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Ichthyornis

Ichthyornis (meaning "fish bird", after its fish-like vertebrae) is an extinct genus of toothy seabird-like ornithuran from the late Cretaceous period of North America. Its fossil remains are known from the chalks of Alberta, Alabama, Kansas (Greenhorn Limestone), New Mexico, Saskatchewan, and Texas, in strata that were laid down in the Western Interior Seaway during the Turonian through Campanian ages, about 95–83.5 million years ago. Ichthyornis is a common component of the Niobrara Formation fauna, and numerous specimens have been found.

Ichthyornis
Temporal range: Late Cretaceous,[1] 95–83.5 Ma
Cast skeleton, Rocky Mountain Dinosaur Resource Center
Scientific classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Clade: Dinosauria
Clade: Saurischia
Clade: Theropoda
Clade: Avialae
Clade: Ornithurae
Clade: Ichthyornithes
Genus: Ichthyornis
Marsh, 1873
Species:
I. dispar
Binomial name
Ichthyornis dispar
(Marsh, 1872)
Synonyms

Angelinornis Kashin 1972
Colonosaurus Marsh, 1872c
Plegadornis Wetmore 1962 (preoccupied)

Species synonymy
  • Graculavus anceps Marsh, 1872a
  • Ichthyornis anceps (Marsh 1872a) Marsh 1872b
  • Colonosaurus mudgei Marsh, 1872c
  • Graculavus agilis Marsh, 1873b
  • Ichthyornis agilis (Marsh, 1873b) Marsh 1880
  • Ichthyornis victor Marsh, 1876
  • Ichthyornis validus Marsh, 1880
  • Plegadornis antecessor Wetmore, 1962
  • Angelinornis antecessor (Wetmore, 1962) Kashin 1972
  • Ichthyornis antecessor (Wetmore, 1962) Olson 1975

Ichthyornis has been historically important in shedding light on bird evolution. It was the first known prehistoric bird relative preserved with teeth, and Charles Darwin noted its significance during the early years of the theory of evolution. Ichthyornis remains important today as it is one of the few Mesozoic era ornithurans known from more than a few specimens.

Description of the Ichthyornis edit

 
Relative size of two I. dispar specimens: YPM 1742, blue, and YPM 1450, green, compared with a human. Both specimens were adult, but YPM 1450 is approximately one million years older.

It is thought that Ichthyornis was the Cretaceous ecological equivalent of modern seabirds such as gulls, petrels, and skimmers. An average specimen was the size of a pigeon, 24 centimetres (9.4 in) long, with a skeletal wingspan (not taking feathers into account) of around 43 centimetres (17 in),[2] though there is considerable size variation among known specimens, with some smaller and some much larger than the type specimen of I. dispar.[1]

Ichthyornis is notable primarily for its combination of vertebrae which are concave both in front and back (similar to some fish, which is where it gets its name) and several more subtle features of its skeleton which set it apart from its close relatives. Ichthyornis is perhaps most well known for its teeth. The teeth were present only in the middle portion of the upper and lower jaws. The jaw tips had no teeth and were covered in a beak. The beak of Ichthyornis, like the hesperornithids, was compound and made up of several distinct plates, similar to the beak of an albatross, rather than a single sheet of keratin as in most modern birds.[3] The teeth were more flattened than the rounded teeth found in crocodilians, though they became wider towards the base of the crown. The tips of the teeth were curved backward and lacked any serrations.[1]

The wings and breastbone were very modern in appearance, suggesting strong flight ability and placing it with modern birds in the advanced group Carinatae. Unlike earlier avialans such as the enantiornithines, the species appears to have matured to adulthood in a rather short, continuous process.[4]

A study on an Ichthyornis endocast reveals that it had a relatively basal brain compared to modern birds, similar to that of Archaeopteryx and other non-avian theropods. Conversely, it had a palate remarkably convergent with that of modern neognaths.[5]

