4 = Shu-An | first4 = Ji | journal = Nature | volume = 393 |pages= 753–761 | issue=6687|bibcode = 1998Natur.393..753Q }}</ref>
]'' fossil]]
# '']'' (inferred 1998: quill knobs; possibly avialan<ref>{{cite journal |author=Agnolin, F.L.; Novas, F.E. |year=2011 |title=Unenlagiid theropods: are they members of the Dromaeosauridae (Theropoda, Maniraptora)? |journal=Anais da Academia Brasileira de Ciências |volume=83 |pages=117–162 |url=http://www.scielo.br/pdf/aabc/v83n1/v83n1a08.pdf |format=PDF|accessdate=23 April 2011 |doi=10.1590/S0001-37652011000100008}}</ref>)<ref name = "forsteretal1998a">{{cite journal|last=Forster|first=Catherine A.|coauthors= Sampson, Scott D.; Chiappe, Luis M. & Krause, David W.|year=1998a|title=The Theropod Ancestry of Birds: New Evidence from the Late Cretaceous of Madagascar|journal=]|volume=279|issue=5358|pages=1915–1919 | doi = 10.1126/science.279.5358.1915|pmid=9506938|bibcode = 1998Sci...279.1915F }} (HTML abstract)</ref>
# '']'' (1999)<ref name="Schweitzeretal1999"/>
# '']'' (1999)<ref name="Xu_et_al_1999_a">{{cite journal|last1= Wu|first1= Xiao-Chun|last2= Xu|first2= Xing|last3= Wang|first3= Xiao-Lin|title=A dromaeosaurid dinosaur with a filamentous integument from the Yixian Formation of China|journal= Nature|volume= 401|pages= 262–266|year= 1999 |doi = 10.1038/45769|issue=6750|bibcode = 1999Natur.401..262X }}</ref>
# '']'' (1999)<ref name="xu99b">{{cite journal | year = 1999 | title = A therizinosauroid dinosaur with integumentary structures from China | url = | journal = Nature | volume = 399 | issue = 6734| pages = 350–354 | doi = 10.1038/20670 | last1 = Xu | first1 = Xing | last2 = Tang | first2 = Zhi-lu | last3 = Wang | first3 = Xiao-lin | bibcode=1999Natur.399..350X}}</ref>
# '']'' (2000)<ref name="zhou&wang2000">{{cite journal | last1 = Zhou | first1 = Z. | last2 = Wang | first2 = X. | year = 2000 | title = A new species of ''Caudipteryx'' from the Yixian Formation of Liaoning, northeast China | url = http://www.ivpp.ac.cn/pdf/magazine213.pdf | format = PDF | journal = Vertebrata Palasiatica | volume = 38 | issue = 2| pages = 113–130 }}</ref>
# '']'' sp. (2000)<ref name="zhouetal2000">{{cite journal | last1 = Zhou | first1 = Z. | last2 = Wang | first2 = X. | last3 = Zhang | first3 = F. | last4 = Xu | first4 = X. | year = 2000 | title = Important features of ''Caudipteryx'' - Evidence from two nearly complete new specimens | url = http://www.ivpp.ac.cn/pdf/magazine232.pdf | format = PDF | journal = Vertebrata Palasiatica | volume = 38 | issue = 4| pages = 241–254 }}</ref>
# '']'' (2000)<ref name="Xu2000">{{cite journal | pages= 705–708 | issue= 6813 | last1= Xu | year= 2000 | volume= 408 | pmid= 11130069 |doi=10.1038/35047056 | first1= Xing | journal= Nature | last2= Zhou | first2= Zhonghe | last3= Wang | first3= Xiaolin | title= The smallest known non-avian theropod dinosaur |url=http://research.amnh.org/%7Esunny/microraptor.pdf |format=PDF }}</ref>
# '']'' (inferred 2000: pygostyle)<ref name="barsboldetal2000">{{cite journal | author = Barsbold R., Osmólska H., Watabe M., Currie P.J., Tsogtbaatar K. | year = 2000 | title = New Oviraptorosaur (Dinosauria, Theropoda) From Mongolia: The First Dinosaur With A Pygostyle | url = http://www.app.pan.pl/archive/published/app45/app45-097.pdf | format = PDF | journal = Acta Palaeontologica Polonica | volume = 45 | issue = 2| pages = 97–106 }}</ref>
# '']'' sp.? (2002)<ref name=mayretal2002>{{cite journal|last1=Mayr|first1=Gerald|last2=Peters|first2=Stefan|last3=Plodowski|first3=Gerhard|last4=Vogel|first4=Olaf|title=Bristle-like integumentary structures at the tail of the horned dinosaur ''Psittacosaurus''|journal=Naturwissenschaften|volume=89|issue=8 | pages= 361–365|year=2002 |pmid= 12435037 | doi = 10.1007/s00114-002-0339-6 |bibcode = 2002NW.....89..361M }}</ref>
# '']'' (2002; possibly avialan)<ref name="czerkas2002">Czerkas, S.A., and Yuan, C. (2002). "An arboreal maniraptoran from northeast China." Pp. 63-95 in Czerkas, S.J. (Ed.), ''Feathered Dinosaurs and the Origin of Flight.'' The Dinosaur Museum Journal '''1'''. The Dinosaur Museum, Blanding, U.S.A. </ref>
# '']'' (2003)<ref name="Xuetal2003">{{cite journal | author = Xu X., Wang X.-L. | year = 2003 | title = A new maniraptoran from the Early Cretaceous Yixian Formation of western Liaoning | url = | journal = Vertebrata PalAsiatica | volume = 41 | issue = 3| pages = 195–202 }}</ref>
# '']'' (2004)<ref name="xuetal2004">{{cite journal| author = Xu, X., Norell, M. A., Kuang, X., Wang, X., Zhao, Q., Jia, C. | year = 2004 | title = Basal tyrannosauroids from China and evidence for protofeathers in tyrannosauroids | journal = Nature| volume = 431 | pages = 680–684| doi = 10.1038/nature02855| pmid = 15470426| issue = 7009 | url=http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/v431/n7009/full/nature02855_fs.html|bibcode = 2004Natur.431..680X }}</ref>
<!--#'']'' (2004)<ref>{{cite journal | author = Liu, J., Ji, S., Tang, F. & Gao, C. | year= 2004 | title = A new species of dromaeosaurids from the Yixian Formation of western Liaoning | journal = Geological Bulletin of China | volume = 23 (8) | pages = 778–783 }} )</ref>-->
# '']'' (2005; possibly avialan<ref name=hone2010>{{cite journal | author = Hone D.W.E., Tischlinger H., Xu X., Zhang F. | editor1-last = Farke | year = 2010 | editor1-first = Andrew Allen | title = The extent of the preserved feathers on the four-winged dinosaur ''Microraptor gui'' under ultraviolet light | url = http://www.plosone.org/article/info%3Adoi%2F10.1371%2Fjournal.pone.0009223 | journal = PLoS ONE | volume = 5 | issue = 2| page = e9223 | doi = 10.1371/journal.pone.0009223 |bibcode = 2010PLoSO...5.9223H | pmid=20169153 | pmc=2821398}}</ref>)<ref name="xu&zhang2005">{{cite journal | last1= Xu | first1= Xing | last2= Zhang | first2= Fucheng | title= A new maniraptoran dinosaur from China with long feathers on the metatarsus | journal= Naturwissenschaften | volume= 92 | issue= 4 | pages= 173–177 | doi = 10.1007/s00114-004-0604-y | year= 2005 |bibcode = 2005NW.....92..173X | pmid = 15685441 }}</ref>
# '']'' (2005)<ref name="Jietal05">{{cite journal | author = Ji Q., Ji S., Lu J., You H., Chen W., Liu Y., Liu Y. | year = 2005 | title = First avialan bird from China (''Jinfengopteryx elegans'' gen. et sp. nov.) | url = | journal = Geological Bulletin of China | volume = 24 | issue = 3| pages = 197–205 }}</ref><ref name=AHTetal07>{{cite journal |last=Turner |first=Alan H. |coauthors= Pol, Diego; Clarke, Julia A.; Erickson, Gregory M.; and Norell, Mark |year=2007 |title=A basal dromaeosaurid and size evolution preceding avian flight |url=http://www.sciencemag.org/cgi/reprint/317/5843/1378.pdf |format=pdf |journal=Science |volume=317 |pages=1378–1381 |doi=10.1126/science.1144066 |pmid=17823350 |issue=5843 |bibcode = 2007Sci...317.1378T }}</ref>
# '']'' (2006)<ref name=Goehlich2006>{{cite journal | author = Goehlich U.B., Tischlinger H., Chiappe L.M. | year = 2006 | title = ''Juraventaor starki'' (Reptilia, Theropoda) ein nuer Raubdinosaurier aus dem Oberjura der Suedlichen Frankenalb (Sueddeutschland): Skelettanatomie und Wiechteilbefunde | url = | journal = Archaeopteryx | volume = 24 | issue = | pages = 1–26 }}</ref><ref name=chiappe2010>{{cite journal | last1=Chiappe | first1=Luis M. | last2=Göhlich | first2=Ursula B. | title=Anatomy of ''Juravenator starki'' (Theropoda: Coelurosauria) from the Late Jurassic of Germany | journal = Neues Jahrbuch für Geologie und Paläontologie - Abhandlungen | volume=258 | pages=257–296 | year=2010 |doi=10.1127/0077-7749/2010/0125 | issue=3}}</ref>
# '']'' (2007)<ref name="jietall2007">{{cite journal | author = Ji S., Ji Q., Lu J., Yuan C. | year = 2007 | title = A new giant compsognathid dinosaur with long filamentous integuments from Lower Cretaceous of Northeastern China | url = | journal = Acta Geologica Sinica | volume = 81 | issue = 1| pages = 8–15 }}</ref>
# '']'' (inferred 2007: quill knobs)<ref name="turneretal2007b"/>
#'']'' (2008; possibly avialan)<ref name="zhangnature2008">{{cite journal|last=Zhang|first=Fucheng|author2=Zhou, Zhonghe |author3=Xu, Xing |author4=Wang, Xiaolin |author5= Sullivan, Corwin |title=A bizarre Jurassic maniraptoran from China with elongate ribbon-like feathers|journal=Nature|year=2008|volume=455|issue=7216|pages=1105–1108|doi=10.1038/nature07447|PMID=18948955}}</ref>
# '']'' (inferred 2008: pygostyle; confirmed 2010)<ref name="heetal2008">{{cite journal | author = He T., Wang X.-L., Zhou Z.-H. | year = 2008 | title = A new genus and species of caudipterid dinosaur from the Lower Cretaceous Jiufotang Formation of western Liaoning, China | url = | journal = Vertebrata PalAsiatica | volume = 46 | issue = 3| pages = 178–189 }}</ref><ref name=simili2>{{cite journal | last1=Xu | first1=Xing | last2=Zheng | first2=Xiaoting | last3=You | first3=Hailu | title=Exceptional dinosaur fossils show ontogenetic development of early feathers | journal=Nature | volume=464 | issue=7293 | pages=1338–1341 | year=2010 | pmid=20428169 |doi= 10.1038/nature08965|bibcode = 2010Natur.464.1338X }}</ref>
<!--# '']'' (2008; possibly avialan)<ref name="Gaoetal2008">Gao, Cunling, Chiappe, L.M., Meng, Q., O'connor, J.K., Wang, X., Cheng, X., Liu, J. (2008) "A New Basal Lineage Of Early Cretaceous Birds From China And Its Implications On The Evolution Of The Avian Tail." "Palaeontology" Vol. 51, Part 4, pp. 775-791. {{doi|10.1111/j.1475-4983.2008.00793.x}}</ref><ref>{{Cite journal|author=Jingmai K. O'Connor and Corwin Sullivan |year=2014 |title=Reinterpretation of the Early Cretaceous maniraptoran (Dinosauria: Theropoda) ''Zhongornis haoae'' as a scansoriopterygid-like non-avian, and morphological resemblances between scansoriopterygids and basal oviraptorosaurs |journal=Vertebrata PalAsiatica |volume=52 |issue=1 |pages=3–30 |url=http://www.ivpp.cas.cn/cbw/gjzdwxb/xbwzxz/201401/P020140121386966325113.pdf }}</ref>-->
# '']'' (2009; possibly avialan)<ref name="anchiadvance">Xu, X., Zhao, Q., Norell, M., Sullivan, C., Hone, D., Erickson, G., Wang, X., Han, F. and Guo, Y. (in press). "A new feathered maniraptoran dinosaur fossil that fills a morphological gap in avian origin." ''Chinese Science Bulletin'', 6 pages, accepted 15 November 2008.</ref>
# '']''? (2009)<ref name="zhengetal2009">{{cite journal | last1= Zheng | first1= Xiao-Ting | last2= You | first2= Hai-Lu | last3= Xu | first3= Xing | last4= Dong | first4= Zhi-Ming | title= An Early Cretaceous heterodontosaurid dinosaur with filamentous integumentary structures | journal= Nature | volume= 458 | issue= 7236 | pages= 333–336 | year= 2009 | pmid= 19295609 | doi=10.1038/nature07856 |bibcode = 2009Natur.458..333Z }}</ref>
<!-- # '']''? (inferred 2010: quill knobs?)<ref name=concadescription>{{cite journal | last1=Ortega | first1=Francisco | last2=Escaso | first2=Fernando | last3=Sanz | first3=José L. | title=A bizarre, humped Carcharodontosauria (Theropoda) from the Lower Cretaceous of Spain | journal=Nature | volume=467 | issue=7312 | pages=203–206 | year=2010 | pmid=20829793 | doi = 10.1038/nature09181 |bibcode = 2010Natur.467..203O }}</ref>-->
# '']'' (2011; possibly avialan)<ref name=Xiaotingia>{{cite journal |title=An ''Archaeopteryx''-like theropod from China and the origin of Avialae |url=http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/v475/n7357/full/nature10288.html |date=28 July 2011 |journal=Nature |volume=475 |pages=465–470 |doi=10.1038/nature10288 |issue=7357 |pmid=21796204 |author=Xing Xu, Hailu You, Kai Du and Fenglu Han}}</ref>
# '']'' (2012)<ref name=yutyrannus>{{cite journal | year = 2012 | title = A gigantic feathered dinosaur from the Lower Cretaceous of China | url = | journal = Nature | volume = 484 | issue = 7392| pages = 92–95 | doi = 10.1038/nature10906 | last1 = Xu | first1 = Xing | last2 = Wang | first2 = Kebai | last3 = Zhang | first3 = Ke | last4 = Ma | first4 = Qingyu | last5 = Xing | first5 = Lida | last6 = Sullivan | first6 = Corwin | last7 = Hu | first7 = Dongyu | last8 = Cheng | first8 = Shuqing | last9 = Wang | first9 = Shuo | displayauthors=9<!--exactly 9 authors-->| pmid = 22481363 |bibcode = 2012Natur.484...92X }}</ref>
# '']'' (2012)<ref>{{cite journal |year=2012 |title=A new species of ''Microraptor'' from the Jehol Biota of northeastern China |journal=Palaeoworld |volume=in press |url=http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1871174X1200025X?v=s5 |doi=10.1016/j.palwor.2012.05.003 |author=En-Pu Gong, Larry D. Martin, David A. Burnham, Amanda R. Falk and Lian-Hai Hou |issue=2 |pages=81 }}</ref>
# '']'' (2012)<ref>{{Cite doi|10.1073/pnas.1203238109 }}</ref>
# '']'' (2012)<ref>{{cite journal |year=2012 |title=Feathered Non-Avian Dinosaurs from North America Provide Insight into Wing Origins |journal=Science |volume=338 |issue=6106 |pages=510–514 |url=http://www.sciencemag.org/content/338/6106/510.abstract |doi=10.1126/science.1225376 |bibcode = 2012Sci...338..510Z |pmid=23112330 |author=Darla K. Zelenitsky, François Therrien, Gregory M. Erickson, Christopher L. DeBuhr, Yoshitsugu Kobayashi, David A. Eberth and Frank Hadfield}}</ref>
# '']'' (2012)<ref>{{cite journal |year=2012 |title=A new oviraptorosaur from the Yixian Formation of Jianchang, Western Liaoning Province, China |journal=Regional Geology of China |volume= |issue=12 |pages=2102–2107 |url= |doi= |author=Ji Qiang, Lü Jun-Chang, Wei Xue-Fang, Wang Xu-Ri }}</ref>
# '']'' (2013; possibly avialan)<ref>{{Cite journal|author=], Helena Demuynck, Gareth Dyke, Dongyu Hu, François Escuillié and Philippe Claeys |year=2013 |title=Reduced plumage and flight ability of a new Jurassic paravian theropod from China |journal=Nature Communications |volume=4 |issue= |pages=Article number 1394 |doi=10.1038/ncomms2389 |pmid=23340434|bibcode = 2013NatCo...4E1394G }}</ref>
# '']'' (2013)<ref>{{Cite journal|author= Hanyong Pu, Yoshitsugu Kobayashi, Junchang Lü, Li Xu, Yanhua Wu, Huali Chang, Jiming Zhang, Songhai Jia |year=2013 |title=An unusual basal therizinosaur dinosaur with an ornithischian dental arrangement from northeastern China |journal=PLoS ONE |volume=8 |issue=5 |pages=Article number e63423 |doi=10.1371/journal.pone.0063423 |pmid= |bibcode = 2013PLoSO...863423P|url=http://www.plosone.org/article/info%3Adoi%2F10.1371%2Fjournal.pone.0063423|last2=Kobayashi |last3=Lü |last4=Xu |last5=Wu |last6=Chang |last7=Zhang |last8=Jia }}</ref>
# '']'' (2013; possibly avialan)<ref>{{Cite journal|author= Pascal Godefroit, Andrea Cau, Hu Dong-Yu, François Escuillié, Wu Wenhao, and Gareth Dyke |year=2013 |title=A Jurassic avialan dinosaur from China resolves the early phylogenetic history of birds |journal=Nature |volume=498 |issue= |pages=359–362 |doi=10.1038/nature12168 |pmid= |bibcode= }}</ref>
# '']'' (2014)<ref>{{Cite journal|author= Gang Han, Luis M. Chiappe,Shu-An Ji, Michael Habib, Alan H. Turner, Anusuya Chinsamy, Xueling Liu, Lizhuo Han |year=2014 |title=A new raptorial dinosaur with exceptionally long feathering provides insights into dromaeosaurid flight performance |journal=Nature Communications |volume=5 |issue= |pages=Article number 4382 |doi=10.1038/ncomms5382 |pmid= |bibcode = |url=http://www.nature.com/ncomms/2014/140715/ncomms5382/full/ncomms5382.html|last2=Chiappe |last3=Ji |last4=Habib |last5=Turner |last6=Chinsamy |last7=Liu |last8=Han }}</ref>
# '']''? (2014)<ref>{{Cite journal|author= Pascal Godefroit, Sofia M. Sinitsa, Danielle Dhouailly, Yuri L. Bolotsky, Alexander V. Sizov, Maria E. McNamara, Michael J. Benton, Paul Spagna |year=2014 |title=A Jurassic ornithischian dinosaur from Siberia with both feathers and scales |journal=Science |volume=25 |issue=345 |pages=451–455 |doi=10.1126/science.1253351 |pmid= |bibcode = |url=http://www.sciencemag.org/content/345/6195/451|last2=Sinitsa |last3=Dhouailly |last4=Bolotsky |last5=Sizov |last6=McNamara |last7=Benton |last8=Spagna }}</ref>
# '']'' (inferred 2014: pygostyle)<ref name=oviraptortails>{{cite journal |year=2014 |title=Oviraptorosaur tail forms and functions |journal=Acta Palaeontologica Polonica |url=http://www.app.pan.pl/article/item/app20120093.html |doi=10.4202/app.2012.0093 |author=W. Scott Persons, IV, Philip J. Currie, and Mark A. Norell }}</ref>
# '']'' (inferred 2014: pygostyle)<ref name=oviraptortails/>
# '']'' (inferred 2014: pygostyle)<ref>{{Cite journal|author=Yuong-Nam Lee, Rinchen Barsbold, Philip J. Currie, Yoshitsugu Kobayashi, Hang-Jae Lee, Pascal Godefroit, François Escuillié, and Tsogtbaatar Chinzorig |year=2014 |title=Resolving the long-standing enigmas of a giant ornithomimosaur ''Deinocheirus mirificus'' |journal=Nature |volume= |issue= |pages= |doi=10.1038/nature13874 |pmid= |bibcode= }}</ref>


