All about dinosaurs, fossils and prehistoric animals by Everything Dinosaur team members.
13 02, 2010

Start of the Winter Olympics – Ice Age Scene

By |2023-03-04T14:52:54+00:00February 13th, 2010|Everything Dinosaur News and Updates, Main Page|0 Comments

Woolly Mammoths in the Tundra

Today marks the start of the first full day of sporting action at the 2010 Winter Olympic Games being held in Vancouver, Canada. We wish the very best of luck to all the competitors. With all the skiing, snowboarding, ice hockey and such like being shown on the television over the next two weeks we thought we would post up a picture of an Ice Age scene.

The picture below was created by designers at the German model manufacturer Schleich to promote their prehistoric animal model ranges. It is sad to report that a number of models from this range have been retired this year.  The Cave Bear and Giant Ground Sloth (Megatherium) are no longer available.  However, the Mammoths and Smilodon are still in production and this scene is part of a longer montage which also depicted a Sabre-toothed cat.

Ice Age Scene

Prehistoric Mammals (Woolly Mammoths) from Schleich

Woolly Mammoths. An Ice Age scene.

A wintry Ice Age scene.  Two adult Woolly Mammoths watch over a young calf.

Picture credit: Schleich/Everything Dinosaur

To view the Schleich Prehistoric Mammal range and dinosaurs: Schleich Prehistoric Animal Models.

Adult Mammoths and a Calf

The scene shows two adult Mammoths and a youngster in the snow with a background of high snow-capped mountains.  It is a typical Ice Age scene.  Although the Northern Hemisphere was much colder during the Ice Age, there were warmer periods when the snow and ice retreated.  However, Woolly Mammoths are prehistoric animals that adapted to living in colder environments.

12 02, 2010

Everything Dinosaur Brings in New Papo Models

By |2023-03-04T14:54:04+00:00February 12th, 2010|Everything Dinosaur News and Updates, Main Page, Press Releases|0 Comments

Everything Dinosaur Brings in New Papo Models

Everything Dinosaur, the UK based dinosaur company run by parents, teachers and real dinosaur experts is to bring in Papo models for the first time.  Announcing the addition of Papo prehistoric animal models to their already extensive model range, a spokesperson for the company commented on how they had admired the Papo models for a long time and that they were delighted to be able to stock them.

Papo Dinosaur Models

Papo, the France based model and figure manufacturer have been making specialist figures for more than a quarter of a century.  They specialise in producing highly detailed, historical figures, animals and characters from films.  The dinosaur range, or as the French would say “Dinosaures” includes four new models, a Plesiosaurus, Oviraptor, Pachyrhinosaurus and a new Velociraptor colouration.  Everything Dinosaur will be stocking all these products, although the Plesiosaurus will not be available until late Spring.

To view the current Papo model range: Papo Dinosaur and Prehistoric Animal Models.

As well as the dinosaur figures, Papo produces a pair of finely detailed Stone Age people models, one with a stone hand axe, the other with a flint spear.

The Prehistoric Figures from Papo

Picture credit: Papo/Everything Dinosaur

It is fitting for a French company to have two superb caveman models to add to their collection of dinosaur models, as France is famous for early modern human settlements and remains as well as many Neanderthal artefacts and fossilised bones.  Papo dinosaur models are highly collectible and very carefully painted.  These dinosaur and prehistoric animal figures are highly regarded by dinosaur fans of all ages.

11 02, 2010

DNA Offers Clues to Appearance of 4,000 Year Old Man

By |2023-03-04T14:56:04+00:00February 11th, 2010|Dinosaur and Prehistoric Animal News Stories, Main Page|0 Comments

Scientist use DNA from Hair to Produce Image of Neolithic Man

A team of scientists and researchers have decoded the DNA found in preserved human hair from a Stone Age man that lived in Western Greenland and have used this data to produce an image of his facial features.

