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#inkayacu #pellornis #archaeopteryx #beipiaosaurus #birds #caudipteryx #coloration #dinosaurs #feathers #microraptor #sinosauropteryx #anchiornis #eoconfuciusornis #feathereddinosaurs #caihong #protopteryx #messelornis #iteravis #eocypselus #changzuiornis #calciavis #borealopelta #scaniacypselus #eocoracias #primotrogon
Published: 2016-06-04 18:35:11 +0000 UTC; Views: 26886; Favourites: 326; Downloads: 87
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With the increasing number of studies on the emerging field of fossil color, a guide to our current tally of fossil dinosaurs with known coloration is likely of interest. With the exception of Borealopelta, this guide only includes colors inferred from direct examination of preserved melanosomes, thus color patterns on Archaeopteryx (Manning et al., 2013) and Confuciusornis (Wogelius et al., 2011) inferred from distribution of trace metals (a method criticized by Vinther, 2015) were excluded. This guide also excludes very recent feather fossils in which the original colors are still discernible without melanosome analysis, such as those of Apteribis (Dove and Olson, 2011) and moa (Rawlence et al., 2009). Color patterns in some fossil dinosaurs have also been suggested based on changes in scale morphology observed in skin impressions (e.g., Bell, 2012), but were excluded on the grounds that the colors themselves cannot be inferred. Preserved coloration in amber-trapped specimens has been reported (e.g., Xing et al., 2016), but are currently not included here as it is uncertain how much these colors have been taphonomically altered. This guide also does not include inferred eggshell coloration (Wiemann et al., 2017; Wiemann et al., 2018). For a more comprehensive list that includes all proposed evidence for coloration in prehistoric animals, see this list by Zhejiangopterus .The dinosaurs are not to scale. Coloration is restricted to body regions that have been sampled for melanosomes.
Anchiornis (coloration inferred by Li et al., 2010)
Body feathers were black and/or dark gray. Wing and hindlimb feathers were black and white. Feathers on the top of the head (possibly forming a crest) were reddish brown. Flecks of reddish brown were also present on the face. Coloration of tail feathers unknown, as the specimen examined did not preserve a tail.
Inkayacu (coloration inferred by Clarke et al., 2010)
Secondary wing feathers and an isolated body feather were brown, whereas preserved covert and tertiary wing feathers were gray.
Archaeopteryx (coloration inferred by Carney et al., 2012 and Carney et al., 2020)
The isolated holotype feather (possibly a covert wing feather) was black. Note that Kaye et al. (2019) questioned the referral of this feather to Archaeopteryx, though their arguments were disputed by Carney et al. (2020).
Microraptor (coloration inferred by Li et al., 2012)
Feathers sampled across the body were iridescent. Their exact hue is unknown, but the most conservative possibility is that they were glossy black.
Eocypselus (coloration inferred by Ksepka et al., 2013)
Feathers on the top of the head (possibly forming a crest) were glossy black. Melanosomes were also found in the wing feathers, but have not been interpreted as representing any particular color.
Caudipteryx (coloration inferred by Li et al., 2014)
Feathers sampled across the body were black. Tail feathers preserve a visible banding pattern.
Messelornis (coloration inferred by Colleary et al., 2015)
The paper is unclear about exactly where the sample was taken, but appears to have been a wing feather based on their figured photo of the specimen. The feather was iridescent. No exact hue was suggested, but I've given the primary wing feathers the same conservative coloration as inferred for Microraptor.
Pellornis (coloration inferred by Colleary et al., 2015)
A tail feather was brown. This specimen was not identified to species level by Colleary et al., but was later assigned to Pellornis by Musser et al. (2019).
Changzuiornis (coloration inferred by Huang et al., 2016)
Preserved wing and tail (or leg?) feathers were black.
CUGB P1202 (coloration inferred by Peteya et al., 2017)
An unnamed enantiornithean. Feathers from the nape, head, and body were iridescent. Their exact hue is unknown, but I've given them the same conservative coloration as inferred for Microraptor. Melanosomes were also found in a wing feather, but had degraded too much to determine what colors they might have produced.