Several non-avian dinosaurs are now known to have been feathered. ]. In all examples, the evidence described consists of feather impressions, except those genera inferred to have had feathers based on skeletal or chemical evidence, such as the presence of quill knobs (the anchor points for wing feathers on the forelimb) or a ] (the fused vertebrae at the tail tip which often supports large feathers).<ref>{{cite journal |author1=Stephen L. Brusatte |author2=Graeme T. Lloyd |author3=Steve C. Wang |author4=Mark A. Norell |year=2014 |title=Gradual assembly of avian body plan culminated in rapid rates of evolution across the dinosaur-bird transition |journal=Current Biology |volume=24 |issue=20 |pages=2386–2392 |doi=10.1016/j.cub.2014.08.034 |pmid=25264248 |doi-access=free}}</ref>
* Note that the filamentous structures in some ]n dinosaurs (''Psittacosaurus'', ''Tianyulong'' and ''Kulindadromeus'') and the pycnofibres found in some ] may or may not be ] with the feathers of theropods.<ref name="zhengetal2009"/><ref name=CJ02>Czerkas, S.A., and Ji, Q. (2002). "A new rhamphorhynchoid with a headcrest and complex integumentary structures." Pp. 15-41 in: Czerkas, S.J. (Ed.). ''Feathered Dinosaurs and the Origin of Flight''. Blanding, Utah: The Dinosaur Museum. ISBN 1-932075-01-1.</ref>


