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Re: Concavenator corcovatus, a new humped carcharodontosaurid from Las Hoyas
I should point out that someone on the list (I forget who, my apologies)
pointed
out that some birds have feathers that grow in-between the scales on their feet
and cited this image as support:
http://www.flickr.com/photos/hardworkinghippy/1874087885/
It shows the feet of a dead Barn Owl, and it is quite clear that on the one
foot
to the right of the image there are FEATHER-LIKE FILAMENTS GROWING IN-BETWEEN
THE SCALES (!!)[sorry for the caps, I'm not really yelling, just trying to make
the point stand out]. This appears to not be unique to this specimen, as a
brief
google image search on "barn owl feet" will tell you. So I am not sure why that
Jura says that feathers (or at least, feather-like filaments) and scales are
mutually exclusive on the body region they cover. It seems that the evidence
from living birds would suggest otherwise. More importantly, this suggests that
some small animals that we would expect to have had feathers, but that instead
only preserve scales (such as Juravenator) may have had (at least) a light
covering of feather-like filaments anyway.
This also may suggest why larger theropods could, as they grew, lose or reduce
their fluffy integumentary layer as they grew larger, and be covered
predominately in scales.
Best,
Zach
----- Original Message ----
From: David Marjanovic <david.marjanovic@gmx.at>
To: DML <dinosaur@usc.edu>
Sent: Thu, September 9, 2010 4:45:44 AM
Subject: Re: Concavenator corcovatus, a new humped carcharodontosaurid from Las
Hoyas
On 09.09.2010 09:38, Tim Williams wrote:
> "Jura" <pristichampsus@yahoo.com> wrote:
>
> > Sad, it really just reads like the authors want these to be quill
> > knobs more than anything else. Maybe the actual paper offers better
> > insight.
Sometimes it reads just like Jura wants these to be anything else more than
quill knobs. ;-)
Besides, I don't agree the abstract is overly enthusiastic. Quite the opposite.
To me reads it reads like "they look like quill knobs, walk like quill knobs,
quack like quill knobs -- surely we've overlooked something???".
> Hmmm... I really don't see why the idea of quill knobs in a
> carcharodontosaur is so controversial. We already know that
> _Velociraptor_ had them. _Velociraptor_ couldn't fly, and there's no
> compelling evidence that it evolved from flighted ancestors. So
> _Velociraptor_ tells us that the presence of quill knobs cannot be
> assumed to indicate flight ability. _Concavenator_ tells us that
> quill knobs can exist in non-maniraptorans.
*Allosaurus*, and *Concavenator* itself, are known to have scales elsewhere on
the body, and not just on the feet or lower legs. This is not known to ever
occur in Neornithes, and Jura maintains that it's outright impossible for some
development genetics reason that I don't quite remember.