Eoconfuciusornis (coloration inferred by Zheng et al., 2017 and Pan et al., 2022)
Feathers making up the wing coverts, nape, and tail were black. A dark spotted pattern is visible on the secondary wing feathers. Feathers on the hindlimb and top of the head were gray. Feathers on the throat were brown. A subsequent study also found evidence for iridescence on the top of the head. The specimen examined may have been a female, as evidenced by the putative presence of preserved ovaries.
Caihong (coloration inferred by Hu et al., 2018)
Feathers on the tail, wings, and hindlimbs were mostly black. A few isolated samples were inferred to be brown, including small patches on the wings, head, chest, and the tips of the feathers at the end of the tail. Feathers on the head, neck, chest, base of the tail, leading edges of the wings, and the front of the hindlimbs were mostly iridescent. The exact hue of iridescence is unknown, but I have colored it differently from "basic" iridescence (e.g., in Microraptor) to reflect the more specialized melanosome morphology of the iridescent feathers in Caihong. However, please note that the morphology of iridescence-producing melanosomes has not been correlated with the production of specific colors.
Iteravis (coloration inferred by Wang et al., 2018)
Feathers on the chest and wing were black.
Primotrogon (coloration inferred by Nordén et al., 2019)
Wing feathers were mostly gray, but one sample taken near the wrist was iridescent. Take note: the authors point out that the gray feathers could potentially represent down (the preservation of the examined specimen isn't sufficient to allow identification of individual feathers), in which case they probably wouldn't have been so visible in life.
Scaniacypselus (coloration inferred by Nordén et al., 2019)
Feathers near the neck, base of the wings, and wrist were gray. One sample taken from the leading edge of the wing was brown. As with Primotrogon, the authors caution that the gray feathers could potentially represent down.
Eocoracias (coloration inferred by Babarović et al., 2019)
Feathers on the tail, rump, and part of the nape were black. Those on the belly, chest, back, throat, and back of the head were inferred to be structurally colored (but not iridescent). Two samples were also taken from the wing feathers but failed to recover melanosomes. The authors note that they were unable to distinguish melanosomes involved in producing non-iridescent structural colors from those that produce gray based on morphology alone; thus, non-iridescent structural coloration can only be confidently inferred through phylogenetic bracketing, as in this case.
Calciavis (coloration inferred by Eliason and Clarke, 2020)
Feathers on the head, tail, and primary wing feathers were iridescent, possibly glossy black. Another sample taken from the wing feathers was black; this may represent the primaries or primary coverts. Due to the disarticulated nature of the specimens studied, there is some uncertainty about the position of the sampled feathers in general.
Protopteryx (coloration inferred by O'Connor et al., 2020)
The tip of a primary wing feather was black.
Yuanchuavis (coloration inferred by Wang et al., 2021)
The elongated central pair of tail feathers was black, whereas shorter tail feathers were gray.
Wulong (coloration inferred by Croudace et al., 2023)
Feathers on the hindlimbs and wings were iridescent, whereas those on the hips and an uncertain region of the forelimb were gray. A sample that may represent feathers from either the underside or the forelimb exhibited a range of different melanosome types that might indicate a mixture of colors from gray to iridescence to possibly brown. Samples were also taken from the tail feathers and near the head but failed to recover melanosomes.
Li et al. (2014) argued based on examination of melanosomes in modern animals that direct inference of colors from melanosome morphology is only reliable for pennaraptors and (to a lesser degree) mammals. As a result, coloration inferred for the following taxa may be less secure.
Sinosauropteryx (coloration inferred by Zhang et al., 2010 and Smithwick et al., 2017)
Feathers sampled from the tail were reddish brown. Though no other samples were examined, a banding pattern is preserved along the tail and likely reflects distribution of melanosomes. More detailed examination of preserved feather distribution across several specimens suggests a countershaded pattern on the body and a "bandit mask" on the face.
Beipiaosaurus (coloration inferred by Li et al., 2014)
Feathers sampled from the neck were brown.
Psittacosaurus (coloration inferred by Vinther et al., 2016)
Scales sampled across the body were likely brown. Variation in the density of pigmentation is suggestive of a countershaded body pattern with darker dorsal coloration and a lighter underside. The face, ankle, ischial region, cloacal region, and some large scales on the shoulder were particularly heavily pigmented. Vinther et al. were able to document these variations in staggering detail, much more than is easily summarized here, so those interested in finding out more are highly encouraged to consult the original paper.
