The First Bird ■ 261
Tussling with Trees
In January 2013, a year and a half after
Xu published his controversial paper about
Xiaotingia and Archaeopteryx, his work re -
ceived unexpected support. Pascal Godefroit,
a paleontologist at the Royal Belgian Institute
of Natural Sciences, reported the discovery
of a feathered dinosaur called Eosinopteryx
brevipenna. A commercial collector in north-
eastern China had dug up Eosinopteryx in the
same area where Xiaotingia was discovered.
The tiny 161-million-year-old dinosaur was
preserved as a virtually complete skeleton, with
its legs bent and arms out, as if about to jump
(Figure 14.12).
When Godefroit and his team added Eosin-
opteryx to the evolutionary tree of feathered
dinosaurs, they came to the same surprising
conclusion that Xu had: Archaeopteryx was not a
bird. Instead, Archaeopteryx was a raptor along
with Eosinopteryx and Xiaotingia. All three
species share traits that early birds did not have,
such as arms longer than their legs, reduced tail
plumage, and primitive feather development.
Figure 14.11
Cambrian biodiversity
During the Cambrian period, animal diversity
increased dramatically. The remains of many of
these species have been found in Canada (the
Burgess Shale), China (the Maotianshan Shale),
and fossil beds in Greenland and Sweden. Some of
the fossils look familiar, resembling sponges and
brachiopods, but do not appear to be related to
any living groups of animals.
Cambrian explosion
4,600 545 490 445
mya
Precambrian Cambrian Ordovician
But science is a continuously changing
process, and only 4 months later, Godefroit
published data about another birdlike fossil
that caused him to revise his hypothesis once
again. This time it was a feathered dinosaur that
Godefroit found collecting dust in the archives
of a Chinese museum. The 18-inch-long fossil
had small, sharp teeth and long forelimbs.
Godefroit believed the dinosaur, which his team
named Aurornis xui to honor Xu’s work, proba-
bly couldn’t fly, but instead used its wings to glide
from tree to tree. But its other features, includ-
ing the hip bones, were clearly shared by modern
birds (Figure 14.13).
Using Aurornis, Godefroit constructed
another evolutionary tree. This time he started
from scratch, compiling data on almost a
Pascal Godefroit is a paleontologist at the
Royal Belgian Institute of Natural Sciences
in Brussels. He has discovered numerous
feathered dinosaurs.
PASCAL GODEFROIT