Timespan and evolution edit

 
Restoration of I. dispar

Ichthyornis fossils have been found in almost all levels of the Niobrara Chalk, from beds dating to the late Coniacian age (about 89 million years ago) to the Campanian age (about 83.5 million years ago).[1][6] Even earlier remains attributed to Ichthyornis have been found in the Greenhorn Formation of Kansas, dating to the early Turonian age (about 93 million years ago).[2] Specimens of Ichthyornis from earlier eras were, on average, smaller than later ones. The holotype specimen of Ichthyornis dispar, YPM 1450, had a humerus about 58 millimetres (2.3 in) long. In many geologically younger specimens like YPM 1742, the same wing bone was 71.5 millimetres (2.81 in) long. Both the older, smaller specimens, and the more recent, larger specimens show signs that they had reached skeletal maturity and were adults, and came from the same geographic area. It is likely that Ichthyornis dispar as a species increased in size over the several million years it inhabited the Western Interior Seaway ecosystem.[1]

History of study edit

 
Skeletal restoration based on the holotype of I. dispar

Ichthyornis was one of the first Mesozoic avialans ever found and the first one known to have had teeth, making it an important discovery in the early history of paleontology. It remains important today, as it represents one of the closest non-avian relatives of modern birds, and one of a handful of Mesozoic bird relatives represented by numerous specimens.[1] Ichthyornis was discovered in 1870 by Benjamin Franklin Mudge, a professor from Kansas State Agricultural College who recovered the initial fossils from the North Fork of the Solomon River in Kansas, United States. Mudge was a prolific fossil collector who shipped his discoveries to prominent scientists for study.[7] Mudge had previously had a close partnership with paleontologist Edward Drinker Cope of the Academy of Natural Sciences in Philadelphia. However, as described by S.W. Williston in 1898, Mudge was soon contacted by Othniel Charles Marsh, Cope's rival in the so-called Bone Wars, a rush to collect and identify fossils in the American West. Marsh wrote to Mudge in 1872 and offered to identify any important fossils free of charge, and to give Mudge sole credit for their discovery. Marsh had been a friend of Mudge when they were younger, so when Mudge learned of Marsh's request, he changed the address on the shipping crate containing the Ichthyornis specimen (which had already been addressed to Cope and was ready to be sent), and shipped it to Marsh instead. Marsh had narrowly won the prestige of studying and naming the important fossil at the expense of his rival.[7]

However, Marsh did not initially recognize the true importance of the fossil. Soon after receiving it, he reported back to Mudge his opinion that the chalk slab contained the bones of two distinct animals: a small bird animal, and the toothed jaws of some unknown reptile. Marsh considered the unusual vertebrae of the bird to resemble those of a fish, so he named it Ichthyornis, or "fish bird."[8] Later in 1872, Marsh described the toothed jaws as a new species of marine reptile, named Colonosaurus mudgei after their discoverer.[9] The similarity of the lower jaw and teeth to those of mosasaurs is so great that as late as 1952, J.T. Gregory argued that it really belonged to a diminutive species or young individual related to the genus Clidastes.[10]

 
Skeletal restoration based on the holotype of I. victor (now I. dispar) by O.C. Marsh.

By early in 1873, Marsh had recognized his error. Through further preparation and exposure of skull bones from the rock, he found that the toothed jaws must have come from the bird itself and not a marine reptile. Due to the previously unknown features of Ichthyornis (vertebrae concave on either side and teeth), Marsh chose to classify it in an entirely new sub-class of birds he called the Odontornithes (or "toothed birds"), and in the new order Ichthyornithes (later Ichthyornithiformes). The only other bird Marsh included in these groups was the newly named Apatornis, which he had previously named as a species of Ichthyornis, I. celer.[11] Mudge later noted the rare and unique quality of these toothed birds (including Hesperornis, which was found to also have teeth by 1877), and the irony of their association with the remains of toothless pterosaurs, flying reptiles which were only known to have had teeth in other regions of the world at that time.[12]

Soon after these discoveries, Ichthyornis was recognized for its significance to the theory of evolution recently published by Charles Darwin. Darwin himself told Marsh in an 1880 letter that Ichthyornis and Hesperornis offered "the best support for the theory of evolution" since he had first published On the Origin of Species in 1859.[1] (While Archaeopteryx was the first known Mesozoic avialan and is now known to have also had teeth, the first specimen with a skull was not described until 1884).[13] Others at the time also recognized the implications of a nearly modern bird with reptilian teeth, and feared the controversy it caused. One Yale student described various men and women urging Marsh to conceal Ichthyornis from the public because it lent too much support to evolutionary theory.[1] Many accused Marsh of having tampered with the fossils or intentionally created a hoax by associating reptilian jaws with the body of a bird, accusations that continued to surface even as late as 1967. However, an overwhelming majority of researchers have demonstrated that Marsh's interpretation of the fossils was correct, and he was fully vindicated by later finds.[1]