Borealopelta (coloration inferred by Brown et al., 2017)
No preserved melanosomes were found, but chemical signatures suggest high concentrations of pheomelanin, which produce reddish brown coloration. According to Jakob Vinther (one of the authors on the study), the sacral shield was the main region directly examined for melanin samples, but broad-scale methods of investigation such as fluorescence imaging suggest that coloration was consistent across most of the dorsal surface of the body, with lighter coloration on the shoulder spine. Consistent lack of melanin preserved on the ventral surface suggests a countershaded pattern.
Preserved melanosomes have also been found in the feathers of Confuciusornis, Sinornithosaurus, Pedopenna, Yixianosaurus, Gansus, Yi, Cruralispennia, and Ambopteryx, as well as in the scales of a hadrosaur specimen, but have not yet been interpreted as representing particular colors.* In addition, visible color patterns have been identified in the preserved plumage of Hassiavis, Plesiocathartes, Messelirrisor, Cratoavis, and Confuciusornis.
*Roy et al. (2020) claim otherwise regarding Confuciusornis and Sinornithosaurus, citing Zheng's The Origin of Birds and Li et al. (2018) for the former and Zhang et al. (2010) for the latter. I have not been able to find a copy of The Origin of Birds, but it appears to be a popular, non-peer-reviewed book and is thus disregarded here, whereas Li et al. (2018) state that colors cannot be confidently reconstructed for the Confuciusornis specimen they examined due to its preservational state. As far as I can tell, Zhang et al. (2010) only report that Sinornithosaurus preserves evidence of "significantly different colour tones" across its plumage but do not attempt to infer what those colors would have been.
I recommend Vinther (2015), Roy et al. (2020), and Vinther (2020) as reviews of our current understanding of fossil color. Unsurprisingly for a newly-developed field of research, much uncertainty remains. Can we infer the coloration of all fossil melanosomes with equal confidence (as discussed by Li et al., 2014)? Melanosomes are not the only way to color integument; can we find evidence of other types of pigmentation in fossils and use them to inform life restorations (e.g., McNamara et al., 2016)? How well can we account for taphonomic distortion of melanosomes (e.g., McNamara et al., 2013)? There is much work to be done.
Thanks to Jakob Vinther for suggestions that improved this guide! This graphic was cited in Roy et al. (2023).
Bibliography
- Babarović, F., M.N. Puttick, M. Zaher, E. Learmonth, E.-J. Gallimore, F.M. Smithwick, G. Mayr, and J. Vinther. 2019. Characterization of melanosomes involved in the production of non-iridescent structural feather colours and their detection in the fossil record. Journal of the Royal Society Interface 16: 20180921. doi: 10.1098/rsif.2018.0921
- Bell, P.R. 2012. Standardized terminology and potential taxonomic utility for hadrosaurid skin impressions: a case study for Saurolophus from Canada and Mongolia. PLoS ONE 7: e31295. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0031295
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Related content
Comments: 115
Atlantis536 In reply to ??? [2017-08-04 01:51:06 +0000 UTC]
It was just named yesterday. It's called Borealopelta markmitchelli.
👍: 0 ⏩: 1
Atlantis536 In reply to ??? [2017-03-14 10:31:10 +0000 UTC]
He have melanosomes for Ornithomimus? Besides Anchirnis, Microraptor and Archaeopteryx, it might be the next famous dinosaur with known colors.
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Albertonykus In reply to Atlantis536 [2017-03-14 11:40:03 +0000 UTC]
Yes, from the specimen described in van der Reest et al. (2016) . Though rereading the paper now, it actually doesn't mention the melanosomes; I must have remembered them from van der Reest's 2015 SVP talk.
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Atlantis536 In reply to Atlantis536 [2017-06-20 05:55:18 +0000 UTC]
It was in our discussion about a Wikipedia page that (used) to have a non-illustrated version of this list here, but now I can't find that conversation.