===Primitive feather types=== ===Primitive feather types===
{{Technical|section|date=May 2021}}
Integumentary structures that gave rise to the feathers of birds are seen in the dorsal spines of reptiles and fish. A similar stage in their evolution to the complex coats of birds and mammals can be observed in living reptiles such as ]s and '']'' agamids. Feather structures are thought to have proceeded from simple hollow filaments through several stages of increasing complexity, ending with the large, deeply rooted, feathers with strong pens (]), barbs and barbules that birds display today.<ref name="prum&brush2002">{{cite journal | author = Prum, R. & Brush A.H. | year = 2002 | title = The evolutionary origin and diversification of feathers | journal = The Quarterly Review of Biology | volume = 77| pages = 261–295 | doi = 10.1086/341993 | pmid = 12365352 | issue = 3| last2 = Brush }}</ref>
] structures that gave rise to the feathers of birds are seen in the dorsal spines of reptiles and fish. A similar stage in their evolution to the complex coats of birds and mammals can be observed in living reptiles such as ]s and '']'' ]. Feather structures are thought to have proceeded from simple hollow filaments through several stages of increasing complexity, ending with the large, deeply rooted feathers with strong pens (]), barbs and barbules that birds display today.<ref name="prum&brush2002">{{cite journal |author=Prum, R. & Brush A.H. |year=2002 |title=The evolutionary origin and diversification of feathers |journal=The Quarterly Review of Biology |volume=77 |pages=261–295 |doi=10.1086/341993 |pmid=12365352 |issue=3 |last2=Brush |s2cid=6344830}}</ref>


According to Prum's (1999) proposed model, at stage I, the follicle originates with a cylindrical epidermal depression around the base of the feather papilla. The first feather resulted when undifferentiated tubular follicle collar developed out of the old keratinocytes being pushed out. At stage II, the inner, basilar layer of the follicle collar differentiated into longitudinal barb ridges with unbranched keratin filaments, while the thin peripheral layer of the collar became the deciduous sheath, forming a tuft of unbranched barbs with a basal calamus. Stage III consists of two developmental novelties, IIIa and IIIb, as either could have occurred first. Stage IIIa involves helical displacement of barb ridges arising within the collar. The barb ridges on the anterior midline of the follicle fuse together, forming the rachis. The creation of a posterior barb locus follows, giving an indeterminate number of barbs. This resulted in a feather with a symmetrical, primarily branched structure with a rachis and unbranched barbs. In stage IIIb, barbules paired within the peripheral barbule plates of the barb ridges, create branched barbs with rami and barbules. This resulting feather is one with a tuft of branched barbs without a rachis. At stage IV, differentiated distal and proximal barbules produce a closed, pennaceous vane. A closed vane develops when pennulae on the distal barbules form a hooked shape to attach to the simpler proximal barbules of the adjacent barb. Stage V developmental novelties gave rise to additional structural diversity in the closed pennaceous feather. Here, asymmetrical flight feathers, bipinnate plumulaceous feathers, filoplumes, powder down, and bristles evolved.<ref name="prum1999">{{cite journal | author = Prum, R | year = 1999 | title = Development and evolutionary origin of feathers | journal = Journal of Experimental Zoology | volume = 285 | pages = 291–306 | doi = 10.1002/(SICI)1097-010X(19991215)285:4<291::AID-JEZ1>3.0.CO;2-9 | pmid = 10578107 | issue = 4 }}</ref> According to Prum's (1999) proposed model, at stage I, the follicle originates with a cylindrical epidermal depression around the base of the feather papilla. The first feather resulted when undifferentiated tubular follicle collar developed out of the old keratinocytes being pushed out. At stage II, the inner, basilar layer of the follicle collar differentiated into longitudinal barb ridges with unbranched keratin filaments, while the thin peripheral layer of the collar became the deciduous sheath, forming a tuft of unbranched barbs with a basal calamus. Stage III consists of two developmental novelties, IIIa and IIIb, as either could have occurred first. Stage IIIa involves helical displacement of barb ridges arising within the collar. The barb ridges on the anterior midline of the follicle fuse together, forming the rachis. The creation of a posterior barb locus follows, giving an indeterminate number of barbs. This resulted in a feather with a symmetrical, primarily branched structure with a rachis and unbranched barbs. In stage IIIb, barbules paired within the peripheral barbule plates of the barb ridges, create branched barbs with rami and barbules. This resulting feather is one with a tuft of branched barbs without a rachis. At stage IV, differentiated distal and proximal barbules produce a closed, pennaceous vane (a ]). A closed vane develops when pennulae on the distal barbules form a hooked shape to attach to the simpler proximal barbules of the adjacent barb. Stage V developmental novelties gave rise to additional structural diversity in the closed pennaceous feather. Here, asymmetrical flight feathers, bipinnate ] feathers, filoplumes, powder down, and bristles evolved.<ref name="prum1999">{{cite journal |author=Prum, R |year=1999 |title=Development and evolutionary origin of feathers |journal=Journal of Experimental Zoology |volume=285 |pages=291–306 |doi=10.1002/(SICI)1097-010X(19991215)285:4<291::AID-JEZ1>3.0.CO;2-9 |pmid=10578107 |issue=4}}</ref>


Some evidence suggests that the original function of simple feathers was insulation. In particular, preserved patches of skin in large, derived, tyrannosauroids show ], while those in smaller, more primitive, forms show feathers. This may indicate that the larger forms had complex skins, with both scutes and filaments, or that tyrannosauroids may be like rhinos and elephants, having filaments at birth and then losing them as they developed to maturity.<ref name="xuetal2004" /> An adult '']'' weighed about as much as an ]. If large tyrannosauroids were ], they would have needed to radiate heat efficiently, and feathers would have interfered with this.<ref name="Norell+Xu2005">Norell, M. Xu, X. (2005) "" Natural History Magazine May 2005.</ref> Some evidence suggests that the original function of simple feathers was insulation. In particular, preserved patches of skin in large, derived, ] show ], while those in smaller, more primitive, forms show feathers. This may indicate that the larger forms had complex skins, with both scutes and filaments, or that tyrannosauroids may be like ] and ]s, having filaments at birth and then losing them as they developed to maturity.<ref name="xuetal2004">{{cite journal |last1=Xu |first1=Xing |last2=Norell |first2=Mark A. |last3=Kuang |first3=Xuewen |last4=Wang |first4=Xiaolin |last5=Zhao |first5=Qi |last6=Jia |first6=Chengkai |title=Basal tyrannosauroids from China and evidence for protofeathers in tyrannosauroids |journal=Nature |date=October 2004 |volume=431 |issue=7009 |pages=680–684 |doi=10.1038/nature02855 |pmid=15470426 |bibcode=2004Natur.431..680X |s2cid=4381777|url=http://doc.rero.ch/record/15283/files/PAL_E2582.pdf }}</ref> An adult '']'' weighed about as much as an ]. If large tyrannosauroids were ], they would have needed to radiate heat efficiently.<ref name="Norell+Xu2005">Norell, M. Xu, X. (2005) , Natural History Magazine, May 2005.</ref> This is due to the different structural properties of feathers compared to fur.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Dawson |first1=T. J. |last2=Maloney |first2=S. K. |year=2013 |title=Fur versus feathers: the different roles of red kangaroo fur and emu feathers in thermoregulation in the Australian arid zone |journal=Australian Mammalogy |volume=26 |issue=2 |page=145 |doi=10.1071/am04145 |doi-access=free}}</ref>