Mounted specimens edit

 
Cast of the original composite panel mount of "I. victor" (now I. dispar), Peabody Museum of Natural History

At the turn of the 20th century, the Peabody Museum of Natural History at Yale University, where most Ichthyornis specimens were housed, began placing many of its most interesting or important specimens on display in the museum's Great Hall. Two panel mounts (that is, pieces where the skeleton is arranged and set into a plaster slab) were created for Ichthyornis; one for I. dispar, and one for "I. victor". Both were created by Hugh Gibb, who prepared many of Marsh's fossils for study and display. The I. dispar mount contained only the holotype fossils, while the "I. victor" mount was a composite incorporating a variety of different specimens to make the piece appear more complete (it did not, however, contain any part of the actual "I. victor" holotype specimen).[1]

At some point before 1937, the catalogue number of the actual "I. victor" type specimen was mistakenly reassigned to the panel mount. Later reports of the specimen, even by the Peabody Museum's staff, therefore mistakenly stated that the original "I. victor" specimen comprised most of the skeleton, when it was in fact only three bones.[1] By 1997, the situation had become so confused that Jacques Gauthier, the current curator of the museum's vertebrate paleontology collection, authorized the dismantling of both panel mounts. This allowed the bones to be properly sorted out and studied in three dimensions, which had been impossible previously when they were embedded in plaster.[1] A full re-description of these specimens was published by paleontologist Julia Clarke in 2004.[1]

Classification edit

Ichthyornis is close to the ancestry of modern birds, the Aves, but represents an independent lineage. It was long believed that it was closely related to some other Cretaceous taxa known from very fragmentary remains – Ambiortus, Apatornis, Iaceornis and Guildavis – but these seem to be closer to the ancestors of modern birds than to Ichthyornis dispar. In Clarke's 2004 review, the former order Ichthyornithiformes and the family Ichthyornithidae are now superseded by the clade Ichthyornithes, which in the paper was also defined according to phylogenetic taxonomy as all descendants of the most recent common ancestor of Ichthyornis dispar and modern birds.[1]

 
Mandible and vertebra

Of the several described species, only one, Ichthyornis dispar, is currently recognized, following the seminal review by Julia Clarke.[1] Marsh had previously named a specimen now attributed to I. dispar as Graculavus anceps. Clarke argued that because the rules for naming animals laid out by the ICZN state that a type species for a genus must have originally been included in that genus, Ichthyornis anceps is ineligible to replace I. dispar as the type species and so must be considered a junior synonym even though it was named first. However, Michael Mortimer pointed out that this is incorrect; while I. anceps cannot become the type species of Ichthyornis, the ICZN does not preclude it from becoming the senior synonym of the type species I. dispar. Therefore, I. anceps should have been considered the correct name for the only recognized Ichthyornis species.[14] All other supposed species of Ichthyornis have not been supported as valid. The presumed "Ichthyornis" lentos, for example, actually belongs into the early galliform genus Austinornis.[1] "Ichthyornis" minusculus from the Bissekty Formation (Late Cretaceous) of Kyzyl Kum, Uzbekistan, is probably an enantiornithine. All other Ichthyornis species are synonymous with I. dispar.[1]

The cladogram below is the result of a 2014 analysis by Michael Lee and colleagues that expanded on data from an earlier study by O’Connor & Zhou in 2012. The clade names are positioned based on their definitions.[15]

Ornithurae

Ichthyornis

Hesperornithes

Limenavis

Aves (modern birds)