👍: 0 ⏩: 1
Albertonykus In reply to Atlantis536 [2017-06-15 16:31:20 +0000 UTC]
I haven't linked to the list here, have I?
👍: 0 ⏩: 0
Dinosaurzzz [2017-02-19 13:55:14 +0000 UTC]
What species of Caudipteryx was inferred to be mainly black?
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Atlantis536 In reply to ??? [2017-01-27 05:14:16 +0000 UTC]
Psittaco is beautiful (even if only the belly is colored)
👍: 0 ⏩: 0
105697 In reply to ??? [2017-01-17 05:02:59 +0000 UTC]
Huh, I thought we had more of the colors in Psittaco preserved.
👍: 0 ⏩: 1
Albertonykus In reply to 105697 [2017-01-17 12:07:57 +0000 UTC]
The specimen is preserved on its back, so most of the analysis had to be done on its underside and limbs. A lateral view is likely not the optimal way to depict the results (though it does show the countershading, at least).
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JustaRandomGourgeist In reply to ??? [2017-01-17 00:33:28 +0000 UTC]
I love how pretty much almost all colors we know of in dinosaurs are either black or brown.
👍: 0 ⏩: 1
Albertonykus In reply to JustaRandomGourgeist [2017-01-17 01:17:05 +0000 UTC]
Yep, colors easily achievable using melanin. In some cases (such as the iridescent ones), melanin may have been combined with different methods of producing color to create other hues, but that's impossible to interpret from fossils at present.
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Julio-Lacerda [2017-01-17 00:16:12 +0000 UTC]
I've always been curious about the function of the patagium found is Psittacosaurus. Is it really not some kind of preservational artifact? What was it used for? Should we extrapolate that for other ornitischians?
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Albertonykus In reply to Julio-Lacerda [2017-01-17 01:06:48 +0000 UTC]
It's a good question. The authors of the new study certainly think it's real, but with such a small sample size there is no reliable way of determining how widespread it was among ornithischians. Function, too, is currently a mystery.
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Atlantis536 In reply to ??? [2016-12-23 11:30:28 +0000 UTC]
Eoconfuciusornis: www.sci-news.com/paleontology/…
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Albertonykus In reply to Atlantis536 [2016-12-23 11:53:00 +0000 UTC]
An interesting study, but they only report that they found melanosomes instead of trying to interpret them as producing any specific color. In any case, that paper was published after I drew this.
👍: 0 ⏩: 1
Atlantis536 In reply to Albertonykus [2016-12-23 23:53:43 +0000 UTC]
Well, therer was a picture attached to the post with brown and yellow body and wing feathers, and bright green tail feathers.
👍: 0 ⏩: 1
Albertonykus In reply to Atlantis536 [2016-12-24 01:45:35 +0000 UTC]
That picture was made before the study. It was likely used by the article because it was a publicly available illustration of Eoconfuciusornis, not because it was based on the results of this particular paper.
👍: 0 ⏩: 0
Corallianassa In reply to ??? [2016-12-12 19:42:14 +0000 UTC]
So much blacks.
Do you think black pigments have a preservational bias compared to colourful ones?
Judging by this they might have.
👍: 0 ⏩: 1
Albertonykus In reply to Corallianassa [2016-12-12 23:35:05 +0000 UTC]
There may be a bias towards melanosomes, which are often used to produce black. Melanosomes are the most common method of pigmentation in birds and mammals, so we would expect them to be common in the fossil record. However, it is still unknown whether other types of pigmentation (such as carotenoids) can be fossilized or not.
Additionally, other vertebrates more frequently use other methods of producing coloration in conjunction with melanosomes, which is why some paleontologists caution against using melanosomes alone to infer the colors of creatures such as ichthyosaurs and mosasaurs.
👍: 0 ⏩: 1
Atlantis536 In reply to ??? [2016-11-24 00:08:39 +0000 UTC]
Where did you get the black Caudipteryx from?
👍: 0 ⏩: 1
Albertonykus In reply to Atlantis536 [2016-11-24 00:23:14 +0000 UTC]
Perhaps reading the description would help. I didn't type up that bibliography for no reason.
