'''Sinornithosaurus''' (derived from a combination of Latin and
Greek, meaning 'Chinese bird-lizard') is a
feathered dromaeosaurid dinosaur genus from the Lower
Cretaceous Period (Middle
Barremian) of the
Yixian Formation in what is now
China. It was the fifth known
feathered dinosaur genus discovered and at that time the closest of them all to the birds. It also suggests that other dromaeosaurids, like ''
Velociraptor'', may have had feathers.
Fuzzy-feathered runner
The impression of
feathers was found in the rock surrounding ''Sinornithosaurus''. They were composed of filaments, and showed two features that indicate they are early feathers. First, several filaments were joined together into "tufts", similar to the way down is structured. Second, a row of filaments (''barbs'') were joined together to a main shaft (''rachis''), making them similar in structure to normal
bird feathers. However, they do not have the secondary branching and tiny little hooks (
''barbules'') that modern feathers have, which allow the feathers of modern birds to form a discrete vane.
This was taken to support the "ground up" theory of avian flight. The "tree down" theory postulates that birds evolved from tree-climbing (''arboreal'') dinosaurs, who glided from tree to tree. The "ground up" theory, on the other hand, suggests that birds descended from running dinosaurs, who used their feathers for
insulation or as part of mating displays, before they started using them to fly. However, the discovery of ''
Microraptor's four wings and the increasing knowledge of early avian evolution indicates that this is likely a gross oversimplification, with both modes of evolving flight occurring in various "paravian" (close to the ancestors of birds) dinosaur species according to their respective mode of life.
In addition to the feathers, ''Sinornithosaurus'' could flap its
arms — it is one of the first dinosaurs discovered with a bird-like
shoulder girdle. It also has a bird-like
pelvic girdle and hindlimbs, and very long arms.
Classification

NGMC 91, or "Dave", is a probable specimen of ''Sinornithosaurus''.
''Sinornithosaurus'' was a member of the family
Dromaeosauridae, a group of agile,
meat-eating dinosaurs with a distinctive sickle-shaped toe claw, which also includes ''
Deinonychus'' and ''
Utahraptor''. It lived about 125
million years ago in the Barremian
age of the Lower Cretaceous
period, which makes it one of the earliest and most primitive dromaeosaurids yet discovered. The presence of feathers on such an early dromaeosaurid indicates that later dromaeosaurids may also have had feathers (instead of
scales or simpler "proto-feathers").
''Sinornithosaurus'' is known from at least two species. ''S. millenii'' ("millennium Chinese bird-lizard") is the
type species, described in 1999. A second species, ''S. haoiana'' ("Hao's Chinese bird-lizard") was described by Liu ''et al.'' in 2004 based on a new specimen which differed from ''S. millenii'' in features of the skull and hips. An incredibly well-preserved microraptorian nicknamed "Dave" (specimen NGMC 91) may represent a third species of ''Sinornithosaurus'', or a juvenile.
Discovery

The
holotype fossil of ''Sinornithosaurus millenii''.
''Sinornithosaurus'' was discovered by Xing Xu, Xiao-Lin Wang and Xiao-Chun Wu of the Institute of Vertebrate Paleontology and Paleoanthropology of
Beijing. An almost-complete
fossil with feather impressions, was recovered from
Liaoning Province, China, in the
Yixian Formation; the same incredibly rich location where four dinosaurs with feathers were discovered previously, ''
Protarchaeopteryx'', ''
Sinosauropteryx'', ''
Caudipteryx'', and ''
Beipiaosaurus''.
References
★
A new species of dromaeosaurids from the Yixian Formation of western Liaoning., Liu, J., Ji, S., Tang, F. & Gao, C., , , Geological Bulletin of China, (
abstract)
★
A dromaeosaurid dinosaur with a filamentous integument from the Yixian Formation of China, Xu, X., Wang, X.L., and Wu, X.C., , , Nature, (
abstract, )
External links
★
Dinosaur fossil yields feathery structures L. Wang
★
''Sinornithosaurus'' at DinoData