Some evidence also suggests that more derived feather types may have served as insulation. For instance, a study of ] pennaceous wing feathers and nesting posture suggests that elongated wing feathers evidently may have served to fill gaps between brooding individuals' insulatory body chamber and the outside environment. This "wall" of wing feathers could have shielded eggs from temperature extremes.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Orsen |first1=M. J. |last2=Hopp |first2=T. P. |title=Feathered dragons: studies on the transition from dinosaurs to birds. |date=2004 |publisher=Indiana University Press |pages=234–350}}</ref>
There is now an increasing body of evidence that supports the display hypothesis, which states that early feathers were colored and increased reproductive success.<ref name="Dimond et al">{{Cite journal|author=Dimond, C. C.,R. J. Cabin and J. S. Brooks|journal=BIOS|title=Feathers, Dinosaurs, and Behavioral Cues: Defining the Visual Display Hypothesis for the Adaptive Function of Feathers in Non-Avian Theropods|volume=82|year=2011|pages=58–63|doi=10.1893/011.082.0302|issue=3}}</ref><ref>{{Cite journal|author=Sumida, S. S. and C. A. Brochu|journal=American Zoologist|title=Phylogenetic Context for the Origin of Feathers|volume=40|year=2000|pages=485–503|doi=10.1093/icb/40.4.486|issue=4}}</ref> Coloration could have provided the original adaptation of feathers, implying that all later functions of feathers, such as thermoregulation and flight, were co-opted.<ref name="Dimond et al"/> This hypothesis has been supported by the discovery of pigmented feathers in multiple species.<ref>{{Cite journal|author=Lingham-Soliar, T.|journal=Journal of Ornithology|title=The evolution of the feather: Sinosauropteryx, a colourful tail|volume=152|year=2011|pages=567–577|doi=10.1007/s10336-010-0620-y|issue=3}}</ref><ref>{{Cite journal|author=Vinther, J., D. E. G. Briggs, R. O. Prum and V. Saranathan|journal=Biology Letters|title=The colour of fossil feathers|volume=4|year=2008|pages=522–525|doi=10.1098/rsbl.2008.0302|issue=5|pmid=18611841|pmc=2610093}}</ref><ref>{{Cite journal|author=Zhang, F. C., S. L. Kearns, P. J. Orr, M. J. Benton, Z. H. Zhou, D. Johnson, X. Xu X. L. Wang|journal=Nature|title=Fossilized melanosomes and the colour of Cretaceous dinosaurs and birds|volume=463|year=2010|pages=1075–1078|doi=10.1038/nature08740|bibcode = 2010Natur.463.1075Z|issue=7284|pmid=20107440 |last2=Kearns|last3=Orr|last4=Benton|last5=Zhou|last6=Johnson|last7=Xu|last8=Wang}}</ref> Supporting the display hypothesis is the fact that fossil feathers have been observed in a ground-dwelling herbivorous dinosaur clade, making it unlikely that feathers functioned as predatory tools or as a means of flight. <ref>Zelenitsky, Darla K.; Therrien, Francois; Erickson, Gregory M.; DeBuhr, Christopher L.; Kobayashi, Yoshitsugu; Eberth, David A.; Hadfield, Frank (10/26/12). "Feathered Non-Avian Dinosaurs From North America Provide Insight into Wing Origins". Science 338 (510). doi:10.1126/science.1225376</ref> Additionally, some specimens have iridescent feathers.<ref name="Li">{{Cite journal|author=Li, Q. G.,K. Q. Gao,Q. J. Meng,M. D. Shawkey,L. D'Alba,R. Pei,M. Ellison,M. A. Norell and J. Vinther|journal=Science|title=Reconstruction of ''Microraptor'' and the Evolution of Iridescent Plumage|volume=335|year=2012|pages=1215–1219|doi=10.1126/science.1213780|bibcode = 2012Sci...335.1215L|pmid=22403389|issue=6073}}</ref> Pigmented and iridescent feathers may have provided greater attractiveness to mates, providing enhanced reproductive success when compared to non-colored feathers. Current research shows that it is plausible that theropods would have had the visual acuity necessary to see the displays. In a study by Stevens (2006), the binocular field of view for '']'' has been estimated to be 55 to 60 degrees, which is about that of modern owls. Visual acuity for '']'' has been predicted to be anywhere from about that of humans to 13 times that of humans.<ref name="stevens2006">{{cite journal | author = Stevens, K.A. | year = 20006 | title = Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology | volume = 26 | pages = 11746–11751 }}</ref> However, as both ''Velociraptor'' and ''Tyrannosaurus'' have a rather extended evolutionary relationship with the more basal theropods, it is unclear how much of this visual acuity data can be extrapolated.{{cn|date=August 2014}}


There is an increasing body of evidence that supports the display hypothesis, which states that early feathers were colored and increased reproductive success.<ref name="Dimond et al">{{cite journal |author1=Dimond, C. C. |author2=R. J. Cabin |author3=J. S. Brooks |journal=BIOS |title=Feathers, Dinosaurs, and Behavioral Cues: Defining the Visual Display Hypothesis for the Adaptive Function of Feathers in Non-Avian Theropods |volume=82 |year=2011 |pages=58–63 |doi=10.1893/011.082.0302 |issue=3 |s2cid=98221211}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |author1=Sumida, S. S. |author2=C. A. Brochu |journal=American Zoologist |title=Phylogenetic Context for the Origin of Feathers |volume=40 |year=2000 |pages=485–503 |doi=10.1093/icb/40.4.486 |issue=4 |doi-access=free}}</ref> Coloration could have provided the original adaptation of feathers, implying that all later functions of feathers, such as thermoregulation and flight, were ]ed.<ref name="Dimond et al"/> This hypothesis has been supported by the discovery of pigmented feathers in multiple species.<ref>{{cite journal |author=Lingham-Soliar, T. |journal=Journal of Ornithology |title=The evolution of the feather: Sinosauropteryx, a colourful tail |volume=152 |year=2011 |pages=567–577 |doi=10.1007/s10336-010-0620-y |issue=3 |s2cid=29827649}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |author1=Vinther, J. |author2=D. E. G. Briggs |author3=R. O. Prum |author4=V. Saranathan |name-list-style=amp |journal=] |title=The colour of fossil feathers |volume=4 |year=2008 |pages=522–525 |doi=10.1098/rsbl.2008.0302 |issue=5 |pmid=18611841 |pmc=2610093}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |author1=Zhang, F. C. |author2=S. L. Kearns |author3=P. J. Orr |author4=M. J. Benton |author5=Z. H. Zhou |author6=D. Johnson |author7=X. Xu |author8=X. L. Wang |journal=Nature |title=Fossilized melanosomes and the colour of Cretaceous dinosaurs and birds |volume=463 |year=2010 |pages=1075–1078 |doi=10.1038/nature08740 |bibcode=2010Natur.463.1075Z |issue=7284 |pmid=20107440 |s2cid=205219587 |url=http://oro.open.ac.uk/22432/2/41064696.pdf}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |last1=Li |first1=Q. |last2=Gao |first2=K. |last3=Vinther |first3=J. |last4=Shawkey |first4=M. D. |last5=Clarke |first5=J. A. |last6=D'Alba |first6=L. |last7=Meng |first7=Q. |title=Plumage Color Patterns of an Extinct Dinosaur |journal=Science |year=2010 |volume=327 |issue=5971 |pages=1369–1372 |doi=10.1126/science.1186290 |pmid=20133521 |bibcode=2010Sci...327.1369L |s2cid=206525132 |url=http://doc.rero.ch/record/210394/files/PAL_E4402.pdf}}</ref> Supporting the display hypothesis is the fact that fossil feathers have been observed in a ground-dwelling herbivorous dinosaur clade, making it unlikely that feathers functioned as predatory tools or as a means of flight.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Zelenitsky |first1=Darla K. |last2=Therrien |first2=Francois |last3=Erickson |first3=Gregory M. |last4=DeBuhr |first4=Christopher L. |last5=Kobayashi |first5=Yoshitsugu |last6=Eberth |first6=David A. |last7=Hadfield |first7=Frank |year=2012 |title=Feathered Non-Avian Dinosaurs From North America Provide Insight into Wing Origins |journal=Science |volume=338 |issue=6106 |pages=510–514 |doi=10.1126/science.1225376 |pmid=23112330 |bibcode=2012Sci...338..510Z |s2cid=2057698}}</ref> Additionally, some specimens have iridescent feathers.<ref name="Li">{{cite journal |author1=Li, Q. G. |author2=K. Q. Gao |author3=Q. J. Meng |author4=M. D. Shawkey |author5=L. D'Alba |author6=R. Pei |author7=M. Ellison |author8=M. A. Norell |author9=J. Vinther |s2cid=206537426 |journal=Science |title=Reconstruction of ''Microraptor'' and the Evolution of Iridescent Plumage |volume=335 |year=2012 |pages=1215–1219 |doi=10.1126/science.1213780 |bibcode=2012Sci...335.1215L |pmid=22403389 |issue=6073}}</ref> Pigmented and iridescent feathers may have provided greater attractiveness to mates, providing enhanced reproductive success when compared to non-colored feathers.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Dimond |first1=C. C. |last2=Cabin |first2=R. J. |last3=Brooks |first3=J. S. |title=Feathers, Dinosaurs, and Behavioral Cues: Defining the Visual Display Hypothesis for the Adaptive Function of Feathers in NonAvian Theropods |journal=BIOS |year=2011 |volume=82 |issue=3 |pages=58–63 |doi=10.1893/011.082.0302 |s2cid=98221211}}</ref> Current research shows that it is plausible that theropods would have had the visual acuity necessary to see the displays. In a study by Stevens (2006), the binocular field of view for '']'' has been estimated to be 55 to 60 degrees, which is about that of modern owls. Visual acuity for '']'' has been predicted to be anywhere from about that of humans to 13 times that of humans.<ref name="stevens2006">{{cite journal |last1=Rauhut |first1=Oliver W. M. |last2=Foth |first2=Christian |last3=Tischlinger |first3=Helmut |last4=Norell |first4=Mark A. |title=Exceptionally preserved juvenile megalosauroid theropod dinosaur with filamentous integument from the Late Jurassic of Germany |journal=Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America |date=17 July 2012 |volume=109 |issue=29 |pages=11746–11751 |doi=10.1073/pnas.1203238109 |pmid=22753486 |pmc=3406838 |bibcode=2012PNAS..10911746R |doi-access=free}}</ref> Paleontological and evolutionary developmental studies show that feathers or feather-like structures were converting back to scales.<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Dhouailly |first=Danielle |date=20 April 2009 |title=A new scenario for the evolutionary origin of hair, feather, and avian scales |journal=Journal of Anatomy |language=en |volume=214 |issue=4 |pages=587–606 |doi=10.1111/j.1469-7580.2008.01041.x |pmc=2736124 |pmid=19422430}}</ref><ref>{{Cite journal |last1=Bell |first1=Phil R. |last2=Campione |first2=Nicolás E. |last3=Persons |first3=W. Scott |last4=Currie |first4=Philip J. |last5=Larson |first5=Peter L. |last6=Tanke |first6=Darren H. |last7=Bakker |first7=Robert T. |date=2017-06-30 |title=Tyrannosauroid integument reveals conflicting patterns of gigantism and feather evolution |journal=Biology Letters |volume=13 |issue=6 |pages=20170092 |doi=10.1098/rsbl.2017.0092 |pmc=5493735 |pmid=28592520}}</ref><ref>{{Cite journal |last1=Zheng |first1=Xiaoting |last2=Zhou |first2=Zhonghe |last3=Wang |first3=Xiaoli |last4=Zhang |first4=Fucheng |last5=Zhang |first5=Xiaomei |last6=Wang |first6=Yan |last7=Wei |first7=Guangjin |last8=Wang |first8=Shuo |last9=Xu |first9=Xing |date=2013-03-15 |title=Hind Wings in Basal Birds and the Evolution of Leg Feathers |url=https://www.science.org/doi/10.1126/science.1228753 |journal=Science |language=en |volume=339 |issue=6125 |pages=1309–1312 |doi=10.1126/science.1228753 |pmid=23493711 |bibcode=2013Sci...339.1309Z |s2cid=206544531 |issn=0036-8075}}</ref>
The fact that precursors of feathers appeared and then were co-opted for insulation is already present in Gould and Vrba, 1982.<ref>{{cite journal |author=Gould, Stephen J. and Vrba, Elisabeth S. |year=1982 |title=Exaptation: a missing term in the science of form |journal=Paleobiology |volume=8 |issue=1 |pages=4–15|url=http://www.diegm.uniud.it/detoni/download/didattica/SeminarioAndriani/ExaptationPaleobiology.pdf}}</ref> The reason why such precursors appeared could be explained by a theory which is based on metabolic issue. Feathers are made of protein and contain substantial amounts of certain amino acids, especially cysteine. The protein complex at the base of the composition of the feather is keratin, which has disulfide bonds between amino acids that confer unique properties of stability and elasticity. The metabolism of amino acids containing sulfur proved to be toxic to the organism. If the sulfur amino acids are not catabolized at the final products of urea or uric acid but used for the synthesis of keratin instead, the release of hydrogen sulfide is extremely reduced or avoided. For an organism whose metabolism works at high internal temperatures of 40&nbsp;°C or greater can be extremely important to prevent the excess production of hydrogen sulfide. This hypothesis could be consistent with the need for high metabolic rate of theropod dinosaurs.<ref>{{cite journal| title= Die Feder, die Mauser und der Urspring der Vögel. Ein neure Sicht zur Evolution der Vögel|author=Reichholf, J. H.|year=1996| journal= Archaeopteryx|volume=1427 |issue=38}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal| title= Explanatory History of the Origin of Feathers|author=Bock, W. J.|year=2000| journal= Amer. Zool.|volume=40 |issue=4|pages=478–485 |doi=10.1093/icb/40.4.478}}</ref>


