While in no way belittling those who study dinosaurs, it feels as though anytime a science documentary series is not quite sure what to do their next episode about dinosaurs are trotted out. Dinosaurs are the "go to" animals. People love them – they terrify, they awe, and for some reason, they inspire. Though they've been extinct for millions, there seems to always be something new and different happening in the world of dinosaurs. This week, Nova trots out dinosaurs in their latest episode, the aptly titled "The Four-Winged Dinosaur."
The episode follows the discovery and discussion surrounding a discovery of Xu Xing, a Chinese paleontologist who, upon receiving a fossil of a four-winged dinosaur recognized it as such (no one before him had seen, or perhaps recognized, such a creature). Xu Xing named the creature a Microraptor.
No sooner had Xu Xing named the creature and written up a paper about it than alternate theories began to emerge. Where Xu Xing placed the Microraptor in one family and felt that it proved beyond a shadow
of a doubt that dinosaurs evolved into birds, others disagreed. Where Xu Xing pointed out how he imagined the bones to connect to one another, others disagreed, sure that leg bones plugged into sockets in a wholly different fashion.
This week's Nova is fascinating precisely because it illuminates the vast array of opinions that scientists can have looking at the exact same material. Nova actually has the scientists trade models with one-another and even with 3-D versions of the Microraptor the scientists cannot agree on how the pieces fit together.
What all the scientists do agree on, mostly because the fossil record is irrefutable, is that the Microraptor (as well as its larger raptor cousins) had feathers and not the type of skin they were depicted with in Steven Spielberg's Jurassic Park. The documentary actually uses Jurassic Park to great effect, explaining how raptors entered the public c
onsciousness via the film, and how perception was affected by the movie.








Article comments
1 - Josh Lasser
Congratulations! This article has been selected for syndication to Advance.net, which is affiliated with newspapers around the United States.