[footsteps] [chime plays] [music plays] [CLARKE (narration):] The animal kingdom is made up of major groups, recognized by key traits. Fish have fins. Some land animals have four legs, others six, and several different groups have wings. Biologists have long sought to discover how groups of animals, and their key features, evolved. And one of the greatest mysteries has been the origin of birds. Our world has more than 10,000 species of birds with feathered wings. Where did birds come from, and how did wings and feathers first arise? To find out, scientists have scoured the fossil record... And they have uncovered surprising twists in the evolution of birds from their flightless ancestors. [CLARKE (to camera):] In the past 30 years we've found a treasure trove of new fossil discoveries. They've made the origin of birds one of the best-documented transitions in the history of life. [music plays, birds call] [walking through grass] [CLARKE (narration):] I am fascinated by birds. And as a paleontologist, I've spent my career chasing their evolutionary origins in the fossil record. [CLARKE (to camera):] Above all else, what makes birds unique are their wings. They're made of feathers that are stiff, yet flexible. And bird wings are even more remarkable than airplane wings, because they can flap, which allows them to maneuver rapidly and ultimately defy gravity. [CLARKE (narration):] The quest to understand the origin of birds and other animals began in earnest over 150 years ago. When Charles Darwin wrote "The Origin of Species," he argued that every major group of animals evolved from a pre-existing one. He predicted that we would find fossils with features that linked one major group to another. In fact, he staked his theory of evolution on the existence of these intermediates. But no fossils were yet known that revealed these transitions. Then, just two years later, a marvelous creature was unearthed from a limestone quarry in Germany. The 150-million-year-old fossil, named Archaeopteryx, rocked the scientific world. [CLARKE (to camera):] This Archaeopteryx fossil is truly remarkable. It preserves in fine detail feathers along the wing-- just like those we see in living birds-- and feathers along the tail. But the bony features tell a very different story. We look closely, we'll see see teeth in the jaw, tiny claws preserved in a hand, and a long bony tail, lacking in living birds, but present in things we think of as traditionally reptilian. For Darwin, it must have been an incredible vindication. He predicted that we would find forms like these. [CLARKE (narration):] Archaeopteryx pointed to a close link between birds and reptiles. But which group of reptiles? Flying pterosaurs had been discovered with light hollow bones. But their wings are constructed very differently than the wings of Archaeopteryx and birds. [CLARKE (to camera):] Here is a tiny pterosaur, and if we take a closer look at its arm, we'll make out 3 small digits, and a fourth, which is really, really long. [CLARKE (narration):] The membrane of a pterosaur's wing attaches to this fourth digit and along its body and hind limb. In contrast, the wings of Archaeopteryx and birds have only three digits. And their feathers attach individually along their arm and hand bones. These differences tell us that pterosaurs and Archaeopteryx evolved flight independently. Archaeopteryx must have descended from different reptiles. Thomas Huxley, Darwin's champion, was astonished by Archaeopteryx's resemblance to a turkey-sized dinosaur called Compsognathus. Compsognathus' hand also had three digits. It had hollow bones and stood on two legs. Similarities like these led Huxley to propose that birds are related to the branch of reptiles called dinosaurs. But other scientists questioned this conclusion. Birds appeared so different from dinosaurs, and some characteristic features of birds--like wishbones-- seemed to be missing from dinosaurs, but were present in other reptiles. [HORNER:] We found an articulated foot... [CLARKE (narration):] When paleontologist Jack Horner began his career, few thought that birds could have come from dinosaurs. [CLARKE:] So Jack, why was it so hard to believe that birds and dinosaurs were related? [HORNER:] Most of the dinosaurs that the public knew about were really big. Like, you know, this is a shoulder blade of a Sauropod. And Sauropods were gigantic. [CLARKE (narration):] Scientists thought that dinosaurs were cold-blooded and slow-moving, like other reptiles. [HORNER:] People couldn't imagine dinosaurs being agile and hopping around. They look at these big giant things and they lumber. There's no way to relate them to birds. [music plays] [CLARKE (narration):] Then, in 1963, John Ostrom discovered a fossil in the badlands of Montana that challenged that view. [HORNER:] What John Ostrom first found was… was this claw. Obviously goes to a foot. It was not a claw for walking