The research team led by Morten Rasmussen of the Zoological Museum in Copenhagen, Denmark, analysed hair buried in the snow in Greenland.  The remarkable state of preservation enabled the scientists to map the genome and establish certain characteristics of this individual who lived 4,000 years ago.

The hair, from a male has enabled the researchers to produce an image of this human from ancient history – he is known as Saqqaq man, the name given to the Paleo-Eskimo culture and people whose remains and artefacts have been found in this region.  He has been nicknamed “Inuk” by the research team.

A Model of a Prehistoric Man

Papo Caveman with club and spear.

Papo prehistoric man.

The picture above, shows a caveman one of the models from the Papo “Les Dinosaures” range: Papo Prehistoric Animal Models.

Saqqaq Man

The scientists believe that Saqqaq man had dark brown eyes, dark brown hair, wide teeth and dry earwax, similar to Mongoloid features seen in many Asian communities today.  The hair was found amongst other small items of debris and it has been speculated that the discovery site was the place that our Stone Age man decided to get his hair cut.  The swatch of hair was so thick when it was first discovered it was labelled as hair from a bear and not investigated any further.

This discovery also sheds new light on the settlement of North America by showing there was a hitherto unsuspected migration of people across the continent, from Siberia to Greenland, some 5,500 years ago.

This Stone Age Greenlander and his genome has helped to establish that he was related to the Chukchis, people who live at the easternmost tip of Siberia.  Saqqaq man’s ancestors split apart from Chukchis some 5,500 years ago, according to genetic calculations, implying that the Saqqaq people’s ancestors must have travelled across the northern edges of North America until they reached Greenland.

No traces of the Saqqaq people have been found to date in North America, during this time, the very end of the Neolithic, there was no land bridge between Siberia and Alaska, but the Saqqaq people may have crossed into the Americas travelling over the winter sea ice.

The Saqqaq man’s genome is so complete that the Danish researchers have been able to reconstruct his probable appearance and susceptibility to disease from the genetic information in his genome. They conclude that he would have had brown eyes because of variations, at four positions along his DNA, that are associated with brown eye colour in East Asians.

He has the East Asian version of a gene known as EDAR, which endows people with hair that is thicker than that of most Europeans and Africans. Another gene suggests that he would have had dry earwax, as do Asians and Native Americans, not the wet earwax of other ethnic groups.  Ironically, since this person has been recreated using strands of hair, one element of the genome recovered hints that this man may have been prone to baldness in later life.

10 02, 2010

Dinosaurs on the Run from Dinosaur City (Thousands of Rare Chinese Tracks)

By |2024-04-19T09:25:33+01:00February 10th, 2010|Dinosaur and Prehistoric Animal News Stories, Main Page|0 Comments

Evidence of Dinosaur Trackways from China – Thousands of Prints

China’s eastern Shandong province, has provided a number of spectacular dinosaur fossils since formal scientific exploration and study began in the area in the late 1960s. Most of the dinosaur discoveries have been centred around the city of Zhucheng.  Over the years a number of Cretaceous dinosaurs, many of them entirely new genera have been discovered.  However, official Chinese media has reported the discovery of not just body fossils (bones etc.), but a series of dinosaur trackways, (trace fossils), over 3,000 dinosaur prints in total.

Dinosaur Fossils

Body fossils such as dinosaur bones, can be transported a long way from the area in which the animal lived and died.  For example, a dinosaur that died inland could be washed into a river as the result of a flash flood and the carcase carried out to sea, where eventually it sank.  This could result in the preservation and fossilisation of a land living animal in marine deposits, as in the case of the Dorset (England), Scelidosaurus.

Trace fossils on the other hand, preserve evidence of the activity of animals, their tracks, trails, burrows all being preserved as part of the fossil record.  Most trace fossils are direct, in situ evidence of the behaviour and the environment of the animal at the time the trace was made.  The 3,000 prints provide evidence of the time and the place where the dinosaurs roamed.