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q Clarke, J.A. (2004). "Morphology, phylogenetic taxonomy, and systematics of Ichthyornis and Apatornis (Avialae: Ornithurae)" (PDF). Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History. 286: 1–179. doi:10.1206/0003-0090(2004)286<0001:MPTASO>2.0.CO;2. S2CID 84035285.
  2. ^ a b Shimada, K.; Fernandes, M.V. (2006). "Ichthyornis sp. (Aves: Ichthyornithiformes) from the lower Turonian (Upper Cretaceous) of western Kansas". Transactions of the Kansas Academy of Science. 109 (1/2): 21–26. doi:10.1660/0022-8443(2006)109[21:ISAIFT]2.0.CO;2. S2CID 86151155.
  3. ^ Lamb, J.P. Jr. (1997). "Marsh was right: Ichthyornis had a beak". Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology. 17: 59A. doi:10.1080/02724634.1997.10011028.
  4. ^ Chinsamy, A., Martin, L.D. and Dobson, P. (April 1998). "Bone microstructure of the diving Hesperornis and the volant Ichthyornis from the Niobrara Chalk of western Kansas". Cretaceous Research. 19 (2): 225–235. Bibcode:1998CrRes..19..225C. doi:10.1006/cres.1997.0102.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  5. ^ Torres, Christopher R.; Norell, Mark A.; Clarke, Julia A. (2021). "Bird neurocranial and body mass evolution across the end-Cretaceous mass extinction: The avian brain shape left other dinosaurs behind". Science Advances. 7 (31). Bibcode:2021SciA....7.7099T. doi:10.1126/sciadv.abg7099. PMC 8324052. PMID 34330706.
  6. ^ Carpenter, K. (2003). Harries, P. J (ed.). "Vertebrate Biostratigraphy of the Smoky Hill Chalk (Niobrara Formation) and the Sharon Springs Member (Pierre Shale)". High-Resolution Approaches in Stratigraphic Paleontology. Topics in Geobiology. 21: 421–437. doi:10.1007/978-1-4020-9053-0. ISBN 978-1-4020-1443-7.
  7. ^ a b Williston, S.W. (1898). "A brief history of fossil collecting in the Niobrara Chalk prior to 1900. Addenda to Part I". The University Geological Survey of Kansas. 4: 28–32.
  8. ^ Marsh, O.C. (1872b). "Notice of a new and remarkable fossil bird". American Journal of Science. Series 3. 4 (22): 344. doi:10.1080/00222937308696769.
  9. ^ Marsh, O.C. (1872). "Notice of a new reptile from the Cretaceous". American Journal of Science. Series 3. 4 (23): 406.
  10. ^ Gregory, J.T. (1952). "The jaws of the Cretaceous toothed birds, Ichthyornis and Hesperornis" (PDF). Condor. 54 (2): 73–88. doi:10.2307/1364594. JSTOR 1364594.
  11. ^ Marsh, O.C. (1873a). "On a new sub-class of fossil birds (Odontornithes)". American Journal of Science. Series 4. 11 (63): 233–234. doi:10.1080/00222937308696804.
  12. ^ Mudge, B.F. (1877). "Annual Report of the committee on Geology, for the year ending November 1, 1876." Transactions of the Kansas Academy of Science, Ninth Annual Meeting, pp. 4–5.
  13. ^ Switek, B. (2010). "Thomas Henry Huxley and the reptile to bird transition." pp. 251–264 in Moody, R.T.J., Buffetaut, E., Naish, D. and Martill, D.M. (eds.) Dinosaurs and Other Extinct Saurians: A Historical Perspective. Geological Society Special Publication 343, ISBN 1862393117.
  14. ^ Mortimer, M. (2010). "Ornithuromorpha: Ichthyornis." The Theropod Database. Accessed online 23 April 2016.
  15. ^ Lee, Michael SY; Cau, Andrea; Darren, Naish; Gareth J., Dyke (May 2014). "Morphological Clocks in Paleontology, and a Mid-Cretaceous Origin of Crown Aves". Systematic Biology. 63 (3). Oxford Journals: 442–449. doi:10.1093/sysbio/syt110. PMID 24449041.

