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Advances in Sinosauropteryx Research

Ji Qiang & Ji Shuan, Chinese Geology, 1997, 7, p. 30-32 and cover page 3.

Since the formal description of the Sinosauropteryx prima, there have been positive valuation on its scientific significance and hot arguments about its classification. Some dinosaur paleontologists suggest that the Sinosauropteryx belongs to a dinosaur (Reptilia) based on its anatomical features of bones. We think that the fossil, with feathers, should belong to Aves. In December 1996 when the Chinese National Geological Museum celebrated its 80th anniversary, the Beipiao Municipal Government of Liaoning Province presented a new piece of Sinosauropteryx specimen to our museum. Here is a report on our preliminary study on this piece of fossil, with further discussions on the classification of the Sinosauropteryx.

I. Additional descriptions on the fossil

Family Sinosauropterygidae Ji et Ji, 1996

Genus Sinosauropteryx Ji et Ji, 1996

Sinosauropteryx prima Ji et Ji, 1996

Positive Specimen: a complete impuberism, Specimen number of China National Geological Museum: GMV2123.

New Specimen: a complete adupt individual, GMV2124.

Location and Strata: Sihe Village, Shangyuan, Beipiao City, Liaoning. Lower part of Yixian Formation, Upper Jurassic.

Modified Features The eye aperture is large. The upper jaw bone is well developed, with coarse tooth bones. Teeth on upper and lower jaws are well developed,. There are about 12 teeth on each side. The front teeth are cone-shaped. The rear ones are flatted, with saw-tooth edge on the rear. The tail is very long, with about 50 candal vertebras. The fore limbs are short. Its bones are fine (small). The pubis is long and combined at the end, stretching down forwards. The closer end of ischia is wide, while the farther end is narrow. The hind limbs are long and coarse. The tibia is longer than ? Thinning of fibula is not obvious. mt (? p31 figure 1 mtI - mtV) are coarse and long, not combined. The first (I) mt is short and small, located at a higher position. The fifth mt (V) existed. Phalanx is coarse. Feathers are primitive, with weak evolution. The feather axes are clear.

Additional Description The Sinosauropteryx on the positive specimen (GMV2123) is 0.65 m long, representing an immature bird. Its features are described by Ji Qiang and Ji Shuan (1996). The new found specimen (GMV2124) measures 1.06 m, representing an adupt bird (Plate 1, Covering page 3), is further described here.

Skull The right side is preserved. Partial osteosututes are visible. The skull is flattened due to compression, but overall shape is good. The skull is 11.3 cm long. The hole before eye is large, oval-shaped. The eye aperture (orbit) is large and round, slightly located backward. The front part of jaws is well developed, the rear part narrow and long. The lacimal bone is straight up, upper part is wider, it is therefore T-shaped. The jugal is narrow and long. The parietal bone is large. The quadrate bone is L-shaped.

The lower jaw is coarse. Its rear part is higher. Tooth bones are well developed. Upper bone (?) is larger.

Teeth are well grown. There are 11 or 12 teeth on upper jaw, 12 on lower jaw. 4 - 5 teeth in the front jaw and lower jaw are straight sharp cone-shaped. Their ends sharpen. The diameters at the base and middle are around 1 mm. Teeth on the upper jaw and at the rear are short knife shaped. Their base is above 2 mm wide. The longest tooth cap (?) is 5.5 mm high, bending backward. The rear edges show saw-tooth (Plate 2, covering page 3). The height of tooth caps on upper jaw decreases from the front to the back. The last one has a height of only 1 mm or so.

Vertebras and ribs The neck vertebras are not well preserved. Their number and shape are not clear. But the third or forth vertebra is 1.5 cm. The front neck ribs(?) are very long, over 2.3 cm.

Only a few back vertebras are preserved, separated and not connected to each other. At least 12 pair or single back ribs are visible, coarse, curved. Closer ends are wide and flat, with 2 joints. The longest rib at the front and middle part is 8 cm. The middle diameter is about 0.2 cm. The ribs at the rear part are short and straight, only 4 cm long. Abdominal ribs are thin and weak (fragile).

The tail is long. Candal vertebras are clear. Only 34 of them are preserved. The total should be over 40. The candal vertebras at the front part are 1.5 -1.6 cm long, about 0.8 cm high. The lower edge of vertebras is obviously concave. Protrusioon is well grown. Transverse process is obvious. The nerve ring is at the mid-rear part of upper side of vertebras, slightly dipping backward. The circuls venosus is well grown, 1.1 - 1.3 cm long. The farther end is a little flat and wide, located between the lower ends of two neighboring vertebras. The vertebras at middle part are similar in length (around 1.6 cm) to those at the front part, but height much less ( 0.6 -0.7 cm). Both protrusion and cymbocephale are well developed. The protrusion is especially clear. Its inner side is connected to the outer side of cymbocephale of the vertebra in front. Nerve rings are low. Circulus venosus becomes smaller. Its end sharpens, 0.8 - 1 cm, dipping backward. The candal vertebras at the rear are small. To view from side, they are rectangle. Their length is twice the height. Both protrusion and cymbocephale are low but thin and long. The circulus venosus is thin, right on the bottom of vertebras.

Pectoral girdle and fore limbs Shoulder bones are thin and long. The mouth bone (?) is roughly irregular fan-shaped. The closer end of humerus is wider. Finger bones (?) are thin and long, with large claws. Although the fossil is not preserved completely, it is clear that fore limbs are very short and small in contrast to hind limbs.

