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18 - Birds of the Crato Formation
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- By Darren Naish, School of Earth and Environmental Sciences, University of Portsmouth, Burnaby Road, Portsmouth PO1 3QL, UK, David M. Martill, Reader in Palaeobiology in the School of Earth and Environmental Sciences University of Portsmouth, Ian Merrick, School of Earth and Environmental Sciences, University of Portsmouth, Burnaby Road, Portsmouth PO1 3QL, UK
- David M. Martill, University of Portsmouth, Günter Bechly, Robert F. Loveridge, University of Portsmouth
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- Book:
- The Crato Fossil Beds of Brazil
- Published online:
- 22 August 2009
- Print publication:
- 13 December 2007, pp 525-534
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- Chapter
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Summary
Introduction
Remains of possible birds are extremely rare in the Crato Formation and have so far only been reported from the Nova Olinda Member. The first report was of an isolated probable remex (Figure 18.1a) described by Martins-Neto and Kellner (1988), and subsequently refigured by Kellner et al. (1991) and Kellner (2002). Martill and Filgueira (1994) later described a semiplume, while Kellner et al. (1994) reported the occurrence of an isolated down feather. Several other feathers have since been reported from the Crato Formation (Kellner, 2002). Avian skeletal remains, although known from anecdotal accounts and personal observations, have yet to be reported in the literature and two examples are figured here for the first time (Plate 25d, Plate 26).
Isolated feathers occur in both the weathered, buff-coloured laminated limestone as goethite pseudomorphs, and as carbonaceous replicas in the unweathered limestones. Specimens preserved as carbonaceous replicas may be represented by bacterial autolithifications (Martill and Frey, 1995), and in this respect the preservation mirrors that of the famous soft-tissue fossils of the Eocene Messel Formation of Germany (Wuttke, 1983). As in the case of the Crato Formation insects, fine details may be preserved in the feathers, despite the bacterial autolithification. In some cases colour patterns appear to have been preserved; in most instances as dark and light transverse bands (Plate 25).
Although it has been possible to categorize these isolated feathers by comparison with modern feather morphotypes, it has not been possible to assign them to any particular taxon.