rare dinosaur era bird wings found trapped in myanmar amber- kristin romey
TRANSCRIPT
http://burma.irrawaddy.com/article/2016/07/06/117850.html
ေဆ ာငးပ း ျ မင ာ ပပာငးေက ကငာကာငး ေ းမာငမမေဆ ာေကငေက ာငပေ း ခရစငစကာင႐မေ|July 6, 2016
ႏေစငမမငးကရ ေက ငကာေကငေ းပ ေမ ျမင ာပပာငးေက ကငင ကငပေ-nationalgeographic.com)
ၾက ေမးခာငကရေ ေဖေကတရေမရေမ ပပာငးေက ကင ာ ေ ေမးာပငေမ ေက ာငပေေက ာငပေမေစငခကမကပေမေခကင ာေကင းကာင ေကတရေမ ာေကငေ းေက ာင းငား ငား ဖာစစငးမပေစေဖာတစစငးမာေရ ာငာေမးဖာတစစငးမေောာငာေကငေ း းစးစား င းရေမ ာမစငႈကမ မးေ း းာမစငးဆေးာမစငးဆေးးမငခာာေမ မေစငေပ ာငးမမငးသနနခမငကပာင ကစငရေမခာာေၾက ာငးေဖ ငျပေမမစငဖာျပေနသည။
ဇမငး၂၈ရကငေမ ကင NatureCommunicationစ ေစ ာငကာငေဖ ငျပာပးးကစမကငကပမာငးာ းျဖာာငNationalGeographicSociety၏ExpeditionCouncilကောေၾကးပာေပမးမစာငေ းမဖပငျဖစငေမေမ ေက ာငပေ းကမ ေးား
ေးား ကခာရႈကမမစင းမာငမမေဆ ေခကင းစငးေခညေမ Cretaceousေခကငာကမငကာင မ းကမငးေပ ကငကပငမ းေမ enantiornithes ေခညမစာငကငာပငစ ေ ျဖစငမစငဖာျပေနသည။
ာရ းာ းျဖစငေး ကငေမ ေကတရေမ းမာငမမေဆ ာ းးေး ကငးာငပာင ာ းာျပ းကာင ာေ းာေက ာင းရေမမစင ေမ ာခကငကမ သ နခခမေစင းကပာင းကငခေ းၾကေမ ငးစငးမမာငးကာင းေခကင ကငေ းမောာငပကငမကငေမ ကေမ ငကမ၏ာမမ ေ က သမငဖမက သမငဖမမမပငင ေက ကငျဖစငရပငကာငး းာေကငေ းေက ာငပေစေ းမောာငပပာငးကာငပပာငးကာင ေက ကငျဖစငရပငကာငးျဖစငေမေမ ကငေ းကခစး ေ ရရေမေမ ာမမမ ျဖစငမစငဖာျပေနသည။
ာေ းာေက ာငႏောာငာ႐မးဖာတစစငးကမတကးေပစ ဖာတစစငးကစငကမငေမခာာမစင င ကငပေ– R.C. McKellar/Royal
Saskatchewan Museum)
ဖမမမပင ေက ကငျဖစငရပငကာငး းေ ကငေ းေက ာငပေစောရ းမစင စးစား င းရေမ ကမ ျပမေမ ငးစငးႈကမကာငႈကမကာင ာႏစမကင းပ ာ ာေရ ာငာေမးမောာငပကငမကငေမ ာခာခကငားကင းကမ မမငးမမ ငး းခားောပးးပပာငးေက ကငာကာငးေ ကခစးမ ရေမေမ ကငေ းကငေ း းမစင ႈကမစငမစာငမကသတ ၏ာေ းာေက ာငျဖစငမစငကမ ဆကငစပင မမမမာငေပဖာျပေနသည။
ပခာမစငရရေမေမ မ မ မေစငခ ေ ာေးးခမမင န၀န၀မောာငန၀န.ော ာငစငသ၀၀မောာင၈၀သ.ရင.ရငာမ ရေမာပးးာရမးကစငေဆ ကငပေမာေကငေ းေၾက းမောာငႏ းစောေမ ကစငရေေး းပ တာငမစငပ တာငမစငဖာျပေနသည။ေးား ကမ ပ းကာျပ းပငမ ကရကင မမမပေကကတမမးင ေ းးး စာငး၏ာဆမာရႈကမတမစင မးးမးးျခ း ကငေမ ပ ဆေးေးား မမရေမရေမ းမာငမမေဆ ေခကင ာေကငေ းေက ာင းျဖစငမစငဖာျပေနသည။
