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  2. Evolution of birds - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Evolution_of_birds

    The basal bird Archaeopteryx, from the Jurassic, is well known as one of the first "missing links" to be found in support of evolution in the late 19th century. Though it is not considered a direct ancestor of modern birds, it gives a fair representation of how flight evolved and how the very first bird might have looked.

  3. Origin of birds - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Origin_of_birds

    A turning point came in the early twentieth century with the writings of Gerhard Heilmann of Denmark.An artist by trade, Heilmann had a scholarly interest in birds and from 1913 to 1916, expanding on earlier work by Othenio Abel, [12] published the results of his research in several parts, dealing with the anatomy, embryology, behavior, paleontology, and evolution of birds. [13]

  4. Bird - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bird

    Modern birds would have expanded from West Gondwana through two routes. One route was an Antarctic interchange in the Paleogene. The other route was probably via Paleocene land bridges between South America and North America, which allowed for the rapid expansion and diversification of Neornithes into the Holarctic and Paleotropics. [7]

  5. Fossil ‘overturns more than a century of knowledge about ...

    www.aol.com/fossil-overturns-more-century...

    Each of the roughly 11,000 species of birds on Earth today is classified into one of two groups, based on the arrangement of their palate bones. Fossil ‘overturns more than a century of ...

  6. Timeline of ornithology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Timeline_of_ornithology

    1933 – Nagamichi Kuroda publishes Birds of the Island of Java (2 Volumes, 1933–36). 1934 – Roger Tory Peterson publishes his Guide to the Birds, the first modern field guide. 1934–37 – Brian Roberts is the expedition ornithologist on John Rymill's British Graham Land Expedition (BGLE).

  7. Geologists Found Ancient Bird Footprints That Are 60 Million ...

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    Birds (and their more reptilian cousins, the Crocodilia) are the modern-day legacy of dinosaur’s 165-million-year-long stint on Earth. While our avian friends’ Mesozoic origin story isn’t up ...

  8. Phorusrhacidae - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phorusrhacidae

    During the early Cenozoic, after the extinction of the non-bird dinosaurs, mammals underwent an evolutionary diversification, and some bird groups around the world developed a tendency towards gigantism; this included the Gastornithidae, the Dromornithidae, the Palaeognathae, and the Phorusrhacidae. [36]

  9. Millions of years before the earliest birds appeared, mystery ...

    www.aol.com/birdlike-footprints-triassic-mystery...

    The oldest fossil evidence for paravians — the dinosaur group that includes the earliest birds and their closest relatives — appears around the middle of the Jurassic Period (201.3 million to ...