The ebony bones glisten dully at the
bottom of a drawer in the basement of the Museum of the Rockies in Bozeman, Montana. Long,
thin leg bones sit beside butterfly-winged vertebrae. But the claws are what get your
attention: curved and sharp like an eagle's, only larger. Curator Jack Horner holds his
hand at Dalmatian-petting height to indicate the size of the wielder of those claws.
Meet Deinonychus, first unearthed by Yale paleontologist John Ostrom in 1964.
The claws and joint structure speak of a quick, agile predator.
Ligaments in the tail
held it stiff, keeping it off the ground and allowing it to act as both rudder and
counterbalance. Deinonychus was not a kangaroo but a charging linebacker.
A few years later, Ostrom recognized a close resemblance between Deinonychus'
fingers and the early bird Archaeopteryx. Ostrom used this and other similarities
between the two to revive the idea that birds weren't just distant relatives of dinosaurs
but that birds were dinosaurs.
A controversial new method of classifying organisms, called cladistics, supported
Ostrom. The revised family tree, or cladogram, lists 130 shared characteristics between
birds and
dinosaurs, completely rejecting the
tradition that places dinosaurs with reptiles and sets aside birds as their own distinct
class. The new classification had a profound effect on the next generation of
paleontologists, such as Paul Sereno, who was studying at the University of Chicago in the
1980s at the time cladistics entered the computer age. "The data is the anatomical
features of the skeleton, which is the only record from which to work, and the computer is
able to quantitively support all this data."
New fossils recently discovered in
China have convinced all but the most intransigent skeptics. Protarchaeopteryx and Caudipteryx
are both theropod dinosaurs unmistakably covered in feathers. Because they lived after Archaeopteryx,
small dinosaurs as a group must have had feathers well before they started down the road
to birdhood and flight. The finds perhaps are "the discovery of the century,"
muses Philip Currie of Canada, one of many paleontologists paving the evolutionary runway
of dinosaur-to-bird.
According to Robert Bakker, the Chinese feathered dinosaurs cement the idea that
"if you could watch dinosaurs moving around, they would look to you like a lot of
ground birds, like really big turkeys with bad attitudes. So yes, birds are descended from
dinosaurs, and dinosaurs had already acquired a lot of those active properties we
associate with being a bird."