“ပပာငးေက ကင ာကာေကငေ းေကမာပကငမကငးမကေမ ငကမရာငဆမာငရကာာ ာတကးးဆေးျပးမ ကကေမ ငကမတရေးာရေမရေးာရေမက ာေကငေ းာပမာငးာစး ေ ကင ကေခ ာငး ာပာရေမကာာ ာေကငေ းေကမ ရရေမက ာဖာျပေနသည။ေမ ကငာပးးာား ေကာား ေက ပငမကသတ ရာတာေ းးာဆမက မမရ း”
ပ းကာေးား မ ကေမး မမာငာေ ေက ငတာင စကငကကငခးပမင ျပကမကင ငRoyalSaskatchewanMuseumာေက ရမးာာ ေရေးေ ာငးမေကမမျပကမကင းရမင ကငကား းကေျပ မစငဖာျပေနသည။”ာခးမ မ းရဖ း းဖာျပေနသည။ာရ းာ းျဖစငေး ကငကာာေကတရေမ ပာ” းစငးမ ကဆမမစငဖာျပေနသည။
ေကတျာငေမကာေကငေ း း ာမပငဇေရးမကငခရမစးကး ငx-raymicro-CTာစစငေဆးခကငာရမ မ မေစငခစးေးေ ာရမးာ႐ပငာစ းမောာငဖေတဖေတာဖမ းာဆာာငာရာ႐ပင ေရ ကငေမးေမ ာေက ာငာပင းေ ျဖစငေၾက ာငးမမရမစငဖာျပေနသည။ာရမးကစငေဆ ကငပေမာခမ းာာခမ းာစ းမောာငာခမ တေမ ာေကငေ းေက ာငးကလ က စး းကႈကမမစင က စးေမ မ းစမကင ေ ျဖစငေၾျဖစငေၾက ာငးေကတရမစငဖာျပေနသည။
ေက ကငျဖစင႐ပငကာငးပ ပပာငးေက ကငႏောာငာေကငာရပင ႏမာငးပေား င စမကငက းပေေဖ ငပေငမ႐ပငေဖ ငပေ– http://www.cbc.ca)
ပေမမငး ာေ းာေက ာင းမေျပ ာငးးာေရးာေကငေ းေက ာင းာကမငးးမကင ကာငးကမငေမျပးးာေရျပ းမကကငမ းမေျခမကကငမ းမေျခမစငး းမောာငာေကငေ းရမးကေ းေ မ မ ၂ခးေးကာင ျာငမ မစငဖာျပေနသည။ာ းးေးာ းးေးကာင စးစား င းရေမ မောာငာေမးစမကငကစငေဆ ကငပေကာင ပေမေခကငာေကင းမောာငဆာငက ၾကမစငဖာျပေနသည။
မ မင ကငစမျဖာာငၾကစာငးာင ာေကငေ း းမစင ာေမေမ ငးစငးမကငခရမစကပငျဖာာငေးား ပ ကပေမမငးေရးေက ပေမမငးေရးေက ာငပေ းမစင ာစမ ရာာငေရ ာငျဖစငက ေျပ ာငးးာေရးေက ာငပေ းေ ာမစငးာပငေဖ ာာမစငးာပငေဖ ာေက ာေမ ာစမ ေ ောေရ ာင ာျဖေေရ ာငာဆာာင းာ မ ာမ းမ းရေမၾကမစငဖာျပေနသည။
းကေက ေ ေက ကငျဖစငရပငကာငး း ပပာငးေ ေက ကငျဖစငရပငကာငးာ းစမစင ျမင မမာငာေေျ ကငပမာငးကခာငျပစငမကခာငျပစငမပင းေက ာငးခမ ာာငတေ ငးရေမ က းေဖ ငေရးးပငာမငး းေ း မစငဖာျပေနသည။ မခမ ာာငတေ ငးကမ းကငကေး ကခာငးကငေျ ကခာငးကငေျ ကငေရးကပင ေက ငက မမငးခ ပင းမစငဖာျပေနသည။ပာငးေးမကာင ျပစငကာငးစစင ျဖစငေမမစင ေ ႏေစင နရေမျပးဖာျပေနသည။
ပပာငးေ ေက ကငျဖစငရပငကာငးာ းစမစင ျမင မမာငာေေျ ကငပမာငးကခာငျပစငမ
ကခာငျပစငမပင းေက ာငးခမ ာာငတေ ငးရေမ က းေဖ ငေရးးပငာမငး းေ း မစင င ကငပေ-nationalgeographic.com)
ပဋမပကေၾက ာာငျမင ပပာငးက းေဖ ငေရ ာငးခေရးေ ာ းာ းျဖာာငစစငးား ငး မမငးခ ပင ရေမ ာ ာ းစ ေ ေက ကင ကငာျဖေက ကင ကငာျဖစင ားေဆာငေက ကငာျဖစင ကမငဖမး းေမ ကရကင းမမေရ ာငးခေမၾကမစငဖာျပေနသည။
းးး စာငးႏောာငမ ၏မေကမမာဖာတမစင ပခေးး ကာင မေးေမ မ မ မေစငခကမကခာငျပစငမပငာမ တေက ငျစငတကးးမ းေ ေက ငၾက းေမ ပပာငးေ းေ ရမစငဖာျပေနသည။