Further reading edit

  • Brands, Sheila (14 August 2008). "Systema Naturae 2000 / Classification – Genus Phoebetria –". Project: The Taxonomicon. Retrieved 12 June 2012.[permanent dead link]
  • Chiappe, Luis M.; Lamb, James P. Jr.; Ericson, Per G.P. (2002). "New enantiornithine bird from the marine Upper Cretaceous of Alabama". Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology. 22 (1): 170–174. doi:10.1671/0272-4634(2002)022[0170:NEBFTM]2.0.CO;2. S2CID 55026727.
  • Marsh, Othniel Charles (1880). Odontornithes, a Monograph on the Extinct Birds of North America. Washington: Government Printing Office.
  • Asteriornis

External links edit

  • Ichthyornis dispar: A toothed, flying bird from the Late Cretaceous of Kansas by Mike Everhart, Oceans of Kansas website. Retrieved 2006-09-16.

ichthyornis, meaning, fish, bird, after, fish, like, vertebrae, extinct, genus, toothy, seabird, like, ornithuran, from, late, cretaceous, period, north, america, fossil, remains, known, from, chalks, alberta, alabama, kansas, greenhorn, limestone, mexico, sas. Ichthyornis meaning fish bird after its fish like vertebrae is an extinct genus of toothy seabird like ornithuran from the late Cretaceous period of North America Its fossil remains are known from the chalks of Alberta Alabama Kansas Greenhorn Limestone New Mexico Saskatchewan and Texas in strata that were laid down in the Western Interior Seaway during the Turonian through Campanian ages about 95 83 5 million years ago Ichthyornis is a common component of the Niobrara Formation fauna and numerous specimens have been found IchthyornisTemporal range Late Cretaceous 1 95 83 5 Ma PreꞒ Ꞓ O S D C P T J K Pg N Cast skeleton Rocky Mountain Dinosaur Resource Center Scientific classification Domain Eukaryota Kingdom Animalia Phylum Chordata Clade Dinosauria Clade Saurischia Clade Theropoda Clade Avialae Clade Ornithurae Clade Ichthyornithes Genus IchthyornisMarsh 1873 Species I dispar Binomial name Ichthyornis dispar Marsh 1872 Synonyms Angelinornis Kashin 1972 Colonosaurus Marsh 1872c Plegadornis Wetmore 1962 preoccupied Species synonymy Graculavus anceps Marsh 1872aIchthyornis anceps Marsh 1872a Marsh 1872bColonosaurus mudgei Marsh 1872cGraculavus agilis Marsh 1873bIchthyornis agilis Marsh 1873b Marsh 1880Ichthyornis victor Marsh 1876Ichthyornis validus Marsh 1880Plegadornis antecessor Wetmore 1962Angelinornis antecessor Wetmore 1962 Kashin 1972Ichthyornis antecessor Wetmore 1962 Olson 1975 Ichthyornis has been historically important in shedding light on bird evolution It was the first known prehistoric bird relative preserved with teeth and Charles Darwin noted its significance during the early years of the theory of evolution Ichthyornis remains important today as it is one of the few Mesozoic era ornithurans known from more than a few specimens Contents 1 Description of the Ichthyornis 2 Timespan and evolution 3 History of study 3 1 Mounted specimens 4 Classification 5 References 6 Further reading 7 External linksDescription of the Ichthyornis edit nbsp Relative size of two I dispar specimens YPM 1742 blue and YPM 1450 green compared with a human Both specimens were adult but YPM 1450 is approximately one million years older It is thought that Ichthyornis was the Cretaceous ecological equivalent of modern seabirds such as gulls petrels and skimmers An average specimen was the size of a pigeon 24 centimetres 9 4 in long with a skeletal wingspan not taking feathers into account of around 43 centimetres 17 in 2 though there is considerable size variation among known specimens with some smaller and some much larger than the type specimen of I dispar 1 Ichthyornis is notable primarily for its combination of vertebrae which are concave both in front and back similar to some fish which is where it gets its name and several more subtle features of its skeleton which set it apart from its close relatives Ichthyornis is perhaps most well known for its teeth The teeth were present only in the middle portion of the upper and lower jaws The jaw tips had no teeth and were covered in a beak The beak of Ichthyornis like the hesperornithids was compound and made up of several distinct plates similar to the beak of an albatross rather than a single sheet of keratin as in most modern birds 3 The teeth were more flattened than the rounded teeth found in crocodilians though they became wider towards the base of the crown The tips of the teeth were curved backward and lacked any serrations 1 The wings and breastbone were very modern in appearance suggesting strong flight ability and placing it with modern birds in the advanced