
Professors Richard Prum, the William Robertson Coe Professor of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, and Derek Briggs, the Frederick W. Beinecke Professor of Geology and Geophysics and director of the Yale Peabody Museum of Natural History, and graduate student Jakob Vinther discuss how they discovered the plumage colors of an extinct feathered dinosaur for the first time. Whilst the traditional view on the evolution of feathers was in relation to flight, new discoveries of feathered dinosaurs in China have changed this to focus on thermoregulation and display.Certain organisations continue to parrot the phrase "no transitional fossils have ever been found". However, the list of species which possess transitional features continues to grow. Anchiornis huxleyi, Epidexipteryx hui, Protoavis, Protarchaeopteryx, Archeopteryx, Avimimus, Sinosauropteryx, Caudipteryx, Rahonavis, Shuvuuia, Sinornithosaurus, Beipiasaurus, Microraptor, Nomingia, Epidendrosaurus, Cryptovolans, Scansoriopteryx, Yixianosaurus, Dilong, Pedopenna, Jinfengopteryx, Sinocalliopteryx, Sinornis, Ambiortus, Hesperornis, Ichthyornis This video is courtesy of YaleUniversity please subscribe to them.
Dinosaurs
melanosomes
melanin
Yale
professors
research
fossils
Peabody
Museum
Anchiornis
huxleyi
fossil
squid
ink
feathers
dinosaur
colors
Archeopteryx
bird
feather
evolution
darwin
dawkins