Bus-Sized Dinosaur Breathed Like Birds
Palaeontologists (L-R) Paul Sereno, Ricardo Martinez and Oscar Alcocer give a news conference about the carnivorous dinosaur discovered in Canadon Amarillo, in the Argentine province of Mendoza, September 29, 2008. The palaeontologists said the specimen was part of the evolutionary change from carnivorous dinosaurs to birds and measured six or seven meters in length by three or four high, walked on two legs, like the Tyrannosaurus Rex, but much smaller.
(Paulo Paez - ARGENTINA/Reuters)
Palaeontologist Paul Sereno from Chicago University shows a replica of skull of a carnivorous dinosaur discovered in Canadon Amarillo, in the Argentine province of Mendoza, September 29, 2008. The palaeontologists said the specimen was part of the evolutionary change from carnivorous dinosaurs to birds and measured six or seven meters in length by three or four high, walked on two legs, like the Tyrannosaurus Rex, but much smaller.
(Paulo Paez/Reuters)Bus-Sized Dinosaur Breathed Like Birds
Jeanna Bryner
Senior Writer
LiveScience.com
Mon Sep 29, 7:35 PM ET
A huge carnivorous dinosaur that lived about 85 million years ago had a breathing system much like that of today's birds, a new analysis of fossils reveals, reinforcing the evolutionary link between dinos and modern birds.
The finding sheds light on the transition between theropods (a group of two-legged carnivorous dinosaurs) and the emergence of birds. Scientists think birds evolved from a group of theropods called maniraptors, some 150 million years ago during the Jurassic period, which lasted from about 206 million to 144 million years ago.
"It's another piece of evidence that's piling onto the list of things that link birds with dinosaurs," said researcher Jeffrey Wilson, a paleontologist at the University of Michigan.
Flighty dinosaur
Called Aerosteon riocoloradensis, the bipedal dinosaur would have stood at about 8 feet (2.5 meters) at its hips with a body length of 30 feet (9 meters), about the length of a school bus.
Wilson along with University of Chicago paleontologist Paul Sereno and others discovered the skeletal remains of A. riocoloradensis during a 1996 expedition to Argentina. In years following the discovery, the scientists cleaned up the bones and scanned them with computed tomography.
The scans showed small openings in the vertebrae, clavicles (chest bone that forms the wishbone) and hip bones that led into large, hollow spaces. When the dinosaur lived, the hollow spaces would have been lined with soft tissue and filled with air. These chambers resembled such features found in the same bones of modern birds.
While there's no evidence to suggest the dinosaur wore a coat of feathers or flew like a bird when alive, the new findings suggest it breathed like one.
Modern birds have rigid lungs that don't expand and contract like ours. Instead, a system of air sacs pumps air through the lungs. This novel feature is the reason birds can fly higher and faster than bats, which, like all mammals, expand their lungs in a less efficient breathing process.
Other avian air sacs line the spinal column and are thought to lighten birds' skeletal bones, also making flight easier.
"We're beginning to learn more about how the specialized respiratory system of the birds evolved by tracing some of the steps in their ancient relatives," Wilson told LiveScience. "And the cool thing is these animals look nothing like birds."
Lighten the load
Wilson and his colleagues suggest the hollow bones and possible air sacs could have served various purposes, such as making the dinosaurs efficient breathers.
Weighing as much as an elephant, Aerosteon also may have used the openings to shuttle away unwanted heat from its body core, Wilson said.
Another advantage of airy bones would be to shed some pounds from the leviathon. "It may have an important functional role in making the backbone light but also strong," Wilson said of the air-sac system. "When you get big, weight is important."
Several dinosaur fossils have shown suites of bird-like features, though no carnivorous dino has been found with such evidence of air sacs in its clavicle.
For instance, past research has shown maniraptoran dinosaurs, such as velicoraptors and tyrannosaurs, were equipped with structures that move the ribs and sternum during breathing in modern birds.
Scientists also have found air sacs in the vertebrae of sauropods, a group of long-necked, long-tailed, plant-eating dinosaurs that lived in the Late Triassic and Middle Jurassic periods, about 180 million years ago.
The clavicle discovery is detailed today in the online journal PLoS ONE.
Dino Quiz: Test Your Smarts Avian Ancestors: Dinosaurs That Learned to Fly Image Gallery: Dinosaur Fossils Original Story: Bus-Sized Dinosaur Breathed Like Birds LiveScience.com chronicles the daily advances and innovations made in science and technology. We take on the misconceptions that often pop up around scientific discoveries and deliver short, provocative explanations with a certain wit and style. Check out our science videos, Trivia & Quizzes and Top 10s. Join our community to debate hot-button issues like stem cells, climate change and evolution. You can also sign up for free newsletters, register for RSS feeds and get cool gadgets at the LiveScience Store.
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The team's field vehicle is parked on the cliff edge above the site where the bones of the 85-million-year-old meat-eating dinosaur Aerosteon riocoloradensis, meaning 'air bones from the Rio Colorado,' were found in Mendoza Province. Scientists have unearthed the remains of the large meat-eating dinosaur with a breathing apparatus much like a modern bird, fortifying the link between birds and dinosaurs and helping to explain the evolution of birds' unique system of breathing.
(David Varricchio/Project Exploration/Handout/Reuters)Palaeontologists (L-R) Paul Sereno, Ricardo Martinez and Oscar Alcocer give a news conference about the carnivorous dinosaur discovered in Canadon Amarillo, in the Argentine province of Mendoza, September 29, 2008. The palaeontologists said the specimen was part of the evolutionary change from carnivorous dinosaurs to birds and measured six or seven meters in length by three or four high, walked on two legs, like the Tyrannosaurus Rex, but much smaller.
(Paulo Paez/Reuters)Flesh rendering of the 85-million-year-old predator dinosaur Aerosteon riocoloradensis, meaning 'air bones from the Rio Colorado,' discovered in Mendoza Province, Argentina, with the body wall removed to show a reconstruction of the lungs (red) and air sacs (other colors) as they might have been in life. Scientists have unearthed the remains of the large meat-eating dinosaur with a breathing apparatus much like a modern bird, fortifying the link between birds and dinosaurs and helping to explain the evolution of birds' unique system of breathing.
(National Geographic Society/Todd Marshall/Handout/Reuters)Skull reconstruction of the head of the 85-million-year-old predator dinosaur Aerosteon riocoloradensis, meaning "air bones from the Rio Colorado," discovered in Cretaceous-age beds in Mendoza Province. Scientists have unearthed the remains of the large meat-eating dinosaur with a breathing apparatus much like a modern bird, fortifying the link between birds and dinosaurs and helping to explain the evolution of birds' unique system of breathing. REUTERS/Project Exploration/Erin Fitzgerald/Handout
Flesh rendering of the head of the 85-million-year-old predator dinosaur Aerosteon riocoloradensis, meaning "air bones from the Rio Colorado," discovered in Mendoza Province, Argentina. Scientists have unearthed the remains of the large meat-eating dinosaur with a breathing apparatus much like a modern bird, fortifying the link between birds and dinosaurs and helping to explain the evolution of birds' unique system of breathing. REUTERS/National Geographic Society/Todd Marshall/Handout
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