Dinosaur Tracks

It is not the volume of prints that is most amazing, although this an exceptional number and represents a hugely significant find in itself, but the fact that at least six genera are represented by the tracks and that all the dinosaurs seemed to heading in the same direction.  Could all the plant-eaters have been running away from the theropods (meat-eaters that left their tracks to)?  Or could this be evidence of a dinosaur migration?

Migration events are common in extant species.  Team members at Everything Dinosaur have witnessed such astonishing events in the natural world as the immense Gnu migration in Kenya, as huge herds of these grazers migrate in search of fresh pasture.  Reindeer in the northern hemisphere migrate enormous distances, following the Reindeer are the predators (Wolves) ready to pick off the weak and vulnerable animals that get left behind.

The dinosaur footprints include those of large meat-eaters, a spokesperson for the Chinese excavation team speculated that they could be tyrannosaurs, as these types of large, carnivorous dinosaur are known from similarly aged rocks in the region.

Zhucheng has been nicknamed “Dinosaur City” as more than 30 excavations have taken place in and around the city to date.  In 2008, the largest single dinosaur fossil location in the world was discovered in the area, with something in excess of 7,000 individual dinosaur fossil bones at this one locality.  The pictures released show a Chinese researcher carefully walking over part of the fossiliferous site, in the foreground a number of bones are exposed, each marked with a white identity tag.

Working on the Trackway Site

Scientists from the Chinese Academy of Sciences have been working to map the trackway site, the first study of the trackways took over three months to complete.  The prints vary in size from ten to eighty centimetres in length, further work will be undertaken to ascertain the speed of travel and to assess why all these animals moved in the same direction.  It is expected that the site will yield a number of new exciting discoveries and provide palaeontologists with a rare opportunity to study interrelationships between different elements of the environment’s mega fauna.

“The Dinosaur City”

Zhucheng the “Dinosaur City” even has a dinosaur genus named after it, Zhuchengosaurus (Z. maximus), an enormous Late Cretaceous hadrosaurine (duck-billed dinosaur).  This colossal animal, is the largest known ornithopod in the fossil record.  Although, the only reconstructed skeleton is a composite mount (made up of parts from several individuals), the mounted dinosaur has a length of 16.6 metres and a height of 9.1 metres, although the posture that this duck-billed dinosaur has been displayed in (very upright and bipedal) has been questioned.

The small forelimbs, reminiscent of Mantellisaurus indicate that Zhuchengosaurus was very probably a facultative biped.

For models of dinosaurs including prehistoric animals from China: PNSO Age of Dinosaurs Figures.

9 02, 2010

The Famous Lizard from Edmonton – Edmontosaurus

By |2024-04-19T09:33:03+01:00February 9th, 2010|Dinosaur Fans, Educational Activities, Main Page|0 Comments

The Lizard from Edmonton – Edmontosaurus

A few days ago, team members at Everything Dinosaur received an email from a young dinosaur fan, asking how Edmontosaurus got its name.  This ornithopod, a member of the Hadrosauridae family, (duck-billed dinosaur), was named and described by the Canadian palaeontologist Lawrence Lambe in 1917.  Lambe was responsible for the study of a number of North American dinosaurs that were discovered in the early years of the 20th century.  Fossils of this particular dinosaur genus have been found in Alberta (Canada) and the United States (Montana and Wyoming).

The Lizard from Edmonton

Edmontosaurus was one of the last of the duck-billed dinosaurs, living at the very end of the Cretaceous (70 – 66 million years ago) – Maastrichtian faunal stage.

An Illustration of Edmontosaurus (Edmontosaurus regalis)

Picture credit: Everything Dinosaur

Edmontosaurus is known from many fossilised skeletons.  It must have been one of the most abundant of the large, herbivorous dinosaurs at the end of the Cretaceous and a number of species have been ascribed to this genus.  These large animals that could grow to lengths of 13 metres and weigh as much as 4 tonnes, were the prey of the large tyrannosaurs.  A number of fossilised skeletons show signs of attacks from predators, including one specimen with a chunk bitten out of its tail.  This flat-headed hadrosaur was not named after the Canadian city of Edmonton, although fossils assoiciated with this genus are known from Edmonton and its suburbs.

