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Albertonykus β€” Why Birds are Dinosaurs

Published: 2011-01-16 05:59:07 +0000 UTC; Views: 8934; Favourites: 47; Downloads: 224
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Description On Internet discussions, I often use text and cladograms to explain why birds are dinosaurs. But people often end up completely ignoring them and bringing up completely unrelated topics. Either that, or they don't even understand what I'm saying and aren't willing to confess they don't. So I put together this handy Venn diagram that is, I hope, easier to comprehend.

As we see, birds are nested inside dinosaurs, not a branch lying outside. And that's all there is to it. It's that simple.

What really baffles me is that a lot of these people aren't BAND supporters (which is, by the way, an equally ridiculous position to take) but accept that birds are of dinosaurian origin. And they often come up with completely ridiculous "arguments" to support their idea, none of which hold any water. I suppose that only shows they learn the fact but don't understand the implications.

For example, they often get confused between two clades being "related" to each other and one being "inclusive" of the other. Deinonychosaurs and avians are related to each other. They share a common ancestor but don't include each other. If you examined a deinonychosaur and an avian carefully enough, you'd probably be able to find features that distinguish the deinonychosaur from the avian. (But you'd have to look very carefully! After all, several basal deinonychosaurs were once thought to be basal avialians!) But maniraptors and deinonychosaurs have a different relationship. Maniraptors include deinonychosaurs. You can distinguish deinonychosaurs from other maniraptor clades (such as oviraptorosaurs) but it'd be impossible to distinguish between "deinonychosaurs" and "maniraptors". All maniraptors besides deinonychosaurs don't share any characteristics that deinonychosaurs themselves don't also share. This applies to birds being dinosaurs in the same way. You could distinguish birds from sauropods or ceratopsians or even oviraptorosaurs, but you won't be able to find any features that all non-bird dinosaurs share but birds do not. You can tell a dog and a cat apart, but that doesn't mean they're not both mammals. Telling "dinosaurs" and "birds" apart is as ridiculous as telling "amphibians" and "frogs" apart. It's physically and logically impossible. But can you tell "frogs" and "salamanders" apart? Certainly.

Related to the above, there's never a point where an animal stops being the member of a clade its ancestors were in. It is by definition impossible. It is impossible by evolutionary law. It doesn't even make sense logically. Microraptor zhaoianus looked a lot more like Jeholornis prima that it did to Triceratops horridus, but people who argue birds aren't dinosaurs would rather put Microraptor zhaoianus and Triceratops horridus in the same "group" and leave Jeholornis prima out. I'm completely in the dark as to how anyone could come to such a conclusion.

It doesn't matter that birds don't look like the earliest dinosaurs. Nor did sauropods or ceratopsians, but no one doubts that they are dinosaurs. I'd argue that birds look more like early dinosaurs than did sauropods and ceratopsians! Besides, the earliest vertebrates looked nothing like trout or frogs or cats, but no one doubts those animals are vertebrates.

Most other dinosaurs being extinct means nothing. There are many extinct mammal lineages, but no one doubts that there are still living things that are mammals today. There are a lot of extinct bird lineages, but no one doubts there are still living things that are birds today.

Also, birds being dinosaurs doesn't mean they stop being birds. A dog can be a canid, a carnivoran, a mammal, an amniote, a tetrapod, a vertebrate, an animal, a eukaryote, etc. "Dinosaur" simply encompasses a far larger group than just "avian".