on. This dinosaur actually used that claw for slashing. [CLARKE (narration):] Deinonychus was small with a delicate build. It ran upright on two legs. It had a long, stiff tail for balance. Not all dinosaurs were big and lumbering. [HORNER:] Ostrom hypothesized that the animal would scale its prey and start using its slashing claw and probably eating the animal while it was alive. [CLARKE (to camera):] Ostrom's discovery set off a revolution. What if dinosaurs weren't slow, but warm-blooded and fast-moving, like birds? [CLARKE (narration):] When Ostrom compared Deinonychus to Archaeopteryx, he saw that they both had lightly-built, hollow bones. And they shared even more features, including long arms and similar hip and shoulder bones. Ostrom concluded that birds did descend from dinosaurs as Huxley had argued. Not from lumbering sauropods, but from another lineage called therapods that walked on two legs, and included T. rex, and agile predators like Deinonychus. While some scientists did not accept this idea at first, supporting evidence continued to accumulate, including the discovery that theropods had a feature of birds not previously found: a wishbone. [HORNER:] People had sort of looked for them, and really didn't know what it was going to look like. And then all of a sudden we started finding them. Here is the wishbone of Tyrannosaurus rex. [CLARKE (narration):] When scientists analyzed the skeletons of theropods and birds, they found too many similarities for any explanation but common ancestry. Jack's collection at the Museum of the Rockies offers an opportunity to compare their features. [HORNER:] Here is an Albertosaur tibia, and as you can see, it's hollow, just like a modern bird. [CLARKE (to camera):] This is a T. rex foot. What we see here are three forward-facing digits that bear the weight of the animal, and in the back, a much smaller digit. If we take a look at this chicken foot, we'll see the same pattern. We've got three forward-facing digits and on the back, a much smaller one. All dinosaurs share an S-shaped neck. You can see it here and in living birds like this chicken. [CLARKE (narration):] New kinds of evidence also emerged. In 1978, Jack made the surprising discovery of a vast dinosaur nesting ground. [HORNER:] We discovered that dinosaurs nested in colonies, cared for their young, brought food to their babies. We also had evidence that they came back, probably over and over again, for many years to the same site. [CLARKE (narration):] In a radical shift, by the 1980s, a consensus was finally building that birds descended from theropod dinosaurs-- from active predators that walked on two legs. But scientists were about to discover the most startling evidence of all. In the mid-1990s, farmers in northeast China began unearthing dinosaurs 120 million years old. And these fossils preserved astonishing detail. [CLARKE (to camera):] In 1996, I was a first year graduate student at my first scientific meeting. They were passing around pictures of this dinosaur. [CLARKE (narration):] This chicken-sized theropod, named Sinosauropteryx, did not have scales. It was covered in some primitive kind of feather. [CLARKE (to camera):] To see those photos of a tiny, fuzzy dinosaur... it just blew everybody's minds. [CLARKE (narration):] This dinosaur was just the first of many fuzzy and feathered theropods to be uncovered. Another, called Caudipteryx, had feathers identical to living birds on its tail and hands, but lacked wings. With the discovery of these spectacular feathered finds, there was no longer any doubt that birds were related to theropods. But while feathered dinosaurs settled one question, they raised a new one: These animals could not fly. Why were they feathered? [CLARKE (to camera):] It was long assumed that feathers evolved for flight. But what we found was that clearly feathers predate flight and arose for some other purpose. [CLARKE (narration):] So why did the first feathers evolve? That's hard to tell from just the fossil evidence. But living birds may offer answers. Feathers provide insulation. So the first feathers might have helped keep dinosaurs warm. Birds also use colorful feathers in communication, in courtship and in territorial displays. Dinosaurs may have used feathers in the same way. Feathers likely played different roles at first, and then were modified for flight. The modification of an existing structure for a new use is called co-option. It is a common way that new structures and abilities evolve. Bird wings are modified forelimbs once used for grabbing and feeding. Just as the walking limbs of land animals are modified fins. And the turtle's shell is a modified ribcage. So the co-option of feathers for flight enabled Archaeopteryx and its relatives to take to the air. And other features also evolved. [CLARKE (to camera):] When we look at evolution after the origin of flight, we see a lot of characteristics of living