National Geographic confirms mistake in description of feathered dinosaur

WASHINGTON - The National Geographic Society confirmed Thursday that a fossil hailed last year as important evidence of a relationship between birds and dinosaurs is really a composite of at least two different animals.

The specimen, Archaeoraptor, was unveiled by National Geographic last October and paleontologists said they believed it was a key species in the transition from dinosaurs to birds.

That was later questioned by Chinese paleontologist Xu Xing and National Geographic convened a panel of scientists to study the question.

The team headed by Hans-Dieter Sues of the Royal Ontario Museum reported Thursday that the specimen is made up of parts from at least two different animals.

Scientists have other evidence that birds descended from small, meat-eating dinosaurs and the new report doesn't change that.

As for Archaeoraptor, however, the panel concluded that the skull, trunk, shoulder and forelimbs of the specimen represent a species new to science, the panel said. They said this new find may have implications for the early evolution of birds, but so far its relationship to other primitive birds has not been determined.

The tail, on the other hand, belongs to a small predatory dinosaur known as a dromaeosaur, they concluded. The left and right upper leg bone - femur- go together, as do the other leg bones, but these bones may represent a combination of several animals, the panel said.

The Chinese scientist had raised questions about the find after finding the supposed tail of Archaeoraptor matched the tail of a small dinosaur from the same type of rock where Archaeoraptor had been found. Xu Xing attended the session where the panel studied the fossil.

Besides Sues, other panel members were James Clark of George Washington University, Catherine Foster of the State University of New York at Stony Brook, Mark Norell of the American Museum of National History in New York and Storrs Olson of the National Museum of Natural History in Washington. The results were announced by Stephen Czerkas of the Dinosaur Museum in Blanding, Utah, who had originally obtained the fossil at a gem and mineral show in Utah.

It was originally found in China and Xu noted that when pieces are stolen and smuggled out, sometimes blocks of fossils are matched together mistakenly.

When it was unveiled at a news conference last October, Archaeoraptor liaoningensis, which lived 120 million to 140 million years ago, stirred interest because the fossil bones made it appear that it would have been able to fly.

On the net: http://www.nationalgeographic.com

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