The strangest argument is the argument from common usage. So the argument goes, no one says, "I see a dinosaur in the garden" when they're looking at a robin, so the robin is not a dinosaur. For starters, since when did common usage affect scientific terminology? A lot of people say, "'Pterodactyls' are flying dinosaurs", but does that make pterosaurs dinosaurs? No! If I saw a robin in my garden I'd most likely say, "There's a robin in my garden" instead of "There's a turdid passerine neoavian neognath neornithine ornithurine ornithothoracine pygostylian avialian eumaniraptor paravian aviremigian maniraptor maniraptoriform tyrannoraptor coelurosaur avetheropod tetanuran averostran neotheropod theropod eusaurischian saurischian dinosaurian dinosauriform dinosauromorph ornithodiran avemetatarsalian archosaurian archosauriform archosauromorph saurian diapsid sauropsid amniote cotylosaurian reptilomorph tetrapod tetrapodomorph stegocephalian sarcopterygian osteichthyan eugnathostome gnathostome vertebrate craniate euchordate chordate deuterostome bilaterian animal opisthokont unikont eukaryote organism in my garden", but that doesn't mean robins don't belong to any of those clades. Common usage is used only informally and is nothing more than a convenience. It has absolutely no bearing on the relationships between living things.

There isn't the slightest difference between saying that a sparrow is a dinosaur and that a dog is a mammal. Saying the birds aren't dinosaurs makes about as much sense as saying bats aren't mammals or ants aren't insects, that is, none at all. If you can accept that dogs and bats are mammals and ants are insects, there's no reason not to accept birds are dinosaurs.

Here's a good video that talks about the point I'm making here, this time applied to humans being monkeys. (Warning: some way into the video it discusses characteristics all monkeys share, and one of the photographs is of a monkey with a visible penis. It's only there for a few seconds, but if you're sensitive to that kind of thing...)
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Comments: 106

amadeus1928 [2020-07-29 02:33:55 +0000 UTC]

Hey. I literally have birds, and the more I look at them the more they look like tiny dinosaurs without tails. Like have you ever seen their feet? Also, go look up photos of baby birds, around the time when their down first appears.

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Albertonykus In reply to amadeus1928 [2020-07-29 14:23:17 +0000 UTC]

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amadeus1928 In reply to Albertonykus [2020-07-29 21:02:02 +0000 UTC]

If you look up an ostrich skeleton it literally looks like a dinosaur but without a tail and arms

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12monkehs [2018-11-12 18:13:19 +0000 UTC]

β€œHumans are not apes but descended from apes”

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SpongeBobFossilPants [2015-08-29 16:07:29 +0000 UTC]

What would you know? You're just a homininan hominin hominine hominid hominoid catarrhin simiiform haplorrhin primate primatomorph archontan euarchontoglire boreoeutherian epitherian placental eutherian therian tribosphenidan zatherian cladotherian theriiform holotherian mammalian mammaliaform prozostrodont chiniquodontoid probainognath eucynodont epicynodont cynodont eutheriodont theriodont neotherapsid eutherapsid therapsid sphenacodontoid sphenacodont eupelycosaur synapsid amniote cotylosaurian reptilomorph tetrapod tetrapodomorph stegocephalian sarcopterygian osteichthyan eugnathostome gnathostome vertebrate craniate euchordate chordate deuterostome bilaterian animal opisthokont unikont eukaryote organism.

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Albertonykus In reply to SpongeBobFossilPants [2015-08-29 16:46:17 +0000 UTC]

Impressive.

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SpongeBobFossilPants [2015-08-12 15:48:36 +0000 UTC]

Is it just me, or are more & more people saying "if birds are reptiles, then mammals are reptiles too"?

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Albertonykus In reply to SpongeBobFossilPants [2015-08-13 06:00:52 +0000 UTC]

I have seen that canard many times. It is the result of conflating the traditional usage of "reptile" and the phylogeny-based definition(s).

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SpongeBobFossilPants [2015-06-09 23:30:35 +0000 UTC]

Guess where I shared this : fstdt.com/QuoteComment.aspx?QI…

BTW, did you have a "favorite" from that thread?

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Albertonykus In reply to SpongeBobFossilPants [2015-06-10 01:42:30 +0000 UTC]

Too much fail to decide!

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SpongeBobFossilPants [2014-08-29 11:48:38 +0000 UTC]

Are you sure that birds are dinosaurs? Was there not a previously extinct fish that was caught, proving it was the oldest one?

