Authors
Jakob Vinther, Derek EG Briggs, Julia Clarke, Gerald Mayr, Richard O Prum
Publication date
2010/2/23
Journal
Biology Letters
Volume
6
Issue
1
Pages
128-131
Publisher
The Royal Society
Description
Investigation of feathers from the famous Middle Eocene Messel Oil Shale near Darmstadt, Germany shows that they are preserved as arrays of fossilized melanosomes, the surrounding beta-keratin having degraded. The majority of feathers are preserved as aligned rod-shaped eumelanosomes. In some, however, the barbules of the open pennaceous, distal portion of the feather vane are preserved as a continuous external layer of closely packed melanosomes enclosing loosely aligned melanosomes. This arrangement is similar to the single thin-film nanostructure that generates an iridescent, structurally coloured sheen on the surface of black feathers in many lineages of living birds. This is, to our knowledge, the first evidence of preservation of a colour-producing nanostructure in a fossil feather and confirms the potential for determining colour differences in ancient birds and other dinosaurs.
Total citations
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Scholar articles
J Vinther, DEG Briggs, J Clarke, G Mayr, RO Prum - Biology Letters, 2010