group Carinatae Unlike earlier avialans such as the enantiornithines the species appears to have matured to adulthood in a rather short continuous process 4 A study on an Ichthyornis endocast reveals that it had a relatively basal brain compared to modern birds similar to that of Archaeopteryx and other non avian theropods Conversely it had a palate remarkably convergent with that of modern neognaths 5 Timespan and evolution edit nbsp Restoration of I dispar Ichthyornis fossils have been found in almost all levels of the Niobrara Chalk from beds dating to the late Coniacian age about 89 million years ago to the Campanian age about 83 5 million years ago 1 6 Even earlier remains attributed to Ichthyornis have been found in the Greenhorn Formation of Kansas dating to the early Turonian age about 93 million years ago 2 Specimens of Ichthyornis from earlier eras were on average smaller than later ones The holotype specimen of Ichthyornis dispar YPM 1450 had a humerus about 58 millimetres 2 3 in long In many geologically younger specimens like YPM 1742 the same wing bone was 71 5 millimetres 2 81 in long Both the older smaller specimens and the more recent larger specimens show signs that they had reached skeletal maturity and were adults and came from the same geographic area It is likely that Ichthyornis dispar as a species increased in size over the several million years it inhabited the Western Interior Seaway ecosystem 1 History of study edit nbsp Skeletal restoration based on the holotype of I dispar Ichthyornis was one of the first Mesozoic avialans ever found and the first one known to have had teeth making it an important discovery in the early history of paleontology It remains important today as it represents one of the closest non avian relatives of modern birds and one of a handful of Mesozoic bird relatives represented by numerous specimens 1 Ichthyornis was discovered in 1870 by Benjamin Franklin Mudge a professor from Kansas State Agricultural College who recovered the initial fossils from the North Fork of the Solomon River in Kansas United States Mudge was a prolific fossil collector who shipped his discoveries to prominent scientists for study 7 Mudge had previously had a close partnership with paleontologist Edward Drinker Cope of the Academy of Natural Sciences in Philadelphia However as described by S W Williston in 1898 Mudge was soon contacted by Othniel Charles Marsh Cope s rival in the so called Bone Wars a rush to collect and identify fossils in the American West Marsh wrote to Mudge in 1872 and offered to identify any important fossils free of charge and to give Mudge sole credit for their discovery Marsh had been a friend of Mudge when they were younger so when Mudge learned of Marsh s request he changed the address on the shipping crate containing the Ichthyornis specimen which had already been addressed to Cope and was ready to be sent and shipped it to Marsh instead Marsh had narrowly won the prestige of studying and naming the important fossil at the expense of his rival 7 However Marsh did not initially recognize the true importance of the fossil Soon after receiving it he reported back to Mudge his opinion that the chalk slab contained the bones of two distinct animals a small bird animal and the toothed jaws of some unknown reptile Marsh considered the unusual vertebrae of the bird to resemble those of a fish so he named it Ichthyornis or fish bird 8 Later in 1872 Marsh described the toothed jaws as a new species of marine reptile named Colonosaurus mudgei after their discoverer 9 The similarity of the lower jaw and teeth to those of mosasaurs is so great that as late as 1952 J T Gregory argued that it really belonged to a diminutive species or young individual related to the genus Clidastes 10 nbsp Skeletal restoration based on the holotype of I victor now I dispar by O C Marsh By early in 1873 Marsh had recognized his error Through further preparation and exposure of skull bones from the rock he found that the toothed jaws must have come from the bird itself and not a marine reptile Due to the previously unknown features of Ichthyornis vertebrae concave on either side and teeth Marsh chose to classify it in an entirely new sub class of birds he called the Odontornithes or toothed birds and in the new order Ichthyornithes later Ichthyornithiformes The only other bird Marsh included in these groups was the newly named Apatornis which he had previously named as a species of Ichthyornis I celer 11 Mudge later noted the rare and unique quality of these toothed birds including Hesperornis which was found to also