Despite a wealth of fossils of Mesozoic birds revealing evidence of plumage and other soft-tissue structures, the epidermal and dermal anatomy of their wing’s patagia remain largely unknown. We describe a distal forelimb of an enantiornithine bird from the Lower Cretaceous limestones of Las Hoyas, Spain, which reveals the overall morphology of the integument of the wing and other connective structures associated with the insertion of flight feathers. The integumentary anatomy, and myological and arthrological organization of the new fossil is remarkably similar to that of modern birds, in which a system of small muscles, tendons and ligaments attaches to the follicles of the remigial feathers and maintains the functional integrity of the w...
We investigated the relationship between wing element proportions and flight mode in a dataset of li...
from the Early Cretaceous of China shows extensive preservation of feathers in a halo around the bo...
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.Since the first...
Birds today follow different aerial strategies to deal with the high costs of flapping flight. Inter...
The hindlimb of theropod dinosaurs changed appreciably in the lineage leading to extant birds, becom...
In this paper we report the discovery of non-plumage soft tissues in Confuciusornis, a basal beaked ...
Fossils of juvenile Mesozoic birds provide insight into the early evolution of avian development, ho...
The fossil record of birds in the Mesozoic of Gondwana is mostly based on isolated and often poorly ...
The origin of birds and avian flight from within the archosaurian radiation has been among the most ...
Feathers are remarkable evolutionary innovations that are associated with complex adaptations of the...
The avian tail played a critical role in the evolutionary transition from long- to short-tailed bird...
The avifauna of the Early Cretaceous is composed of a unique combination of primitive and derived fo...
Although many Mesozoic fossil birds have been found with primary feathers preserved, these structure...
The Early Cretaceous bird Jeholornis was previously only known to have a distally restricted ornamen...
We describe an exquisitely preserved new avian fossil (BMNHC-PH-919) from the Lower Cretaceous Yixia...
We investigated the relationship between wing element proportions and flight mode in a dataset of li...
from the Early Cretaceous of China shows extensive preservation of feathers in a halo around the bo...
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.Since the first...
Birds today follow different aerial strategies to deal with the high costs of flapping flight. Inter...
The hindlimb of theropod dinosaurs changed appreciably in the lineage leading to extant birds, becom...
In this paper we report the discovery of non-plumage soft tissues in Confuciusornis, a basal beaked ...
Fossils of juvenile Mesozoic birds provide insight into the early evolution of avian development, ho...
The fossil record of birds in the Mesozoic of Gondwana is mostly based on isolated and often poorly ...
The origin of birds and avian flight from within the archosaurian radiation has been among the most ...
Feathers are remarkable evolutionary innovations that are associated with complex adaptations of the...
The avian tail played a critical role in the evolutionary transition from long- to short-tailed bird...
The avifauna of the Early Cretaceous is composed of a unique combination of primitive and derived fo...
Although many Mesozoic fossil birds have been found with primary feathers preserved, these structure...
The Early Cretaceous bird Jeholornis was previously only known to have a distally restricted ornamen...
We describe an exquisitely preserved new avian fossil (BMNHC-PH-919) from the Lower Cretaceous Yixia...
We investigated the relationship between wing element proportions and flight mode in a dataset of li...
from the Early Cretaceous of China shows extensive preservation of feathers in a halo around the bo...
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.Since the first...