The idea that precursors of feathers appeared before they were co-opted for insulation is already stated in Gould and Vrba (1982).<ref>{{cite journal |author1=Gould, Stephen J. |author2=Vrba, Elisabeth S. |year=1982 |title=Exaptation: a missing term in the science of form |journal=Paleobiology |volume=8 |issue=1 |pages=4–15 |url=https://www.insead.edu/sites/default/files/assets/faculty-personal-site/vibha-gaba/documents/Gould%20%26%20Vrba_Exaptation.pdf |doi=10.1017/S0094837300004310 |bibcode=1982Pbio....8....4G |s2cid=86436132 |access-date=25 March 2022 |archive-date=18 May 2022 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220518011405/https://www.insead.edu/sites/default/files/assets/faculty-personal-site/vibha-gaba/documents/Gould%20%26%20Vrba_Exaptation.pdf |url-status=dead }}</ref> The original benefit might have been metabolic. Feathers are largely made of the keratin protein complex, which has disulfide bonds between amino acids that give it stability and elasticity. The metabolism of amino acids containing sulfur can be toxic; however, if the sulfur amino acids are not catabolized as the final products of urea or uric acid but used for the synthesis of keratin instead, the release of ] is extremely reduced or avoided. For an organism whose metabolism works at high internal temperatures of {{Convert|40|°C|°F}} or greater, it can be extremely important to prevent the excess production of hydrogen sulfide. This hypothesis could be consistent with the need for high metabolic rate of theropod dinosaurs.<ref>{{cite journal |title=Die Feder, die Mauser und der Ursprung der Vögel. Ein neure Sicht zur Evolution der Vögel |trans-title=The feather, the moult and the origin of the birds. A new perspective on the evolution of birds |language=de |last1=Reichholf |first1=J. H. |year=1996 |journal=Archaeopteryx |volume=14 |pages=27–38}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |last1=Bock |first1=Walter J. |title=Explanatory History of the Origin of Feathers |journal=American Zoologist |date=1 August 2000 |volume=40 |issue=4 |pages=478–485 |doi=10.1093/icb/40.4.478 |citeseerx=10.1.1.497.1279}}</ref>
It is not known with certainty at what point in ] ] the earliest simple “protofeathers” arose, or whether they arose once or independently multiple times. Filamentous structures are clearly present in ], and long, hollow quills have been reported in specimens of the ]n dinosaurs '']'' and '']''.<ref name="mayretal2002">{{cite journal| author = Mayr, G. Peters, S.D. Plodowski, G. Vogel, O.| year = 2002| title = Bristle-like integumentary structures at the tail of the horned dinosaur ''Psittacosaurus''| journal = Naturwissenschaften| volume = 89| pages = 361–365| doi = 10.1007/s00114-002-0339-6| pmid = 12435037| issue = 8|bibcode = 2002NW.....89..361M | last2 = Peters| last3 = Plodowski| last4 = Vogel}}</ref><ref name="zhengetal2009"/> In 2009, Xu et al. noted that the hollow, unbranched, stiff integumentary structures found on a specimen of '']'' were strikingly similar to the integumentary structures of '']'' and ]s. They suggested that all of these structures may have been inherited from a common ancestor much earlier in the evolution of ]s, possibly in an ] from the Middle ] or earlier.<ref name="Xuetal2009">{{cite journal | last1 = Xu | first1 = X. | last2 = Zheng | first2 = X. | last3 = You | first3 = H. | title = A new feather type in a nonavian theropod and the early evolution of feathers | doi = 10.1073/pnas.0810055106 | journal = Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences | volume = 106 | pages = 832–4 | year = 2009 |pmc=2630069 | pmid=19139401 | issue=3|bibcode = 2009PNAS..106..832X }}</ref> More recently, findings in Russia of the basal ] '']'' report that although the lower leg and tail seemed to be scaled, "varied integumentary structures were found directly associated with skeletal elements, supporting the hypothesis that simple filamentous feathers, as well as compound feather-like structures comparable to those in theropods, were widespread amongst the whole dinosaur clade."<ref>http://dml.cmnh.org/2013Nov/msg00010.html</ref>