Girdle and hind limbs This part is preserved completely (Figure 1). The girdle is coarse. Intestinal bone is 9.1 cm long, 2.7 cm high. Its upper edge is convex and arc-shaped, similar to that of Theropoda. Pubis is very long -- 9.6 cm. Its lower end is combined and dipped forward. The pubis is slightly shorter than thigh. Significantly, a 2 cm - long mammalís tooth bone (?) and teeth are preserved between the two pubises of the Sinosauropteryx. The ischia is 5.6 cm long, with closer end wider and farther end narrower. The back of ischia is concave.

The thigh is 10.8 cm long. Two ends are round, wider than the middle part, slightly curved backward. The tibia is very long - 15.1 cm. The closer end is 2.2 cm wide, and middle part becomes narrower. The tibia is straight. The length ratio of the tibia to the thigh is about 1.4. The fibula is also thin, closely attached to the tibia. Its closer end is 1.5 cm wide.

Several tarsuses are visible. Tibial or fibular tarsuses are larger, and lune (half-moon).

mt (fig 1) are long and wide, not combined. II - IV are over 9 cm. The first is very short and small, only 1.6 cm long. Its upper end is 4 cm higher than II. The fifth (V) exists, small, at higher location.

Segments of pubises are various in width and length. Pubis I is small. II is longer and wider. III is the largest. Pubis pattern (?): 2-3-4-5-0.

Feathers Two feathers are seen under the front candal vertebra and at the end of the tail. The foliated feather is 2.3 cm long, 1.1 cm wide ,with feather axis (?).

It should be pointed out that a cross section of feather axes are found. Feather pulps and sheathings are near round or oval, and distributed in concentric pattern ( Plate 3, Covering page 3).

Comparison Only two Sinosauropteryx specimens have been described now. They are both from Sihe Village, Shangyuan, Beipiao. They have many common or similar features, such as large skull, coarse lower jaw, sharp teeth, same numbers of back vertebras (ribs), long tail, short and small fore limbs, coarse hind limbs, not combined mt, coarse girdle, long and forward-stretching pubis, as well as existence of feathers. Therefore, both should belong to the same species. The original specimen is 65 cm. Its feathers are more primitive, with scale impression under the closer side of the tail. It represents a immature animal (Ji Qiang and Ji Shuan, 1996). The adult individual (GMV2124) described here is 106 cm long. The feathers are foliated, with feather axes, which reveals different grown stages of Sinosauropteryx. We regard it as the new specimen of the Sinosauropteryx prima, because its skull, teeth, girdle, hind limbs, and candal vertebras are better preserved.

In addition to the difference in size, this two specimens also have some different features (Table 1). However, those differences are caused by various growth stages and can not be used to classify into two different species.

Table 1 Comparison of Sinosauropteryx prima Immature and adult

Features Positive specimen (GMV2123) New Specimen (GMV2124)

Immature Adult

Length 65 cm 106 cm

Hole before eye small Large, short round shape

Thigh length: tibia length 1:1.13 1:1.40

Candal vertebra 54 over 40

Feather short, no differentiation large, foliated, with axes

If the positive (original) specimen is hard to believe to be a bird, due to its short and not differentiated feathers, then the large feathers in the new specimen proves that the Sinosauropteryx is a bird.

II. The classification of Sinosauropteryx

It is no doubt that the bone structure of the Sinosauropteryx is obviously similar to Theropoda, such as large skull, sharp teeth, saw-tooth at rear edge of back teeth., strong skeleton, strong girdle and hind limbs, numerous scandal vertebras, and so on. However, so typical features of a bird appeared on the Sinosauropteryx, such as feathers. The transitional feature shows the close relation between dinosaur and bird, which is invaluable scientifically. To discuss the Sinosauropteryx belongs to dinosaur or bird, it is necessary to see the biological standard distinguishing reptile and bird.

It is well known that modern reptiles with concas are cold-blooded and birds with feathers are warm-blooded. We believe that the most significant difference between a reptile and a bird is features. Feathers are the most important feature of a bird. In fact, the establishment of such a high classification unit as ìclassî is based on biological standard, not only on bone structure especially when we classify some transitional species. The bone structures of the Germany Archaeopteryx lithographica are also similar to small Theropoda. But the existence of feathers shows that it belong to birds. There is no reason to disregard that the Sinosauropteryx, with feathers, is also a bird.

Birdsí feathers and reptileís imprication are of the same source. The appearance of feathers, evolved from imprication, was first to keep the body temperature, further made flight possible. If the feathered Sinosauropteryx is believed to belong to dinosaurs,

Then how do we define a bird? What is the boundary between a bird and a reptile? A bird is the only type of animals with feathers. Based on that definition, we strongly believe that the Sinosauropteryx belongs to Aves. The fact that the skeleton of the Sinosauropteryx looks like a small Theropoda confirms that birds are evolved from small Theropoda (Ostrom, 1976). Protarchaeopteryx robusta from higher strata than the Sinosauropteryx is in similar evolution level to the German Archaeopteryx lithographica (Ji Qiang and Ji Shuan, 1976). And more advanced Confuciusornis sanctus and other early birds have also been found (Hou Lianhai and Zhou Zhonghe, 1995), which represents different stages of early birds. The Sinosauropteryx is most primitive bird, the real origin of birds known to date.

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