Edmontosaurus was named after the “Edmonton” Formation, the rock unit in which it was first found.  The “Edmonton” Formation has subsequently been elevated to “Group” status by geologists and consists of four geological formations namely, (oldest first) Horseshoe Canyon, Whitemud, Battle and the Scollard Formation which contains evidence to make the Cretaceous-Palaeogene boundary.  Edmontosaurus fossils (E. regalis) are associated with the Horseshoe Canyon Formation.

An Edmontosaurus Skeleton on Display

Edmontosaurus skeleton.

Duck-billed dinosaur on display. Picture credit: Everything Dinosaur.

Edmontosaurus

To view models of Edmontosaurus and other duck-billed dinosaurs, we suggest you take a look at the scale models in the CollectA Deluxe range: CollectA Deluxe Prehistoric Life Models.

8 02, 2010

Eagerly Awaiting the Release of the Schleich Saurus Giganotosaurus

By |2023-03-04T15:04:03+00:00February 8th, 2010|Everything Dinosaur News and Updates, Main Page, Press Releases|0 Comments

New Schleich Saurus – Release Date September 2010

Team members at Everything Dinosaur are eagerly awaiting the arrival of the Schleich Giganotosaurus model.

The Saurus range of prehistoric animals from Schleich is only having one new addition this year.  This German manufacturer is producing a scale model of a Giganotosaurus (Giganotosaurus carolini) to go with its large theropod collection of T. rex, Spinosaurus and the Late Jurassic Allosaurus.

Schleich Giganotosaurus Model

The New Schleich Giganotosaurus Model – Release Date Sept. 2010

Picture credit: Schleich/Everything Dinosaur

We have been lucky enough to see this model up close, as part of our preview work with the manufacturer.  This Giganotosaurus, continues this German company’s tradition of producing very stocky and robust looking theropods.  This model contrasts nicely with the long awaited Giganotosaurus from Bullyland (Germany).  Bullyland have chosen a very different look for their version of this large South American predator from the Neuquen Province of Argentina.

The red head on the Bullyland model is most striking, a reflection on the large theropod hypothesis put forward by Dr Bob Bakker et al.  More on this later no doubt when our first shipments come in; but in the meantime, it is exciting looking forward to the release of the Schleich interpretation.  The detailing on this model is very good, the expression of the fenestra in front of the orbit (eye) is vividly demonstrated.  This Giganotosaurus is clearly depicted as a ponderous, heavy, carnivore, quite capable of tackling a titanosaur if it wanted.

To view the Schleich Saurus range:  Schleich Dinosaurs and Prehistoric Animals.

7 02, 2010

New Study of Melanosomes Provides Further Proof of Feathered Dinosaurs

By |2024-04-19T07:17:35+01:00February 7th, 2010|Dinosaur Fans, Main Page, Palaeontological articles|0 Comments

Sinosauropteryx – a Ginger Dinosaur

A team of scientists from China and the United Kingdom have published a paper indicating that some small theropod, feathered dinosaurs were red heads, in fact, sort of ginger coloured all over.

The article published in the scientific journal “Nature” highlights the work done on the fine bristle-like structures found surrounding parts of the fossilised skeleton of a turkey-sized, 125 million-year-old dinosaur called Sinosauropteryx.  Scanning electron microscopes have shown melanosomes to be present, indicating that these strange features were not the remains of collagen or connective tissue, but most probably feathers.

This is further evidence that many dinosaurs were covered in downy feathers, perhaps to keep them warm but also for display.  The melanosomes contain the pigment melanin and from the ratio of different shaped melanosome structures found in the fossilised feathers the scientists have concluded that this particular Sinosauropteryx was ginger coloured.

Feathered Dinosaurs

The scientists have also discovered that this diminutive carnivore had a “Mohican” of feathers running along its head and back and a striped tail.