birds gradually accruing. [CLARKE (narration):] But not in a simple linear sequence. Like other dinosaurs, this crow-sized bird had large claws on its hand, but like living birds, it had a toothless beak and a short bony tail. While this species had teeth, its hand bones were partially fused to form a stronger wing. And this bird had a large breastbone for well-developed flight muscles, like living birds. But it also had teeth. [CLARKE (to camera):] We don't find forms that are somehow lock-step intermediate between Archaeopteryx and living birds... we find a diversity of forms, forms we could not have predicted. [CLARKE (narration):] For tens of millions of years, an assortment of scaly dinosaurs, feathered dinosaurs, and many types of birds lived together. Then, 66 million years ago, almost all of these creatures died out. [rumble] A six-mile wide asteroid slammed into the planet... [explosion] ...and triggered a global mass extinction. [music plays] Only a small group of toothless birds survived... and they evolved into the 10,000 species of birds we see today. [bird calls, music] We once might have said the dinosaurs all died out, but now we know that living birds are a lineage of theropod dinosaurs in the same way that we are a lineage of primates. [HORNER:] Have dinosaurs gone extinct? Absolutely not. We separate dinosaurs into two groups now: the non-avian dinosaurs fortunately have gone extinct, and the avian dinosaurs are still alive, making it a beautiful world. [music plays] [CLARKE (to camera):] Dinosaurs are still with us. We just call them birds. [music plays] [bird calls] [music plays]
Table of contents
- 1. Introduction to Biology2h 40m
- 2. Chemistry3h 40m
- 3. Water1h 26m
- 4. Biomolecules2h 23m
- 5. Cell Components2h 26m
- 6. The Membrane2h 31m
- 7. Energy and Metabolism2h 0m
- 8. Respiration2h 40m
- 9. Photosynthesis2h 49m
- 10. Cell Signaling59m
- 11. Cell Division2h 47m
- 12. Meiosis2h 0m
- 13. Mendelian Genetics4h 41m
- Introduction to Mendel's Experiments7m
- Genotype vs. Phenotype17m
- Punnett Squares13m
- Mendel's Experiments26m
- Mendel's Laws18m
- Monohybrid Crosses16m
- Test Crosses14m
- Dihybrid Crosses20m
- Punnett Square Probability26m
- Incomplete Dominance vs. Codominance20m
- Epistasis7m
- Non-Mendelian Genetics12m
- Pedigrees6m
- Autosomal Inheritance21m
- Sex-Linked Inheritance43m
- X-Inactivation9m
- 14. DNA Synthesis2h 27m
- 15. Gene Expression3h 20m
- 16. Regulation of Expression3h 31m
- Introduction to Regulation of Gene Expression13m
- Prokaryotic Gene Regulation via Operons27m
- The Lac Operon21m
- Glucose's Impact on Lac Operon25m
- The Trp Operon20m
- Review of the Lac Operon & Trp Operon11m
- Introduction to Eukaryotic Gene Regulation9m
- Eukaryotic Chromatin Modifications16m
- Eukaryotic Transcriptional Control22m
- Eukaryotic Post-Transcriptional Regulation28m
- Eukaryotic Post-Translational Regulation13m
- 17. Viruses37m
- 18. Biotechnology2h 58m
- 19. Genomics17m
- 20. Development1h 5m
- 21. Evolution3h 1m
- 22. Evolution of Populations3h 52m
- 23. Speciation1h 37m
- 24. History of Life on Earth2h 6m
- 25. Phylogeny2h 31m
- 26. Prokaryotes4h 59m
- 27. Protists1h 12m
- 28. Plants1h 22m
- 29. Fungi36m
- 30. Overview of Animals34m
- 31. Invertebrates1h 2m
- 32. Vertebrates50m
- 33. Plant Anatomy1h 3m
- 34. Vascular Plant Transport2m
- 35. Soil37m
- 36. Plant Reproduction47m
- 37. Plant Sensation and Response1h 9m
- 38. Animal Form and Function1h 19m
- 39. Digestive System10m
- 40. Circulatory System1h 57m
- 41. Immune System1h 12m
- 42. Osmoregulation and Excretion50m
- 43. Endocrine System4m
- 44. Animal Reproduction2m
- 45. Nervous System55m
- 46. Sensory Systems46m
- 47. Muscle Systems23m
- 48. Ecology3h 11m
- Introduction to Ecology20m
- Biogeography14m
- Earth's Climate Patterns50m
- Introduction to Terrestrial Biomes10m
- Terrestrial Biomes: Near Equator13m
- Terrestrial Biomes: Temperate Regions10m
- Terrestrial Biomes: Northern Regions15m
- Introduction to Aquatic Biomes27m
- Freshwater Aquatic Biomes14m
- Marine Aquatic Biomes13m
- 49. Animal Behavior28m
- 50. Population Ecology3h 41m
- Introduction to Population Ecology28m
- Population Sampling Methods23m
- Life History12m
- Population Demography17m
- Factors Limiting Population Growth14m
- Introduction to Population Growth Models22m
- Linear Population Growth6m
- Exponential Population Growth29m
- Logistic Population Growth32m
- r/K Selection10m
- The Human Population22m
- 51. Community Ecology2h 46m
- Introduction to Community Ecology2m
- Introduction to Community Interactions9m
- Community Interactions: Competition (-/-)38m
- Community Interactions: Exploitation (+/-)23m
- Community Interactions: Mutualism (+/+) & Commensalism (+/0)9m
- Community Structure35m
- Community Dynamics26m
- Geographic Impact on Communities21m
- 52. Ecosystems2h 36m
- 53. Conservation Biology24m
32. Vertebrates
Aminotes
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