"(coloration inferred by Li et al., 2014)"
Mind you, the part where they infer it as black is buried in the supplementary info, so you'll have to dig a bit to find it.
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Nuclearzeon2 In reply to ??? [2016-11-05 18:23:45 +0000 UTC]
I wanna know what color Yutyrannus was.
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Wyatt-Andrews-Art [2016-11-05 18:18:15 +0000 UTC]
I love how everyone's all: OMG WE NOW KNOW WHAT ARKEIPTERX LOOKED LIKE! Despite us having a sample the size of french fry.
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Atlantis536 [2016-10-16 01:53:28 +0000 UTC]
Conserning the last sentence: I saw a video on YouTube that says Confuciusornis had the colors of a zebra finch, SInornithosaurus was red, orange, yellow and brown, and Yi was black on the skin and red on the wing membranes.
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Albertonykus In reply to Atlantis536 [2016-10-16 13:24:33 +0000 UTC]
Those sound like they are based on the presence of pheomelanosomes and eumelanosomes reported in those taxa. Though reasonable inferences, no one has yet quantifiably analyzed the density and dimensions of those melanosomes to draw firm conclusions about color, as has been done for Anchiornis, Inkayacu, and others. (Only one melanosome, for instance, was found in the membranes of Yi out of the three samples they took from it; I doubt the wings would have been a very rich red with such low melanosome density.)
Additionally, the reason Confuciusornis is frequently compared to a zebra finch is because the team that examined its melanosomes discovered that it possessed the same types of melanosomes as a zebra finch, but this does not mean the colors were arranged across its plumage in exactly the same way.
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Atlantis536 In reply to Albertonykus [2016-10-17 23:52:10 +0000 UTC]
Of course, I didn't say that Confuciusornis had the exact same patters as a zebra finch, I'm just saying it has the colors that are present of the finch.
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Albertonykus In reply to Atlantis536 [2016-10-18 11:00:24 +0000 UTC]
Fair enough. However, we only know that the melanosomes themselves were similar, not the exact colors they would have displayed or distribution across the body, thus I did not include it here.
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JustaRandomGourgeist In reply to ??? [2016-09-17 22:06:04 +0000 UTC]
You can add Psicattosaurus onto the list
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Albertonykus In reply to JustaRandomGourgeist [2016-09-18 03:44:11 +0000 UTC]
I will whenever I update this!
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Albertonykus In reply to Ursumeles [2016-08-12 15:12:50 +0000 UTC]
Glad you found it useful!
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Albertonykus In reply to TheDubstepAddict [2016-07-19 20:57:15 +0000 UTC]
One of its feathers might have been. A subsequent study tried to figure out the rest of its colors based on the presence of trace metals in a specimen, but the validity of that method has been questioned.
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Inmyarmsinmyarms [2016-06-14 14:06:35 +0000 UTC]
Add Palaeochiropteryx to the list. And an extinct snake
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Albertonykus In reply to Inmyarmsinmyarms [2016-07-17 03:02:58 +0000 UTC]
Additionally, Hassianycteris was suggested to have been brown in the same paper that examined the colors of Palaeochiropteryx (and Messelornis). The snake is something of a controversial example , but would be very exciting if correct.
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Gojira5000 [2016-06-08 20:15:09 +0000 UTC]
Remember when we said it was impossible to find out what colors dinosaurs were in life?
Boy, that got proven wrong.
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KirbyniferousRegret In reply to ??? [2016-06-06 14:59:25 +0000 UTC]
Nice reference! But what about sinornithosarus? I heard melanosomes were found in it is as well.
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Albertonykus In reply to KirbyniferousRegret [2016-06-06 16:01:37 +0000 UTC]
Yep, I mention it in the description. Even though melanosomes have been identified in Sinornithosaurus, no one has yet analyzed them to find out exactly what colors they would have produced.
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KirbyniferousRegret In reply to Albertonykus [2016-06-06 18:07:40 +0000 UTC]
Whoops, sorry I missed it. Thank you!
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RickRaptor105 In reply to ??? [2016-06-05 00:01:36 +0000 UTC]
Oh my god I didn´t know about the black Caudipteryx.
And seeing how little of Inkayacu´s colour is actually known really puts things in perspective.
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