ာေရမကမင မ တမမာငးျပကမကငေ ေက ရမးာာမကသေသးျပကမကင းေးးသစင.ရး ပငးငးး၏ာဆမာရမမပေပမမပေပစ ရောင းာကကင ျမင ာပပာငး၏စာေဆ ာင ေ းမာငမမေဆ ေခကင ကမရစ ကမရစ ၦမငမောာငာပာင မ းာ းဆေးပ တာငေမႏမာငမစင ေမ ာခကငျဖစငမစငဖာျပေနသည။
“ျမင ာပပာငးရာတ႕နရ ခမာငႏမငးမးးပ းေး ကင ာမေစငမ ရရေမပ းမး ေပပာငကမငကာာ .နရ ခမ.နရ ခမာငႏမငးေး ကငကေက ာ မမမ မမမ ကာာ ဇးတမ းစေကပငတကမ ျပမေမပ ကပငဖာျပေနသည။းးးမကပငတာဆာာငမ းကမ ကေမ င ပငးမ ေ ခမငေမငးမမာငပ း” းစငးမ ကေျပ မစငဖာျပေနသည။
ပစ ရောငာကကင ာဖမးျဖကငမမာငေမ ငးစငးတပငမ မေစငမကင ျမင ာပပာငးာ းစကမ ေက ကင ကငာျဖစငးစငးေက ာငးမ ာငး ရ ာျဖစငးစငးေက ာငးာမေးျပ ေမ ေၾာမေးျပ ေမ ေၾက ာာငငမမေမ ာာငးဆကင းမောာငာပာင းေက ကငျဖေက ကငျဖစငရပငကာငး းပ တာငျခာငးကမ ေက ကငာေခ စင၏ကမငဖမးကမ ေး ာကေေး ာကေစေမ မမငစာင ျဖစငမစင မကင ေကငၾကမစငဖာျပေနသည။
ငမမေမ ေက ကငျဖစငရပငကာငး းကမ ေက ကငေမးာေရ ာငကာငစား င ကစမကငကပမာငးျဖစငေစာ းးေးျဖစငေစဖကငဆးးျဖစငၾဖကငဆးးျဖစငၾကမစငဖာျပေနသည။ပပာငးမကငာကာငးပ တာငေမ ာရ ၏မမာငးပေား ငခကငာ းျဖာာငာမကငေမျခာငးမစငးစငးေက ကငကမ ျေက ကငကမ ျဖကင းမေမးး ေက ကငျဖစငရပငကာငး းေကတရမင ခကငခာေစမစင ကေမး ေ ျပကမကင းကငကား းကငကား းကဆမမစငဖာျပေနသည။
မမေမ ငျမင ပပာငးေ ာေကငေ းေက ာင းမစင ႈကမ၏ရေ းပ းမောာငးေပေၾက ာာငကမငဖမး းခေရာပးးမမာငးကမမာငးကာင းေခကင ာေကငေ းေက ာင၏ားေေားေေသးရမကမငဖမးကမ းးေေ ာငး မးျပရမင ျဖကငေက ကငာေရ ာငကာငၾကမစငဖာျပေနသည။မ မ ပစစငးကကငမမာငမေ မမငးမမ မမငးမမ ငးေရးကမ .ရ စမကငၾကေပဖာျပေနသည။
က႐ကင မပစ ရောင းးး စာငးင ကငပေ– www.chinanews.com)
ပခေးား ေ ေက ာငပေမေစငခာမကင ပမ မေမးာပငေမ ေက ာငပေကမ းေက ကင ကငးးဇမာငးေရးဆာမ ကဆာမးးျပ ဆာမးးျပ းပငရမင ရစင႐ပငျပးးမကင မ ပင၏ေက ာငပေ း ေခညခာာေမ ေၾက ာာငစာငး၏ာစာငး၏ာဖာတကးစငးႈကမ မကင မ ပင ာစငေပး းမစငဖာျပေနသည။မေကမေကမး းက မေက ကငျဖစငရပငကာငးကမ ေးား ေမ ာခ ႈကမ မမာငးမမာငးကာင းေခကင ာေကငကေက ာငးေးပ တာငဖပငရေမေမ ပပာငးေက ကင ေ ျဖကငေက ကငခာာမစင ေက ကငပ ႏမာငေမမစငဖာျပေနသည။
မမေမ ငmicro-CTမကငခ႐မစးကးစကမငကာင ျာငရေမ ာရ ေ ကရကင မ ပစ ရောင းးး စာငးကမ းးမငစ ႏေးေးခမငေစဆာျဖစငာပးးာေကငေးကခမ ကာေ းာေက ာင ာ းာျပ းပ တာငာပးးမေစငမမေစငမမငးကရ မးးပ းရေငမေမ ာေကငေက ာငပောရမးဖာတစစငးပေျဖစငမစငဖာျပေနသည။“း ကကပာငမကင မ ပင” စာငးက.လငပ ေျပ ဆမမစငဖာျပေနသည။