The above was a satire ofΒ web.archive.org/web/2011112812… , which you've seen.

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Albertonykus In reply to SpongeBobFossilPants [2014-08-29 13:40:11 +0000 UTC]

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frapt [2014-02-13 02:55:24 +0000 UTC]

Thank God PBS is teaching kids this. Never mind Dinosaur Train, the Wild Kratts episode "Raptor Roundup" claimedΒ dinosaurs are still alive today as birds.

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Albertonykus In reply to frapt [2014-02-13 04:24:21 +0000 UTC]

That's excellent. I still need to watch that episode...

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TouhouPoorCuteKids [2013-12-23 17:56:45 +0000 UTC]

Flagged as Spam

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Albertonykus In reply to TouhouPoorCuteKids [2013-12-25 04:59:09 +0000 UTC]

Troublesome, and has been for a while. Let's hope the situation will gradually improve in the future.

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TouhouPoorCuteKids In reply to Albertonykus [2013-12-25 08:32:16 +0000 UTC]

Flagged as Spam

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Albertonykus In reply to TouhouPoorCuteKids [2013-12-25 09:48:54 +0000 UTC]

First of all, not all feathered fossils come from China. More central to the point, hoaxes (especially ones as extreme as you appear to describe) almost never make it into the primary literature, and those that do are inevitably found out by subsequent examination. In addition, most of these fossil "hoaxes" are combined fossils from multiple specimens or have artificially embellished features; the feathers themselves are not faked . Lastly, even in the unlikely event that all feathered dinosaur fossils were fake, that would not invalidate the remaining mountain of evidence that birds are dinosaurs.

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TouhouPoorCuteKids In reply to Albertonykus [2013-12-25 10:03:42 +0000 UTC]

Flagged as Spam

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Albertonykus In reply to TouhouPoorCuteKids [2013-12-25 10:12:28 +0000 UTC]

I'm afraid I do not understand what you are trying to say at all.

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TouhouPoorCuteKids In reply to Albertonykus [2013-12-25 10:20:07 +0000 UTC]

Flagged as Spam

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Albertonykus In reply to TouhouPoorCuteKids [2013-12-25 12:50:31 +0000 UTC]

I do not. Apologies.

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yoult In reply to TouhouPoorCuteKids [2013-12-24 17:09:58 +0000 UTC]

Wait... does that mean Kantaky fired Chicken?

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TouhouPoorCuteKids In reply to yoult [2013-12-24 20:59:08 +0000 UTC]

Flagged as Spam

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yoult In reply to TouhouPoorCuteKids [2013-12-25 17:39:53 +0000 UTC]

Nope, I can't watch videos in China, they're blocked.

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SpongeBobFossilPants [2013-08-12 15:49:15 +0000 UTC]

Fun fact: for want of a better place to post this; Mickey Mortimer said on the DML a few years ago (Β dml.cmnh.org/2008Mar/msg00195.… ) that paravians outside Dinosauria was less likely than the traditional Carnosauria.

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Hybodus [2013-03-28 20:26:07 +0000 UTC]

Thanks, for this. I think this is quite informative. I did know this already but I think this will help others to understand.

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Naiadme2 [2013-02-21 02:02:42 +0000 UTC]

You have too much science, bro. Chillax.

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Gojira5000 In reply to Naiadme2 [2013-02-21 02:37:12 +0000 UTC]

IMPOSSIBRU, man.

IT IZ IMPOSSIBRU TO HAZ TOO MUCH SCIENCE.

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Naiadme2 In reply to Gojira5000 [2013-02-22 23:50:00 +0000 UTC]

But I have science class! with geology! I DONT NEED THIS!

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DOTB18 [2013-01-27 19:27:55 +0000 UTC]

You've just given me the perfect method to demonstate to David Peters that his understanding of reptile phylogeny is completely wrong. Thank you.