The point is not known with certainty in ] ] that the earliest simple "protofeathers" arose, as well as whether they arose once or independently multiple times. Filamentous structures are clearly present in ],<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Yang |first1=Z. |last2=Jiang |first2=B. |last3=McNamara |first3=M. E. |last4=Kearns |first4=S. L. |last5=Pittman |first5=M. |last6=Kaye |first6=T. G. |last7=Orr |first7=P. J. |last8=Xu |first8=X. |last9=Benton |first9=M. J. |title=Pterosaur integumentary structures with complex feather-like branching |journal=Nature Ecology & Evolution |date=2019 |volume=3 |issue=1 |pages=24–30 |doi=10.1038/s41559-018-0728-7 |pmid=30568282 |hdl=1983/1f7893a1-924d-4cb3-a4bf-c4b1592356e9 |s2cid=56480710 |url=https://research-information.bris.ac.uk/ws/files/184677374/Main_Text_revised_mjb.pdf |hdl-access=free}}</ref> and long, hollow quills have been reported in specimens of the ornithischian dinosaurs '']'' and '']''<ref name=mayretal2002>{{cite journal |last1=Mayr |first1=Gerald |last2=Peters |first2=Stefan |last3=Plodowski |first3=Gerhard |last4=Vogel |first4=Olaf |title=Bristle-like integumentary structures at the tail of the horned dinosaur ''Psittacosaurus'' |journal=Naturwissenschaften |volume=89 |issue=8 |pages=361–365 |year=2002 |pmid=12435037 |doi=10.1007/s00114-002-0339-6 |bibcode=2002NW.....89..361M |s2cid=17781405}}</ref><ref name="zhengetal2009">{{cite journal |last1=Zheng |first1=Xiao-Ting |last2=You |first2=Hai-Lu |last3=Xu |first3=Xing |last4=Dong |first4=Zhi-Ming |title=An Early Cretaceous heterodontosaurid dinosaur with filamentous integumentary structures |journal=Nature |volume=458 |issue=7236 |pages=333–336 |year=2009 |pmid=19295609 |doi=10.1038/nature07856 |bibcode=2009Natur.458..333Z |s2cid=4423110}}</ref> although there has been disagreement.<ref name="Qiang 2016 535–544">{{cite journal |last1=Qiang |first1=Ji |last2=Xuri |first2=Wang |last3=Yannan |first3=Ji |last4=Ball |first4=Black |date=2016 |title=Feathers or scales |url=http://www.cqvip.com/qk/96560x/201604/671056951.html |journal=Journal of Geology |issue=4 |pages=535–544}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |last=Unwin |first=David |date=28 September 2020 |title=No protofeathers on pterosaurs |url=https://www.nature.com/articles/s41559-020-01308-9 |journal=Nature Ecology and Evolution |volume=4 |issue=12 |pages=1590–1591|doi=10.1038/s41559-020-01308-9 |pmid=32989266 |s2cid=222168569 }}</ref><ref>{{Cite journal |last1=Barrett |first1=Paul M. |last2=Evans |first2=David C. |last3=Campione |first3=Nicolás E. |date=2015-06-30 |title=Evolution of dinosaur epidermal structures |journal=Biology Letters |volume=11 |issue=6 |pages=20150229 |doi=10.1098/rsbl.2015.0229 |pmc=4528472 |pmid=26041865}}</ref> In 2009, Xu et al. noted that the hollow, unbranched, stiff integumentary structures found on a specimen of '']'' were strikingly similar to the integumentary structures of ''Psittacosaurus'' and pterosaurs. They suggested that all of these structures may have been inherited from a common ancestor much earlier in the evolution of archosaurs, possibly in an ] from the ] or earlier.<ref name="Xuetal2009">{{cite journal |last1=Xu |first1=X. |last2=Zheng |first2=X. |last3=You |first3=H. |title=A new feather type in a nonavian theropod and the early evolution of feathers |doi=10.1073/pnas.0810055106 |journal=Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences |volume=106 |pages=832–4 |year=2009 |pmc=2630069 |pmid=19139401 |issue=3 |bibcode=2009PNAS..106..832X |doi-access=free}}</ref> More recently, findings in Russia of the basal ]n '']'' report that although the lower leg and tail seemed to be scaled, "varied integumentary structures were found directly associated with skeletal elements, supporting the hypothesis that simple filamentous feathers, as well as compound feather-like structures comparable to those in theropods, were widespread amongst the whole dinosaur clade."<ref>{{cite conference |last1=Godefroit |first1=P |last2=Sinitsa |first2=S |last3=Dhouailly |first3=D |last4=Bolotsky |first4=Y |last5=Sizov |first5=A |date=2013 |title=Feather-like structures and scales in a Jurassic neornithischian dinosaur from Siberia |url=https://www.naturalsciences.be/en/rbins-biblio/12537 |access-date=6 January 2020 |archive-date=1 March 2021 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210301132741/https://www.naturalsciences.be/en/rbins-biblio/12537 |url-status=dead }}</ref> In contrast, a 2016 study published in the Journal of Geology suggested that the integumentary structures found on ''Kulindadromeus'' and ''Psittacosaurus'' may be highly deformed scales rather than filamentous feathers.<ref name="Qiang 2016 535–544"/>
Display feathers are also known from dinosaurs that are very primitive members of the bird lineage, or ]. The most primitive example is '']'', which had a short tail with extremely long, ribbon-like feathers. Oddly enough, the fossil does not preserve wing feathers, suggesting that ''Epidexipteryx'' was either secondarily flightless, or that display feathers evolved before flight feathers in the bird lineage.<ref name="zhangnature2008">{{cite journal |last1=Zhang |first1=Fucheng |last2=Zhou |first2=Zhonghe |last3=Xu |first3=Xing |last4=Wang |first4=Xiaolin |last5=Sullivan |first5=Corwin |title=A bizarre Jurassic maniraptoran from China with elongate ribbon-like feathers |url=http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/v455/n7216/full/nature07447.html |journal=Nature |volume=455 |issue=7216 |pages=1105–8 |year=2008 |pmid=18948955| doi=10.1038/nature07447 |bibcode=2008Natur.455.1105Z}}</ref> Plumaceous feathers are found in nearly all lineages of Theropoda common in the northern hemisphere, and pennaceous feathers are attested as far down the tree as the Ornithomimosauria. The fact that only adult '']'' had wing-like structures suggests that pennaceous feathers evolved for mating displays.<ref>{{Cite doi|10.1126/science.1225376}}</ref>


Display feathers are also known from dinosaurs that are very primitive members of the bird lineage, or ]. The most primitive example is '']'', which had a short tail with extremely long, ribbon-like feathers. Oddly enough, the fossil does not preserve wing feathers, suggesting that ''Epidexipteryx'' was either secondarily flightless, or that display feathers evolved before flight feathers in the bird lineage.<ref name="zhangnature2008">{{cite journal |last=Zhang |first=Fucheng |author2=Zhou, Zhonghe |author3=Xu, Xing |author4=Wang, Xiaolin |author5=Sullivan, Corwin |title=A bizarre Jurassic maniraptoran from China with elongate ribbon-like feathers |journal=Nature |year=2008 |volume=455 |issue=7216 |pages=1105–1108 |doi=10.1038/nature07447 |pmid=18948955 |bibcode=2008Natur.455.1105Z |s2cid=4362560 |url=https://www.nature.com/articles/npre.2008.2326.1.pdf}}</ref> Plumaceous feathers are found in nearly all lineages of Theropoda common in the northern hemisphere, and pennaceous feathers are attested as far down the tree as the ]. The fact that only adult '']'' had wing-like structures suggests that pennaceous feathers evolved for mating displays.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Zelenitsky |first1=D. K. |last2=Therrien |first2=F. |last3=Erickson |first3=G. M. |last4=DeBuhr |first4=C. L. |last5=Kobayashi |first5=Y. |last6=Eberth |first6=D. A. |last7=Hadfield |first7=F. |title=Feathered Non-Avian Dinosaurs from North America Provide Insight into Wing Origins |journal=Science |date=25 October 2012 |volume=338 |issue=6106 |pages=510–514 |doi=10.1126/science.1225376 |pmid=23112330 |bibcode=2012Sci...338..510Z |s2cid=2057698}}</ref>
==Phylogeny and the inference of feathers in other dinosaurs==


==Phylogeny and inference of feathers in other dinosaurs==
Fossil feather impressions are extremely rare and they require exceptional preservation conditions to form. Therefore only a few feathered dinosaur ] have been identified. All fossil feather specimens have been found to show certain similarities. Due to these similarities and through developmental research, almost all scientists agree that feathers could only have evolved once in dinosaurs. Feathers would then have been passed down to all later, more derived species, unless some lineages lost feathers secondarily. If a dinosaur falls at a point on an evolutionary tree within the known feather-bearing lineages, then its ancestors had feathers, and it is quite possible that it did as well. This technique, called ], can also be used to infer the type of feathers a species may have had, since the developmental history of feathers is now reasonably well-known. All feathered species had filamentaceous or plumaceous (downy) feathers, with pennaceous feathers found among the more bird-like groups. The following ] is adapted from Godefroit ''et al.'', 2013.<ref name=AurornisNature>{{Cite doi|10.1038/nature12168 }}</ref>
This technique, called ], can also be used to infer the type of feathers a species may have had, since the developmental history of feathers is now reasonably well-known. All feathered species had filamentaceous or plumaceous (downy) feathers, with pennaceous feathers found among the more bird-like groups. The following ] is adapted from Godefroit ''et al.'', 2013.<ref name=AurornisNature>{{cite journal |last1=Godefroit |first1=Pascal |last2=Cau |first2=Andrea |last3=Hu |first3=Dong-Yu |last4=Escuillié |first4=François |last5=Wu |first5=Wenhao |last6=Dyke |first6=Gareth |doi=10.1038/nature12168 |title=A Jurassic avialan dinosaur from China resolves the early phylogenetic history of birds |journal=Nature |volume=498 |issue=7454 |pages=359–362 |year=2013 |pmid=23719374 |bibcode=2013Natur.498..359G |s2cid=4364892}}</ref>


<span style="color:grey;">Grey</span> denotes a clade that is not known to contain any feathered specimen at the time of writing, some of which have fossil evidence of scales. The presence or lack of feathered specimens in a given clade does not confirm that all members in a clade have the specified integument, unless corroborated with representative fossil evidence within clade members.
{{clade| style=font-size:75%;line-height:120%

{{clade|style=font-size:75%;line-height:120%
|label1=] |label1=]
|1={{clade |1={{clade
|1=] (none known) |1=]
|label2=] |label2=]
|2={{clade |2={{clade
|1=] (none known) |1=]
|label2=] |label2=]
|2={{clade |2={{clade
|1=] (none known) |1=]
|label2=] |label2=]
|2={{clade |2={{clade
|1='']'' - filamentous feathers |1='']'' filamentous feathers
|label2=] |label2=]
|2={{clade |2={{clade
|1=] (''], ]'') – plumulaceous feathers |1=] (''], ]'') – plumulaceous feathers
|2={{clade |2={{clade
|1='']'' – plumulaceous feathers |1='']'' – plumulaceous feathers
Line 130: Line 99:
|1={{clade |1={{clade
|1='']'' – filamentous feathers |1='']'' – filamentous feathers
|2='']'' (none known) }} |2='']'' }}
|label2=] |label2=]
|2={{clade |2={{clade
|1=] ('']''?, '']'', '']'') – plumulaceous feathers |1=] ('']'', '']'') – plumulaceous feathers
|label2=] |label2=]
|2={{clade |2={{clade
|1=] ('']'') – plumulaceous? feathers |1=] ('']'') – plumulaceous feathers
|2={{Clade |2={{Clade
|1=] ('']'', '']'') – plumulaceous feathers |1=] ('']'', '']'') – plumulaceous feathers
Line 152: Line 121:
|2={{clade |2={{clade
|1=] ('']'') – pennaceous feathers |1=] ('']'') – pennaceous feathers
|2=] (birds) |2=] (ancestors of birds)
}} }}
}} }}
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}} }}
}} }}
}} }} }} }} }} }} }} }} }} }} }} }} }} }} }} }} }}
]
The following cladogram is from Xu (2020).<ref>{{citation |last=Xu |first=Xing |title=Filamentous Integuments in Nonavialan Theropods and Their Kin: Advances and Future Perspectives for Understanding the Evolution of Feathers |date=2020 |work=The Evolution of Feathers: From Their Origin to the Present |pages=67–78 |editor-last=Foth |editor-first=Christian |series=Fascinating Life Sciences |place=Cham |publisher=Springer International Publishing |language=en |doi=10.1007/978-3-030-27223-4_5 |isbn=978-3-030-27223-4 |s2cid=216384668 |editor2-last=Rauhut |editor2-first=Oliver W. M. }}</ref>