have teeth by 1877 and the irony of their association with the remains of toothless pterosaurs flying reptiles which were only known to have had teeth in other regions of the world at that time 12 Soon after these discoveries Ichthyornis was recognized for its significance to the theory of evolution recently published by Charles Darwin Darwin himself told Marsh in an 1880 letter that Ichthyornis and Hesperornis offered the best support for the theory of evolution since he had first published On the Origin of Species in 1859 1 While Archaeopteryx was the first known Mesozoic avialan and is now known to have also had teeth the first specimen with a skull was not described until 1884 13 Others at the time also recognized the implications of a nearly modern bird with reptilian teeth and feared the controversy it caused One Yale student described various men and women urging Marsh to conceal Ichthyornis from the public because it lent too much support to evolutionary theory 1 Many accused Marsh of having tampered with the fossils or intentionally created a hoax by associating reptilian jaws with the body of a bird accusations that continued to surface even as late as 1967 However an overwhelming majority of researchers have demonstrated that Marsh s interpretation of the fossils was correct and he was fully vindicated by later finds 1 Mounted specimens edit nbsp Cast of the original composite panel mount of I victor now I dispar Peabody Museum of Natural History At the turn of the 20th century the Peabody Museum of Natural History at Yale University where most Ichthyornis specimens were housed began placing many of its most interesting or important specimens on display in the museum s Great Hall Two panel mounts that is pieces where the skeleton is arranged and set into a plaster slab were created for Ichthyornis one for I dispar and one for I victor Both were created by Hugh Gibb who prepared many of Marsh s fossils for study and display The I dispar mount contained only the holotype fossils while the I victor mount was a composite incorporating a variety of different specimens to make the piece appear more complete it did not however contain any part of the actual I victor holotype specimen 1 At some point before 1937 the catalogue number of the actual I victor type specimen was mistakenly reassigned to the panel mount Later reports of the specimen even by the Peabody Museum s staff therefore mistakenly stated that the original I victor specimen comprised most of the skeleton when it was in fact only three bones 1 By 1997 the situation had become so confused that Jacques Gauthier the current curator of the museum s vertebrate paleontology collection authorized the dismantling of both panel mounts This allowed the bones to be properly sorted out and studied in three dimensions which had been impossible previously when they were embedded in plaster 1 A full re description of these specimens was published by paleontologist Julia Clarke in 2004 1 Classification editIchthyornis is close to the ancestry of modern birds the Aves but represents an independent lineage It was long believed that it was closely related to some other Cretaceous taxa known from very fragmentary remains Ambiortus Apatornis Iaceornis and Guildavis but these seem to be closer to the ancestors of modern birds than to Ichthyornis dispar In Clarke s 2004 review the former order Ichthyornithiformes and the family Ichthyornithidae are now superseded by the clade Ichthyornithes which in the paper was also defined according to phylogenetic taxonomy as all descendants of the most recent common ancestor of Ichthyornis dispar and modern birds 1 nbsp Mandible and vertebra Of the several described species only one Ichthyornis dispar is currently recognized following the seminal review by Julia Clarke 1 Marsh had previously named a specimen now attributed to I dispar as Graculavus anceps Clarke argued that because the rules for naming animals laid out by the ICZN state that a type species for a genus must have originally been included in that genus Ichthyornis anceps is ineligible to replace I dispar as the type species and so must be considered a junior synonym even though it was named first However Michael Mortimer pointed out that this is incorrect while I anceps cannot become the type species of Ichthyornis the ICZN does not preclude it from becoming the senior synonym of the type species I dispar Therefore I anceps should have been considered the correct name for the only recognized Ichthyornis species 14 All other supposed species of Ichthyornis have not been supported as valid The presumed