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Albertonykus In reply to DOTB18 [2013-01-27 19:38:45 +0000 UTC]

You're welcome, but good luck with that.

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Phil-Boswell [2012-12-16 22:02:59 +0000 UTC]

This is such an interesting diagram: I would love to see more layers on the outside of this, including for example crocodiles and other reptiles, extinct and not.

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Albertonykus In reply to Phil-Boswell [2012-12-16 22:43:27 +0000 UTC]

Thanks! I've run out of space on the page I drew this on, but as multiple people have asked for something like that I might draw a new one that includes all that info.

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pie-lord [2012-11-28 09:27:12 +0000 UTC]

im sorry but i just can't say birds are dinosaurs i agree they have relations to dinosaurs but they are their own species like reptiles can also be relations to dinosaurs but they are their own species.

altho i have heard worse one guy thinks dinosaurs are related to dragons and that the bird and modern reptile theory is wrong.

anyway im not gunna hate bash you for your opinion and i hope you dont bash me for mine im just telling you how i feel.

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Albertonykus In reply to pie-lord [2012-11-28 12:49:22 +0000 UTC]

Opinion doesn't matter here, I'm afraid. Birds being dinosaurs is good as established fact. As I've explained here, "related to" is the wrong term for describing the relationship between birds and dinosaurs. It's true that birds are related to other types of dinosaurs, but they're not related to dinosaurs in the sense that they are a discrete group outside of Dinosauria; they're simply a branch of dinosaurs themselves. Similarly, dinosaurs are not "related to" reptiles as two distinct entities, but are a type of reptiles themselves. Incidentally, "bird" and "reptile" encompass thousands of species; they don't describe just one.

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pie-lord In reply to Albertonykus [2012-11-28 13:58:54 +0000 UTC]

anyways i dont wanna argue with you i just realised how out of hand this could get real easy cos we are not going to change our minds so how about we agree to disagree and both just love dinosaurs and their world in our own way eh?

and sorry for bein a smart ass with the opening line to my reply but i just took a grump because your remark about opinions not mattering pissed me off because i didnt say your opinion was false and threw facts in your face.

anyways thats it i wave a white flag to you and bow out of this but feel free to throw any dino related vids my way im open to a good doco or two :3

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Gojira5000 In reply to pie-lord [2012-11-28 17:15:53 +0000 UTC]

Oh yes, REAL mature of you to chicken out like this. "I DUN WANNA ARGUE WIT U!" screams stuck-up. I already featured your comment in a journal, so you can't delete your comment and protect yourself, either.

Also, it's called looking good. You seem to lack this. You need to capitalize and, most important of all, PUNCTUATE. It's hard on the brain to have to read something something like this, where all of the sentences are lacking in breaks for the eye and mind to process such information. This is why respected scientists and people with jobs often post their documents or posts with proper grammar, spelling and capatalization.

Also, for an artist of your level, you should at least try to type proper English instead of chatspeak. Tis no gd 4 artist, k?

I'm not trying to bash my opinion into you, before you use that, this is point-blank factual. I may be coming off as harsh, but you can't just bawl and say "BIRDS AND DINOSAURS ARE ONLY RELATIVES, THEY ARE SEPARATE!" without expecting to get called out on it. Alb's given you enough information, but this is from someone who has had enough of this. Also, blaming things on "oh, i wuz PO'd" isn't going to make anybody go "Aw, it's OK, you're right." It only serves to make you seem even more of a fool. I could rank you with wolfaboos, but that would be harsh.

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abekowalski In reply to Gojira5000 [2013-05-27 07:19:42 +0000 UTC]

Dude, you're being a complete asshat. The guy doesn't want to make an argument out of it, don't be a dick because he prefers pacifism.

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pie-lord In reply to Gojira5000 [2012-11-29 01:05:18 +0000 UTC]

No you were not harsh.