A View of a Model of Sinosauropteryx

PNSO Sinosauropteryx dinosaur model.

PNSO Yuyan the Sinosauropteryx dinosaur model.  The colouration of this dinosaur model has been inspired by the scientific paper.

Sinosauropteryx

Sinosauropteryx caused a sensation when its discovery was announced in 1996.   The fossil of this one- metre-long dinosaur, was found in the Cretaceous deposits of the Liaoning Province in China.  The fossil showed a perfectly preserved small, theropod dinosaur with a covering of an enigmatic fuzz (“protofeathers”), some of these feathery filaments were up to 4 cm long.

To view the range of prehistoric animal figures in the PNSO series: PNSO Age of Dinosaurs Models and Replicas.

The joint Chinese and British team first scanned the fossils of a Cretaceous bird – Confuciusornis.  Confuciusornis is a primitive bird that bridges the morphological and anatomical gap between creatures like Archaeopteryx and modern birds.  It is the most common bird fossil find in the Jehol deposits of Liaoning.

Using an electron microscope to look inside the feathers, researchers were able to see microscopic structures called melanosomes, which, in life, contain the pigment melanin.

Professor Mike Benton, of the University of Bristol, (UK), the leader of this research project commented:

“Melanin is what gives colour to human hair and animal fur.  They are also the most common way that colours are [produced] in feathers.”

Professor Benton explained that differently shaped melanosomes produced different colours, with blacks or greys produced by “sausage-shaped” melanosomes, and reddish or “russet” shades found in spherical ones.

“A ginger-haired person would have more spherical melanosomes, and a black-haired or grey-haired person would have more of the sausage-shaped structures,” said Professor Benton.

Having found both types of melanosomes in the fossils of the bird Confuciusornis, the team decided to turn their attention to Sinosauropteryx in a bid to understand more about he nature and structure of its own feathered coat.

The close view of pictures of the head, show the line of feathers running down the head and the neck, described by the scientific team as a “Mohican”.

The electron microscope study focused on the bands of dark and light that could be seen along the tail of the fossil Sinosauropteryx.  This close examination has shown that the dinosaur’s “Mohican” was russet or ginger-coloured, and that these bands were in fact ginger and white stripes.

“This is the first time anyone has ever had evidence of original colour of feathers in dinosaurs,” said Professor Benton.

Professor went on to add, that this study confirmed that the bristles on this “rather primitive flesh-eating dinosaur… really were feathers”.

This gives more weight to a very well-supported theory that modern birds evolved from theropods, the group of small carnivorous dinosaurs to which Sinosauropteryx belonged.

“Critics have said that these visible spiny structures could be shredded connective tissue,” Professor Benton explained. “But the discovery of melanosomes within the bristles finally proves that some early dinosaurs were indeed feathered.”

The findings also help to resolve a long-standing debate about the evolution and original function of feathers.

“We now know that feathers did not originate as flight structures,” said Professor Benton.

It seems feather-like structures evolved for insulation and display.

Dr Richard Butler, a palaeontologist at the Bavarian State Collection for Palaeontology, in Munich, Germany, said this was a “fascinating and exciting discovery with important implications for understanding dinosaur evolution and biology.  This discovery suggests that with more work we may be able to accurately reconstruct colour patterns in some dinosaur species, and begin to understand how those colour patterns may have functioned for camouflage or display.”

6 02, 2010

Iguanodon or Iguanosaurus? That is a Great Question

By |2024-04-19T07:11:46+01:00February 6th, 2010|Dinosaur Fans, Main Page|0 Comments

The Problem with Iguanodon

Team members at Everything Dinosaur have been asked to explain to a local church group in Lewes, East Sussex about the difficulties regarding the taxonomic relationships of iguanodontids.  Lewes, was the birth place and home of Dr Gideon Mantell, the scientist who was responsible for formerly naming and describing the dinosaur known as Iguanodon.