Ichthyornis lentos for example actually belongs into the early galliform genus Austinornis 1 Ichthyornis minusculus from the Bissekty Formation Late Cretaceous of Kyzyl Kum Uzbekistan is probably an enantiornithine All other Ichthyornis species are synonymous with I dispar 1 The cladogram below is the result of a 2014 analysis by Michael Lee and colleagues that expanded on data from an earlier study by O Connor amp Zhou in 2012 The clade names are positioned based on their definitions 15 Ornithurae Ichthyornis Hesperornithes Limenavis Aves modern birds References edit a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q Clarke J A 2004 Morphology phylogenetic taxonomy and systematics of Ichthyornis and Apatornis Avialae Ornithurae PDF Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History 286 1 179 doi 10 1206 0003 0090 2004 286 lt 0001 MPTASO gt 2 0 CO 2 S2CID 84035285 a b Shimada K Fernandes M V 2006 Ichthyornis sp Aves Ichthyornithiformes from the lower Turonian Upper Cretaceous of western Kansas Transactions of the Kansas Academy of Science 109 1 2 21 26 doi 10 1660 0022 8443 2006 109 21 ISAIFT 2 0 CO 2 S2CID 86151155 Lamb J P Jr 1997 Marsh was right Ichthyornis had a beak Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology 17 59A doi 10 1080 02724634 1997 10011028 Chinsamy A Martin L D and Dobson P April 1998 Bone microstructure of the diving Hesperornis and the volant Ichthyornis from the Niobrara Chalk of western Kansas Cretaceous Research 19 2 225 235 Bibcode 1998CrRes 19 225C doi 10 1006 cres 1997 0102 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Torres Christopher R Norell Mark A Clarke Julia A 2021 Bird neurocranial and body mass evolution across the end Cretaceous mass extinction The avian brain shape left other dinosaurs behind Science Advances 7 31 Bibcode 2021SciA 7 7099T doi 10 1126 sciadv abg7099 PMC 8324052 PMID 34330706 Carpenter K 2003 Harries P J ed Vertebrate Biostratigraphy of the Smoky Hill Chalk Niobrara Formation and the Sharon Springs Member Pierre Shale High Resolution Approaches in Stratigraphic Paleontology Topics in Geobiology 21 421 437 doi 10 1007 978 1 4020 9053 0 ISBN 978 1 4020 1443 7 a b Williston S W 1898 A brief history of fossil collecting in the Niobrara Chalk prior to 1900 Addenda to Part I The University Geological Survey of Kansas 4 28 32 Marsh O C 1872b Notice of a new and remarkable fossil bird American Journal of Science Series 3 4 22 344 doi 10 1080 00222937308696769 Marsh O C 1872 Notice of a new reptile from the Cretaceous American Journal of Science Series 3 4 23 406 Gregory J T 1952 The jaws of the Cretaceous toothed birds Ichthyornis and Hesperornis PDF Condor 54 2 73 88 doi 10 2307 1364594 JSTOR 1364594 Marsh O C 1873a On a new sub class of fossil birds Odontornithes American Journal of Science Series 4 11 63 233 234 doi 10 1080 00222937308696804 Mudge B F 1877 Annual Report of the committee on Geology for the year ending November 1 1876 Transactions of the Kansas Academy of Science Ninth Annual Meeting pp 4 5 Switek B 2010 Thomas Henry Huxley and the reptile to bird transition pp 251 264 in Moody R T J Buffetaut E Naish D and Martill D M eds Dinosaurs and Other Extinct Saurians A Historical Perspective Geological Society Special Publication 343 ISBN 1862393117 Mortimer M 2010 Ornithuromorpha Ichthyornis The Theropod Database Accessed online 23 April 2016 Lee Michael SY Cau Andrea Darren Naish Gareth J Dyke May 2014 Morphological Clocks in Paleontology and a Mid Cretaceous Origin of Crown Aves Systematic Biology 63 3 Oxford Journals 442 449 doi 10 1093 sysbio syt110 PMID 24449041 Further reading editBrands Sheila 14 August 2008 Systema Naturae 2000 Classification Genus Phoebetria Project The Taxonomicon Retrieved 12 June 2012 permanent dead link Chiappe Luis M Lamb James P Jr Ericson Per G P 2002 New enantiornithine bird from the marine Upper Cretaceous of Alabama Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology 22 1 170 174 doi 10 1671 0272 4634 2002 022 0170 NEBFTM 2 0 CO 2 S2CID 55026727 Marsh Othniel Charles 1880 Odontornithes a Monograph on the Extinct Birds of North America Washington Government Printing Office AsteriornisExternal links edit nbsp Dinosaurs portal nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Ichthyornis Ichthyornis dispar A toothed flying bird from the Late Cretaceous of Kansas by Mike Everhart Oceans of Kansas website Retrieved 2006 09 16 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ichthyornis amp oldid 1220372091, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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