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SuperCJ In reply to Gojira5000 [2012-11-28 23:22:22 +0000 UTC]

He's not "chickening out" just because he doesn't want to argue. He said in his first comment that he was just stating his opinion and did not want to get wrapped up in a huge argument.

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pie-lord In reply to Albertonykus [2012-11-28 13:17:21 +0000 UTC]

well then techs wouldnt dinosaur's be fish since the original first land critter came from the ocean?

and humans are not related to monkies we are related to apes.
just cos somethin shares a family tree does not make it something else thats like wolves are not a chihuahua and a tabby cat is not lion and how mites share the same family as spiders but they are not spiders.

and it is a matter of opinion just because you and a scientist say because of their family history they are a dinosaur does not mean everyone else and every other scientist is going to say oh yes indeed.

my opinion is they are birds, i know they have dino roots just as dinosaurs have their roots in the sea but i am not going to say that a dinosaur is a fish just because its ancestor was a fish. there has to be a line where something evolves past just being its ancestor and becomes its own creature.

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Albertonykus In reply to pie-lord [2012-11-28 16:25:47 +0000 UTC]

"Fish" is just a term for any vertebrate that is not a tetrapod. While it could potentially be given a phylogenetic definition, such a group would be redundant because it already includes the same thing as the already established clade Vertebrata, and dinosaurs are considered vertebrates.

We are related to monkeys. We are also related to dogs, trout, cycads, and bacteria. All living things are related. Cats are not descended from lions and mites are not descended from spiders, so they aren't considered to be inclusive of one another. This is where it's appropriate to use the phrase "related to". Birds being dinosaurs is not analogous to such situations.

Again, it's not a matter of opinion. "Dinosaur" has a set definition that is agreed upon by researchers who study the subject and can be objectively evaluated to see whether something fits that definition or not. Also, it's not "me and a scientist" who is saying that birds are dinosaurs, it's essentially every dinosaur paleontologist in the world. It doesn't matter what "everyone else" thinks. They're the ones who define the terms.

Birds being dinosaurs doesn't mean they aren't birds anymore. They still are. Just like how bats are bats, but they are also still mammals. There is no such thing as a "line" that divides anything from a clade it arose from. That's why whales are still considered mammals even though they are now extremely different from the ancestral mammal, why sauropods are still considered dinosaurs even though they were extremely different from the ancestral dinosaur, why elephants are still considered eukaryotes even though they are extremely different from the ancestral eukaryote, and so on.

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pie-lord In reply to Albertonykus [2012-11-29 01:13:20 +0000 UTC]

Fair enough.

I know I have quite firmly lodged my foot in my mouth here and no matter how much I either kiss ass or fight or agree, I have already made a fail.

The best I can do here is accept your facts and leave.

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lollipop3455555555 In reply to pie-lord [2014-03-14 02:00:32 +0000 UTC]

That is a good idea, Sir.

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SpongeBobFossilPants [2012-04-21 13:10:57 +0000 UTC]

In the case of people like [link] & , you should put a bubble labeled "Crocodylomorpha"... A bubble that is very far away from Dinosauria.

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SuperCJ In reply to SpongeBobFossilPants [2012-11-28 23:58:43 +0000 UTC]

That link made me laugh at one of the comments left. It said a bunch of garbage in reply to a comment by crocodile basically explaining the workings of cladistics and the person completely ignored or misunderstood it and instead backed up a previous commenter who made a very eloquent but ignorant comment about how Neanderthals are the ancestors of modern humans.

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Albertonykus In reply to SpongeBobFossilPants [2012-04-21 13:20:42 +0000 UTC]

That would be a good idea if this didn't already take up the entire sketchbook page.

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SpongeBobFossilPants [2012-03-17 21:38:01 +0000 UTC]

Is Aves used to refer to the crown group here?

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Albertonykus In reply to SpongeBobFossilPants [2012-03-18 00:35:38 +0000 UTC]

I left it ambiguous intentionally.

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