# Slender monofilamentous integument
# Broad monofilamentous integument
# Basally joining filamentous feather
# Basally joining shafter filamentous feather
# Radially branched shafted filamentous feather
# Bilaterally branched filamentous feather
# Basally joining branched filamentous feather
# Basally joining membranous-based filamentous feather
# Symmetrical open-vaned feather
# Symmetrical close-vaned feather
# Asymmetrical close-vaned feather
# Proximally ribbon-like close-vaned feather
# Rachis-dominant close-vaned feather

{{clade
|1=]
|label2=Ornithodira
|2={{clade
|1=] 1?
|label2=]
|2={{clade
|label1=]
|1={{clade
|1={{clade
|1='']''
|2='']'' 1? }}
|2={{clade
|1='']'' 1? ,3?
|2={{clade
|1='']'' 1
|2='']'' }} }} }}
|2={{clade
|1=]
|2={{clade
|1='']''
|2={{clade
|1='']'' 1
|2={{clade
|1='']''
|label2=]
|2={{clade
|1={{clade
|1='']'' 2, 3?, 4?, 5? 6?
|2={{clade
|1='']'' 3?, 4?, 5?, 6?
|2='']'' }} }}
|2={{clade
|1='']'' 1?, 2?, 3?
|label2=]
|2={{clade
|1='']'' 3?, 4, 5?, 6?
|2={{clade
|1={{clade
|1='']'' 2, 3?, 4?, 5?, 6?
|2='']'' }}
|2={{clade
|1={{clade
|1='']''
|2='']'' 1? }}
|label2=]
|2={{clade
|1={{clade
|1='']'' 3?, 4?, 5?, 6?, 9?, 10
|2='']'' 3?, 4?, 5?, 6?, 10, 12 }}
|label2=]
|2={{clade
|1={{clade
|1='']'' 3?, 4?, 5?, 6?, 8, 13
|2='']'' 3?, 4?, 5?, 6?, 7 }}
|2={{clade
|1=] (most types)
|2={{clade
|1={{clade
|1='']'' 3?, 4? 5?, 6?, 7?, 10
|2='']'' 3?, 4?, 5?, 6?, 10, 11 }}
|2={{clade
|1='']'' 3?, 4?, 5?, 6?, 10, 11
|2='']'' 3, 4, 5?, 6?, 10 }} }} }} }} }} }} }} }} }} }} }} }} }} }} }} }} }}


==See also== ==See also==
* {{Annotated link|Origin of birds}}
{{Portal|Dinosaurs}}
* ]


==References== ==References==
{{Reflist|2}} {{Reflist}}


==External links== ==External links==
* , ''University of Bristol'', 12 February 2019
* , dinosaur-bird controversy explained, by UC Berkeley.
* , DinoBuzz, UC Berkeley.
]
* {{In Our Time|Feathered Dinosaurs|b099v33p}}
]
{{Portal bar|Evolutionary biology|Dinosaurs|Paleontology|Science}}

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Latest revision as of 01:12, 7 October 2024

Dinosaur with feathers For the book, see Feathered Dinosaurs (book).

Life restoration of the feathered Wulong with colors inferred from preserved melanosomes
The ostrich is the largest living dinosaur.

A feathered dinosaur is any species of dinosaur possessing feathers. That includes all species of birds, and in recent decades evidence has accumulated that many non-avian dinosaur species also possessed feathers in some shape or form. The extent to which feathers or feather-like structures were present in dinosaurs as a whole is a subject of ongoing debate and research.

It has been suggested that feathers had originally functioned as thermal insulation, as it remains their function in the down feathers of infant birds prior to their eventual modification in birds into structures that support flight.

Since scientific research began on dinosaurs in the early 1800s, they were generally believed to be closely related to modern reptiles such as lizards. The word dinosaur itself, coined in 1842 by paleontologist Richard Owen, comes from the Greek for 'terrible lizard'. That view began to shift during the so-called dinosaur renaissance in scientific research in the late 1960s; by the mid-1990s, significant evidence had emerged that dinosaurs were much more closely related to birds, which descended directly from the theropod group of dinosaurs.

Knowledge of the origin of feathers developed as new fossils were discovered throughout the 2000s and the 2010s, and technology enabled scientists to study fossils more closely. Among non-avian dinosaurs, feathers or feather-like integument have been discovered in dozens of genera via direct and indirect fossil evidence. Although the vast majority of feather discoveries have been in coelurosaurian theropods, feather-like integument has also been discovered in at least three ornithischians, suggesting that feathers may have been present on the last common ancestor of the Ornithoscelida, a dinosaur group including both theropods and ornithischians. It is possible that feathers first developed in even earlier archosaurs, in light of the discovery of vaned feathers in pterosaurs. Fossil feathers from the dinosaur Sinosauropteryx contain traces of beta-proteins (formerly called beta-keratins), confirming that early feathers had a composition similar to that of feathers in modern birds. Crocodilians also possess beta keratin similar to those of birds, which suggests that they evolved from common ancestral genes.

History of research

Main article: Origin of birds

Early

The Berlin Archaeopteryx

Shortly after the 1859 publication of Charles Darwin's On the Origin of Species, the British biologist Thomas Henry Huxley proposed that birds were descendants of dinosaurs. He compared the skeletal structure of Compsognathus, a small theropod dinosaur, and the "first bird" Archaeopteryx lithographica (both of which were found in the Upper Jurassic Bavarian limestone of Solnhofen). He showed that, apart from its hands and feathers, Archaeopteryx was quite similar to Compsognathus. Thus Archaeopteryx represents a transitional fossil. In 1868, he published On the Animals which are most nearly intermediate between Birds and Reptiles, which made that case.

The first restoration of a feathered dinosaur was Huxley's depiction in 1876 of a feathered Compsognathus, made to accompany a bird evolution lecture he delivered in New York, in which he speculated that the aforementioned dinosaur might have had feathers.

Dinosaur renaissance

A century later, during the dinosaur renaissance, paleoartists began to create modern restorations of highly active dinosaurs. In 1969, Robert T. Bakker drew a running Deinonychus. His student Gregory S. Paul depicted non-avian maniraptoran dinosaurs with feathers and protofeathers, starting in the late 1970s.

Fossil discoveries

Cast in Japan of a resting trace from Massachusetts, which was argued to have been made by a theropod like Dilophosaurus and to include feather impressions around the belly (arrow), but that has been questioned.

The first known specimen of Archaeopteryx, on the basis of which the genus was named, was an isolated feather, although whether or not it belongs to Archaeopteryx has been controversial. One of the earliest discoveries of possible feather impressions by non-avian dinosaurs is a trace fossil (Fulicopus lyellii) of the 195–199 million year old Portland Formation in the northeastern United States. Gierlinski (1996, 1997, 1998) and Kundrát (2004) have interpreted traces between two footprints in this fossil as feather impressions from the belly of a squatting dilophosaurid. Although some reviewers have raised questions about the naming and interpretation of this fossil, if correct, that early Jurassic fossil is the oldest known evidence of feathers, almost 30 million years older than the next-oldest-known evidence.

Sinosauropteryx fossil, the first fossil of a definitively non-avialan dinosaur with feathers

The most important discoveries at Liaoning have been a host of feathered dinosaur fossils, with a steady stream of new finds filling in the picture of the dinosaur–bird connection and adding more to theories of the evolutionary development of feathers and flight. Turner et al. (2007) reported quill knobs from an ulna of Velociraptor mongoliensis, and these are strongly correlated with large and well-developed secondary feathers.

A nesting Citipati osmolskae specimen, at the AMNH

Behavioural evidence, in the form of an oviraptorosaur on its nest, showed another link with birds. Its forearms were folded, like those of a bird. Although no feathers were preserved, it is likely that these would have been present to insulate eggs and juveniles.

Fossil of Microraptor gui includes impressions of feathered wings (see arrows)

Not all of the Chinese fossil discoveries proved valid however. In 1999, a supposed fossil of an apparently feathered dinosaur named Archaeoraptor liaoningensis, also found in Liaoning, turned out to be a forgery. Comparing the photograph of the specimen with another find, Chinese paleontologist Xu Xing came to the conclusion that it was composed of two portions of different fossil animals. His claim made National Geographic review their research and they too came to the same conclusion.

In 2011, samples of amber were discovered to contain preserved feathers from 75 to 80 million years ago during the Cretaceous Period, with evidence that they were from both dinosaurs and birds. Initial analysis suggests that some of the feathers were used for insulation, and not flight. More complex feathers were revealed to have variations in coloration similar to modern birds, while simpler protofeathers were predominantly dark. Only 11 specimens are currently known. The specimens are too rare to be broken open to study their melanosomes (pigment-bearing organelles), but there are plans for using non-destructive high-resolution X-ray imaging. Melanosomes produce colouration in feathers; as differently-shaped melanosomes produce different colours, subsequent research on melanosomes preserved in feathered dinosaur specimens has led to reconstructions of the life appearance of several dinosaur species. These include Anchiornis, Sinosauropteryx, Microraptor, and Archaeopteryx.

In 2016, the discovery was announced of a feathered dinosaur tail preserved in amber that is estimated to be 99 million years old. Lida Xing, a researcher from the China University of Geosciences in Beijing, found the specimen at an amber market in Myanmar. It is the first definitive discovery of dinosaur material in amber.

Current knowledge

Non-avian dinosaur species preserved with evidence of feathers

Main article: List of non-avian dinosaur species preserved with evidence of feathers
Fossil of Sinornithosaurus millenii, the first evidence of feathers in dromaeosaurids
Cast of a Caudipteryx fossil with feather impressions and stomach content
Fossil cast of a Sinornithosaurus millenii
Jinfengopteryx elegans fossil

Several non-avian dinosaurs are now known to have been feathered. Direct evidence of feathers exists for several species. In all examples, the evidence described consists of feather impressions, except those genera inferred to have had feathers based on skeletal or chemical evidence, such as the presence of quill knobs (the anchor points for wing feathers on the forelimb) or a pygostyle (the fused vertebrae at the tail tip which often supports large feathers).

Primitive feather types

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Integumentary structures that gave rise to the feathers of birds are seen in the dorsal spines of reptiles and fish. A similar stage in their evolution to the complex coats of birds and mammals can be observed in living reptiles such as iguanas and Gonocephalus agamids. Feather structures are thought to have proceeded from simple hollow filaments through several stages of increasing complexity, ending with the large, deeply rooted feathers with strong pens (rachis), barbs and barbules that birds display today.