Iguanodon

Mantell figured and named Iguanodon based on the discovery of some fossilised teeth, he published his work in the journal the Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society in 1825.  Incidentally, he only gave a generic name for this material, opting not to refer to a specific or species name.  These days such a generic name would be regarded as invalid, however, in the Georgian era, with the nascent study of fossils, this practice was permitted and Iguanodon gained acceptance.  It was another scientist (Holl), who four years later ascribed a species name to the Mantell material.

The first species of Iguanodon was name I. anglicum (Holl, 1829), the specific name has been changed to I. anglicus to reflect the masculine Latinised version of the name, after all, the genus Iguanodon is in the masculine form of Latin.  Mantell, had struggled to find a name for the animal whose teeth he had studied.  By chance he had been shown a preserved specimen of a Caribbean iguana at the Museum of the Royal College of Surgeons and from the similarities in the teeth he came upon the idea of naming his new reptile after an iguana.  He originally wanted to name his new genus Iguanosaurus (iguana lizard), but the name Iguanodon (iguana tooth) was chosen after it was suggested by another scientist (Conybeare).

All this took place many years before Sir Richard Owen coined the phrase Dinosauria to describe this group of strange “Saurian Reptiles”.

We now know that the iguanodontids were advanced ornithopods and they were a very successful group of dinosaurs, with a number of Early Cretaceous genera ascribed to this group.  They were more heavily built than other ornithopods, with stout legs and deep, muscular tails that became slim and pointed at their distal end.

An Illustration of a Typical Iguanodontid

Iguanodon

A drawing of Iguanodon. Picture credit: Everything Dinosaur.

Picture credit: Everything Dinosaur

Although this most English of dinosaurs is still very much associated with the Wealden Formation and other UK locations such as the Isle of Wight, scientifically the term Iguanodon has become a “taxon waste basket” and much sorting out of individual genera has taken place, so much so that the International Commission on Zoological Nomenclature was petitioned to change the type genus from Mantell’s teeth to the more complete skeletons found in Belgium (Bernissart).

There may be several million years separating Mantell’s first iguanodontid I. anglicus and those Iguanodontidae described by Dollo after the discovery in 1878 of a number of near complete specimens – Iguanodon bernissartensis, but this and the revision of Iguanodon material into genera such as Dollodon and the American Dakotadon means that this once very “British” dinosaur is not that closely related to the United Kingdom anymore.

However, one light, gracile iguanodontid has been named Mantellisaurus to honour the doctor from Lewes who was responsible for naming and describing the Iguandontids in the first place.

A Model of Mantellisaurus

CollectA Mantellisaurus dinosaur model.

CollectA Mantellisaurus drinking.

The image shows the CollectA Age of Dinosaurs Mantellisaurus drinking figure. To view this range of dinosaur and prehistoric animal models: CollectA Age of Dinosaurs Prehistoric Life Models.

5 02, 2010

The Largest of the Dromaeosauridae – Utahraptor

By |2023-01-02T12:50:30+00:00February 5th, 2010|Dinosaur Fans, Main Page|0 Comments

Utahraptor – Early Dromaeosaurs were Bigger?

Everything Dinosaur discusses one of the largest dromaeosaurs described to date, the fearsome Utahraptor.

The city of Moab, in eastern Utah (United States) straddles highway 191 and is a popular destination for hikers and bikers and outdoors folk, visiting the area to enjoy the spectacular walks and scenery.  However, if you had been around this particular part of the western United States approximately 120 million years ago, it would have been safer to not wander around on your own.

This was the home range of one of the earliest dromaeosaurs (swift lizards), also one of the largest known in the fossil record – Utahraptor ostrummaysorum.

Discovered, during excavations at the Dalton Wells quarry in 1991, Utahraptor was named after the famous palaeontologist and professor of geology John Ostrom, who did much to establish the theory that many dinosaurs were warm-blooded and highly active animals.