းးး စာငး၏ာမ . ကငစး ေကမမငး းကာင ျစငတကးးမ းေ းကာင ကာငးဆာငးမေကမမမ း းမစင ေက ေက ကင မာငး းေ း ေမ ပပာငး းမာငမမေဆ ေခကင ေက ကငျဖစငရပငကာငး းပ ပ စစငေဆးရမင ာစစငေဆးရမင ာာငစကးက ကခ ေ ာငေရးမႈကမ ျမင ႏမာငာေကာင မေကမမကမငဖမးာရ မမငးမမ င မမငးမမ ငးက ျမင ကကတမမးင းႏောာငပ းေပ ာငးေးား ေရးကမပ တာငမစငဖာျပေနသည။
ငNationalGeographicပ KristinRomey၏RareDinosaur-EraBirdWingsFoundTrappedinAmberကမ ျာာငတာငးမမမငး မ ျပမငမစငဖာျပေနသည။ာ
Rare Dinosaur-Era Bird Wings Found Trapped in Amber http://news.nationalgeographic.com/2016/06/dinosaur-bird-feather-burma-amber-myanmar-flying-
paleontology-enantiornithes/
Bone, tissue, and feathers show the almost 100-million-year-old wings are
remarkably similar to those on modern birds.
18
ENLARGE
This nearly 100-million-year-old wing tip features bones, soft tissue, and feathers preserved in amber. It was nicknamed "Angel" because it was originally intended to be used in a pendant called "Angel's Wings." PHOTOGRAPH BY RYAN C. MCKELLAR
By Kristin Romey
PUBLISHED JUNE 28, 2016
Two tiny wings entombed in amber reveal that plumage (the layering,
patterning, coloring, and arrangement of feathers) seen in birds today
already existed in at least some of their predecessors nearly a hundred
million years ago.
A study of the mummified wings, published in the June 28 issue of Nature
Communications and funded in part by the National Geographic Society's
Expeditions Council, indicated they most likely belonged to enantiornithes ,
a group of avian dinosaurs that became extinct at the end of the Cretaceous
period. (Read more about the evolution from dinosaurs to modern birds.)
'Mind-Blowingly Cool'
While the fact that many, if not nearly all, dinosaurs were feathered has been
generally accepted since the 1990s, our knowledge of prehistoric plumage
until now has come from feather imprints in carbonized compression
fossils and individual feathers fossilized in amber. (See dinosaurs in their
feathered glory.)
