Model shows how 4-winged dinosaur could glide
Microraptor 'a very successful glider'
Last Updated: Tuesday, January 26, 2010 | 1:03 PM ET
CBC News
Related
Internal Links
External Links
(Note: CBC does not endorse and is not responsible for the content of external sites - links will open in new window)
Scientists from the University of Kansas created a model of a Microraptor gui to show its gliding capabilities. (University of Kansas) An early four-winged, feathered dinosaur appears to have been a good glider, researchers say, providing clues about the origin of flight in birds.
Scientists at the University of Kansas and China's Northeastern University collaborated to build gliding models based on the hawk-sized Microraptor gui, which lived 120 million years ago.
"We've done the scientific work and flight tests to show that Microraptor was a very successful glider," stated David Burnham of the University of Kansas.
Fossils of the Microraptor were first found by Chinese farmers in 2000. A fossil found in 2003 was detailed enough that paleontologists could count the feathers on its wings, Burnham said. More than 20 Microraptor fossils have been found.
Unlike birds, Microraptor had feathers on both its front limbs and rear limbs, so scientists have debated how the dinosaur would have positioned its wings as it glided.
"The controversy was that these animals couldn't spread their hind wings to glide," said Burnham. "But we've been able to articulate the bones in their hip socket to show that they could fly."
David Alexander of the University of Kansas prepares to hand-launch an early version of the Microraptor model. (Helen Miller Alexander) In the study, published in Proceedings of the National Academies of Sciences, researchers led by David Alexander of the University of Kansas built a model of the dinosaur, based on a cast of one of its fossils, out of plywood, balsa wood, carbon fibre and bird feathers.
They then attached the hind wings in three different positions and tested how well the model could glide in each configuration.
They found that the most stable wing position was a sprawling posture similar to that of modern gliding mammals, such as flying squirrels and the colugo, a tree-dwelling animal from Southeast Asia.
A competing theory, advanced by other paleontologists in 2007, suggested a "biplane" wing configuration, reminiscent of the Wright Brothers' early airplanes. The University of Kansas team found that this would have required an impossibly heavy head to maintain the animal's centre of gravity.
The researchers also said the 18-centimetre feathers on Microraptor's hind wings would have made it clumsy on land, suggesting it spent most of its time in the trees.
They said this supports the "tree-down" model for the origin of flight in feathered dinosaurs and birds, which suggests that tree-dwelling dinosaurs glided from branch to branch, leading to the evolution of flight.
Some paleontologists favour a "ground-up" model, theorizing that flight first emerged in feathered, ground-dwelling dinosaurs that hopped on two legs.
Share Tools
Top News Headlines
- Immigrants the proudest Canadians, poll suggests

- Most Canadians feel immigrants are just as likely to be good Canadian citizens as people who were born here and don't object to them keeping their original citizenship, according to a recent Environics survey. more »
- NDP MPs urged to scrap gun registry in final vote
- Public Safety Minister Vic Toews urges opposition MPs to break party ranks and side with the government during tonight's vote on scrapping the long-gun registry. more »
- Honduras prison fire kills hundreds
- Trapped inmates screamed from their cells as a fire swept through a Honduran prison, killing at least 300 inmates in one of the world's deadliest fires in decades, authorities said Wednesday. more »
- Ocean Ranger sinking still haunts 30 years later
- The violent storm that sank the Ocean Ranger, killing 84 men, still haunts people 30 years after the disaster on the Grand Banks east of Newfoundland. more »
Latest Technology & Science News Headlines
- Online privacy erosion dismays critics
- Government and law enforcement access to people's electronic communications is the norm in dictatorships around the world, but the same intrusion appears to be creeping into North America, say opponents of a new online surveillance bill tabled in the House Tuesday. more »
- Venus slowdown puzzles planetary scientists
- Scientists have detected a sudden and dramatic slowdown in the rotation of Earth's sister planet Venus. more »
- Electric cars can handle Canadian winter
- New data obtained by CBC News suggests the range of electric cars is significantly impaired by extreme cold, but not enough to affect the commuting habits of most Canadians. more »
- Online surveillance bill targets child porn: Toews
- A bill that would give police and intelligence agencies new powers to access Canadians' electronic communications is needed to protect against child pornography, says Public Safety Minister Vic Toews. more »
- McGuinty backs Wi-Fi in schools
- Premier Dalton McGuinty is shrugging off concerns raised by an Ontario teachers' union about Wi-Fi in public schools. more »
Bob McDonald's Blog
Glacier Discovery Walk: Will the visitor centre enhance the view? Feb. 14, 2012 9:22 AM Environment minister Peter Kent has announced the construction of a new Glacier Discovery Walk and visitor centre on the Icefields Parkway in Jasper National Park. It raises the issue of how to balance commercial development in our National Parks against the preservation of the last refuges of wilderness.
Quirks & Quarks
- February 18: Guitar Hero, or Guitar Zero? Feb. 15, 2012 10:53 AM An NYU professor of psychology describes how he was able to learn to play the guitar in midlife in spite of a limited musical aptitude, and what it tells us about how our brains learn.
Latest Features
- Legalize pot, say former B.C. attorneys general
- Barefoot Newfoundland girl survives icy ordeal
- Immigrants the proudest Canadians, poll suggests
- Botox injected by unlicensed practitioners
- Online privacy erosion dismays critics
- Russians in abusive plane tirade to be sentenced
- Trudeau says sovereignty less of a bogeyman now
- Honduras prison fire kills hundreds
- Toronto NBA fans experience 'Lin-sanity'