According to Prum's (1999) proposed model, at stage I, the follicle originates with a cylindrical epidermal depression around the base of the feather papilla. The first feather resulted when undifferentiated tubular follicle collar developed out of the old keratinocytes being pushed out. At stage II, the inner, basilar layer of the follicle collar differentiated into longitudinal barb ridges with unbranched keratin filaments, while the thin peripheral layer of the collar became the deciduous sheath, forming a tuft of unbranched barbs with a basal calamus. Stage III consists of two developmental novelties, IIIa and IIIb, as either could have occurred first. Stage IIIa involves helical displacement of barb ridges arising within the collar. The barb ridges on the anterior midline of the follicle fuse together, forming the rachis. The creation of a posterior barb locus follows, giving an indeterminate number of barbs. This resulted in a feather with a symmetrical, primarily branched structure with a rachis and unbranched barbs. In stage IIIb, barbules paired within the peripheral barbule plates of the barb ridges, create branched barbs with rami and barbules. This resulting feather is one with a tuft of branched barbs without a rachis. At stage IV, differentiated distal and proximal barbules produce a closed, pennaceous vane (a contour feather). A closed vane develops when pennulae on the distal barbules form a hooked shape to attach to the simpler proximal barbules of the adjacent barb. Stage V developmental novelties gave rise to additional structural diversity in the closed pennaceous feather. Here, asymmetrical flight feathers, bipinnate plumulaceous feathers, filoplumes, powder down, and bristles evolved.

Some evidence suggests that the original function of simple feathers was insulation. In particular, preserved patches of skin in large, derived, tyrannosauroids show scutes, while those in smaller, more primitive, forms show feathers. This may indicate that the larger forms had complex skins, with both scutes and filaments, or that tyrannosauroids may be like rhinos and elephants, having filaments at birth and then losing them as they developed to maturity. An adult Tyrannosaurus rex weighed about as much as an African elephant. If large tyrannosauroids were endotherms, they would have needed to radiate heat efficiently. This is due to the different structural properties of feathers compared to fur.

Some evidence also suggests that more derived feather types may have served as insulation. For instance, a study of oviraptorid pennaceous wing feathers and nesting posture suggests that elongated wing feathers evidently may have served to fill gaps between brooding individuals' insulatory body chamber and the outside environment. This "wall" of wing feathers could have shielded eggs from temperature extremes.

There is an increasing body of evidence that supports the display hypothesis, which states that early feathers were colored and increased reproductive success. Coloration could have provided the original adaptation of feathers, implying that all later functions of feathers, such as thermoregulation and flight, were co-opted. This hypothesis has been supported by the discovery of pigmented feathers in multiple species. Supporting the display hypothesis is the fact that fossil feathers have been observed in a ground-dwelling herbivorous dinosaur clade, making it unlikely that feathers functioned as predatory tools or as a means of flight. Additionally, some specimens have iridescent feathers. Pigmented and iridescent feathers may have provided greater attractiveness to mates, providing enhanced reproductive success when compared to non-colored feathers. Current research shows that it is plausible that theropods would have had the visual acuity necessary to see the displays. In a study by Stevens (2006), the binocular field of view for Velociraptor has been estimated to be 55 to 60 degrees, which is about that of modern owls. Visual acuity for Tyrannosaurus has been predicted to be anywhere from about that of humans to 13 times that of humans. Paleontological and evolutionary developmental studies show that feathers or feather-like structures were converting back to scales.

The idea that precursors of feathers appeared before they were co-opted for insulation is already stated in Gould and Vrba (1982). The original benefit might have been metabolic. Feathers are largely made of the keratin protein complex, which has disulfide bonds between amino acids that give it stability and elasticity. The metabolism of amino acids containing sulfur can be toxic; however, if the sulfur amino acids are not catabolized as the final products of urea or uric acid but used for the synthesis of keratin instead, the release of hydrogen sulfide is extremely reduced or avoided. For an organism whose metabolism works at high internal temperatures of 40 °C (104 °F) or greater, it can be extremely important to prevent the excess production of hydrogen sulfide. This hypothesis could be consistent with the need for high metabolic rate of theropod dinosaurs.

The point is not known with certainty in archosaur phylogeny that the earliest simple "protofeathers" arose, as well as whether they arose once or independently multiple times. Filamentous structures are clearly present in pterosaurs, and long, hollow quills have been reported in specimens of the ornithischian dinosaurs Psittacosaurus and Tianyulong although there has been disagreement. In 2009, Xu et al. noted that the hollow, unbranched, stiff integumentary structures found on a specimen of Beipiaosaurus were strikingly similar to the integumentary structures of Psittacosaurus and pterosaurs. They suggested that all of these structures may have been inherited from a common ancestor much earlier in the evolution of archosaurs, possibly in an ornithodire from the Middle Triassic or earlier. More recently, findings in Russia of the basal neornithischian Kulindadromeus report that although the lower leg and tail seemed to be scaled, "varied integumentary structures were found directly associated with skeletal elements, supporting the hypothesis that simple filamentous feathers, as well as compound feather-like structures comparable to those in theropods, were widespread amongst the whole dinosaur clade." In contrast, a 2016 study published in the Journal of Geology suggested that the integumentary structures found on Kulindadromeus and Psittacosaurus may be highly deformed scales rather than filamentous feathers.

Display feathers are also known from dinosaurs that are very primitive members of the bird lineage, or Avialae. The most primitive example is Epidexipteryx, which had a short tail with extremely long, ribbon-like feathers. Oddly enough, the fossil does not preserve wing feathers, suggesting that Epidexipteryx was either secondarily flightless, or that display feathers evolved before flight feathers in the bird lineage. Plumaceous feathers are found in nearly all lineages of Theropoda common in the northern hemisphere, and pennaceous feathers are attested as far down the tree as the Ornithomimosauria. The fact that only adult Ornithomimus had wing-like structures suggests that pennaceous feathers evolved for mating displays.

Phylogeny and inference of feathers in other dinosaurs

This technique, called phylogenetic bracketing, can also be used to infer the type of feathers a species may have had, since the developmental history of feathers is now reasonably well-known. All feathered species had filamentaceous or plumaceous (downy) feathers, with pennaceous feathers found among the more bird-like groups. The following cladogram is adapted from Godefroit et al., 2013.

Grey denotes a clade that is not known to contain any feathered specimen at the time of writing, some of which have fossil evidence of scales. The presence or lack of feathered specimens in a given clade does not confirm that all members in a clade have the specified integument, unless corroborated with representative fossil evidence within clade members.

Neotheropoda

Dilophosauridae

Orionides

Megalosauroidea

Avetheropoda

Carnosauria

Coelurosauria

Sciurumimus – filamentous feathers

Tyrannoraptora

Tyrannosauroidea (Dilong, Yutyrannus) – plumulaceous feathers

Sinocalliopteryx – plumulaceous feathers

Compsognathidae (Sinosauropteryx, GMV 2124) – plumulaceous feathers

Juravenator – filamentous feathers

Ornitholestes

Maniraptoriformes

Ornithomimosauria (Ornithomimus, Deinocheirus) – plumulaceous feathers

Maniraptora

Alvarezsauridae (Shuvuuia) – plumulaceous feathers

Therizinosauroidea (Beipiaosaurus, Jianchangosaurus) – plumulaceous feathers

Pennaraptora

Oviraptorosauria (Avimimus, Nomingia, Caudipteryx, Similicaudipteryx, Protarchaeopteryx, Ningyuansaurus, Citipati, Conchoraptor) – pennaceous feathers

Paraves

Scansoriopterygidae (Scansoriopteryx, Epidexipteryx) – pennaceous feathers

Eosinopteryx – pennaceous feathers

Eumaniraptora

Dromaeosauridae (Sinornithosaurus, Microraptor, Velociraptor, Changyuraptor) – pennaceous feathers

Troodontidae (Jinfengopteryx) – pennaceous feathers

Avialae (ancestors of birds)

Cladogram showing distribution of feathers in Dinosauria, as of 2019. The groups that are marked with scales did not necessarily lack feathers but simply have never been found with feather impressions.

The following cladogram is from Xu (2020).

  1. Slender monofilamentous integument
  2. Broad monofilamentous integument
  3. Basally joining filamentous feather
  4. Basally joining shafter filamentous feather
  5. Radially branched shafted filamentous feather
  6. Bilaterally branched filamentous feather
  7. Basally joining branched filamentous feather
  8. Basally joining membranous-based filamentous feather
  9. Symmetrical open-vaned feather
  10. Symmetrical close-vaned feather
  11. Asymmetrical close-vaned feather
  12. Proximally ribbon-like close-vaned feather
  13. Rachis-dominant close-vaned feather

crocodiles and relatives

Ornithodira

Pterosauria 1?

Dinosauria
Ornithischia

Heterodontosaurus

Tianyulong 1?

Kulindadromeus 1? ,3?

Psittacosaurus 1

Triceratops

Sauropodomorpha

Coelophysis

Sciurumimus 1

Concavenator

Coelurosauria

Yutyrannus 2, 3?, 4?, 5? 6?

Dilong 3?, 4?, 5?, 6?

Tyrannosaurus

Ornithomimus edmontonicus 1?, 2?, 3?

Maniraptora

Sinosauropteryx 3?, 4, 5?, 6?

Beipiaosaurus 2, 3?, 4?, 5?, 6?

Therizinosaurus

Haplocheirus

Shuvuuia 1?

Pennaraptora

Protarchaeopteryx 3?, 4?, 5?, 6?, 9?, 10

Incisivosaurus 3?, 4?, 5?, 6?, 10, 12

Paraves

Epidexipteryx 3?, 4?, 5?, 6?, 8, 13

Yi 3?, 4?, 5?, 6?, 7

Avialae (most types)

Anchiornis 3?, 4? 5?, 6?, 7?, 10

Jianianhualong 3?, 4?, 5?, 6?, 10, 11

Microraptor 3?, 4?, 5?, 6?, 10, 11

Sinornithosaurus 3, 4, 5?, 6?, 10

See also

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