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Duck ancestors roamed Earth with dinosaurs

By Michael Kanellos
http://news.com.com/Duck+ancestors+roamed+Earth+with+dinosaurs/2100-1008_3-5548666.html

A close relative of modern-day ducks, chickens and geese coexisted
with dinosaurs more than 65 million years ago, according to fossil
research compiled by professors at North Carolina State University.

Recent examinations of an Antarctica fossil found in 1992 have
revealed evidence of a prehistoric avian species called Vegavis iaai
that appears to be a cousin of today's barnyard poultry. The existence
of the fossil thus means that birds and dinosaurs overlapped and that
these birds must have survived the Cretaceous-Tertiary mass extinction
event that included the disappearance of all other dinosaurs.

Scientists have long debated whether birds coexisted with the giant
reptiles. Genetic researchers have theorized that, considering DNA
sequence data, an overlap had to occur. Critics, however, have pointed
to the paucity of fossils proving the theory.

The species was unearthed from computed tomography scans of the
fossil--which uncovered new bones deep within the rock matrix--and
recovery of latex peels made of the specimen just after its discovery
in Antarctica in 1992. The partial skeleton embedded in the fossil is
the most complete specimen from the Cretaceous period to be found to
have an evolutionary relationship to a living bird group.

The fossil's fragility hampered earlier investigation. Earlier this
year, the National Science foundation gave a grant to re-examine the
fossil to Julia Clarke, an assistant professor in the marine, earth
and atmospheric sciences department at N.C. State.

"We have more data than ever to propose at least the beginnings of the
radiation of all living birds in the Cretaceous," Clarke said in a
statement. "We now know that duck and chicken relatives coexisted with
nonavian dinosaurs. This does not mean that today's chicken and duck
species lived with nonavian dinosaurs but that the evolutionary
lineages leading to today's duck and chicken species did."

Earlier this month, scientists at the University of Washington posted
a paper theorizing that "The Great Dying," a mass species extinction
that occurred several million years before the dinosaur extinction,
was caused by global warming--not an asteroid.

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