But while feather imprints in compression fossils may show arrangement,
they generally lack very fine detail and rarely preserve information on color,
while individual feathers in amber cannot be associated with the animal they
originally came from. (How did feathers evolve?)
Skin, muscle, claws, and feather shafts are visible, along with the remains of rows of feathers similar in arrangement and microstructure to modern birds.
The two new samples, weighing in at only 0.06 and 0.3 ounces (1.6 and 8.51
grams), contain bone structure, tracts of feathers, and soft tissue. They are
the first Cretaceous plumage samples to be studied that are not simply
isolated feathers, according to study co-author Lida Xing of the China
University of Geosciences.
"The biggest problem we face with feathers in amber is that we usually get
small fragments or isolated feathers, and we’re never quite sure who
produced [them]," says co-author Ryan McKellar, curator of invertebrate
palaeontology at Canada's Royal Saskatchewan Museum. "We don’t get
something like this. It’s mind-blowingly cool."
Familiar Feathers
An x-ray micro-CT analysis revealed that both samples appeared to belong to
juveniles, based on bone size and stage of development. Similarities in bone
structure and proportion, as well as some plumage characteristics, suggest
that they may belong to the same species.
For scientists, the appeal of Burmese amber lies in the fact that it most likely contains the largest variety of animal and plant life from the Cretaceous period.
Skin, muscle, claws, and feather shafts are visible in both samples, along
with the remains of rows of primary asymmetrical flight feathers, secondary
feathers, and covert feathers. All are similar in arrangement and
microstructure to modern birds.
ENLARGE
Mines in Myanmar's Hukawng Valley are a valuable source of Cretaceous-period amber that is prized both for its aesthetic value as well as the scientific information it preserves. PHOTOGRAPH BY MO LI
Although the feathers appeared black to the naked eye, microscopic analysis
revealed that the flight feathers were mostly dark brown, while the covert
feathers ranged from a slightly paler brown to silver or white bands.
A Bountiful Fossil Source in a Troubled Area
Most fossils in Burmese amber come from mines in the Hukawng Valley in
Kachin state, northern Myanmar. The valley is currently under the control of
the Kachin Independence Army, which has been in intermittent conflict with
the state for more than 50 years.
Due to the conflict, the mining and sale of Burmese amber is mostly
unregulated, with the majority of the material sold to Chinese consumers
who prize it for jewelry and decorative carvings.
One wing sample was nicknamed "Angel" because a jewelry designer originally intended to fashion it into a pendant called "Angel's Wings."
Xing and his research team collected the fossilized wing samples used in the
study in a well-known amber market in Myitkyina, the capital of Kachin
state.
For scientists, the appeal of Burmese amber lies in the fact that it most likely
contains the largest variety of animal and plant life from the Cretaceous
period, according to David Grimaldi, curator of invertebrate zoology at the
American Museum of Natural History.
"About 70 percent of the Burmese amber is barren, but the other 30 percent
features phenomenal biodiversity," says Grimaldi. "Never, ever would I have
predicted this level of diversity."
Precious to Science, Impure to Consumers
Because the majority of Burmese amber is used in jewelry and carvings, most
fossilized inclusions, such as insects and plant life, are considered impurities
that reduce the value of the finished piece. The fossils may be partially or
completely destroyed during polishing. The relative darkness of the
inclusions within the dark amber can also make them hard to spot before the
sample are cut or polished, notes McKellar.
But feathers in Burmese amber are prized for their rarity and beauty, and are
cut and polished to highlight the aesthetic value of the prehistoric plumage.
Little consideration is given to maintaining as much of the specimen as
possible.
The smaller of the two fossilized wing samples in the current study was
nicknamed "Angel" by Xing's team because a jewelry designer originally
intended to fashion it into a pendant called "Angel's Wings." When the
researchers analyzed the fossil, they observed truncated wing surfaces
directly on the amber surface that suggested it had been chipped off of a
larger amber inclusion that may have originally included the entire early bird
specimen.
Still, what Xing saw in the micro-CT analysis made his heart race, he recalls:
not just single feathers, but multiple feathers associated with the bony
structure of an almost 100-million-year-old wing.
"It is a real angel," the researcher proudly concludes.
Lida's future plans include establishing an institute where researchers on the
ground in the Myitkyina markets can check amber coming from the mines
for Cretaceous inclusions, and keep those with research value in Myanmar to
be studied in partnership with local universities.
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