An Scale Illustration of Utahraptor

Utahraptor

The illustration on the Everything Dinosaur Utahraptor fact sheet.  A scale drawing of Utahraptor.  Picture credit: Everything Dinosaur.

Picture credit: Everything Dinosaur

Dromaeosaurid Models and Figures

Dromaeosaurid models and figures have proved popular amongst dinosaur fans and model collectors.

To view models of large dromaeosaurids such as Utahraptor: CollectA Prehistoric Life Models.

With an estimated length of 6-7 metres and with its head at over 2.5 metres in the air, this large predator would have been a formidable hunter, especially if they hunted in packs.  The sickle-shaped claw on the second toe (pes II) measured an estimated 38 cm long.

These large members of the Dromaeosauridae family have proved to be very popular with young dinosaur fans.  Models of Utahraptor have been made and there were even Utahraptor soft toys produced.

A case of prehistoric plush!

To view the range of dinosaur and prehistoric animal soft toys (prehistoric plush) available from Everything Dinosaur’s award-winning website: Dinosaur and Prehistoric Animal Soft Toys.

4 02, 2010

Darwin on the “Imperfection of the Geological Record”

By |2023-03-04T15:07:33+00:00February 4th, 2010|Famous Figures, Main Page, Palaeontological articles|0 Comments

Darwin’s Comments on the Geological Record

For Darwin, at the time of writing his ground-breaking study into evolution – “The Origin of Species”, palaeontology and geology were relatively new sciences.  Amongst the educated elite of Great Britain in the Georgian era, there were to our modern minds some very peculiar ideas.  For example, it was widely believed that Europeans were a separate species to those natives of places such as North America and the Pacific.  Women were considered intellectually inferior to men and they were not permitted to hold certain positions in society or to study at certain universities, or indeed enter a number of academic professions.  These ideas persisted into the Victorian era (indeed, some may say that they have persisted for much longer).

Darwin

It is against this background and a backdrop of a general lack of understanding concerning natural selection and evolution that Darwin attempted to argue his case for a tree of life and an all embracing single theory that could explain the great diversity of life on Earth.

Aware of the difficulties that he would encounter when attempting to convince his readers about the merits of his theory, Darwin, naturally provides extensive evidence in support of his point of view in his book.  However, he also sets out to counter the arguments that he anticipated would be put forward against his hypothesis.  Darwin was aware that his theory centred around the belief that specific forms are distinct from each other but descended from a common ancestor.

Between two specific organisms that share a common ancestor there must have been innumerable transitional links that eventually resulted in the species seen in his day.  He put forward a number of proposals as to why extant transitional forms were extremely rare, the very fact that that subsequent generations would out compete and eradicate their parent generations was one of his main points here.  However, he knew that the lack of transitional extinct forms found in the fossil record would also be used as an argument to counter the thrust of his theory.

The Imperfections of the Fossil Record

Darwin dedicates two of the fourteen chapters in his third edition to explaining why transitional forms are not found in plentiful numbers in the fossil record, some sixty pages in total.  Palaeontology and geology were very much nascent sciences, Darwin comments on the intermittent nature of the geological record and refers to the paucity of the fossil record.  He puts forward a number of points to explain why fossils are so rare and comments on the need for certain geological conditions to be present before fossilisation can occur.  To him the imperfections found in the then known geological record were no barrier to his theory on natural selection.

The “Origin of Species”, or to give this book its full title; “The Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection or the Preservation of Favoured Races in the Struggle for Life”, was first published in 1859.  The first complete fossilised skeleton of Archaeopteryx was found in 1861.  A perceived weakness in Darwin’s theory was the lack of intermediate creatures preserved in the fossil record.  If animals and plants had been changing from one form to another over vast amounts of time, the process of evolution, then some evidence should be found in palaeontological collections.

Here was a bird with Dinosaurian features, Darwin had predicted that such forms would be found and this was seen by evolutionists as clear support from the geological record for Darwin’s point of view.

Visit Everything Dinosaur’s website: Everything Dinosaur.

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