The Changma Basin in northwest Chinaâs Gansu province is famous for its many ancient bird fossils. Or, at least, pieces of fossils. Paleontologists have documented over 100 prehistoric avian dinosaur remains buried across the region, many resembling the digestive pellets regurgitated by owls living today. For years, researchers suspected that a similar predator was responsible for the fossil fragments, but lacked a convincing candidate.
Experts now have a plausible suspect. According to a study published today in the Annals of Carnegie Museum, a cousin of the fearsome Velociraptor stalked the Changma Basin around 120 million years ago. But with its long feathers and four âwings,â Jian changmaensis didnât ambush its prey from high in the air like a falcon. Instead, it more likely swooped in like a flying squirrel.
âItâs the only dinosaur found at this site that wasnât a bird, it was a carnivore, and it was much bigger than everything else that weâve found there,â Jingmai OâConnor, a study co-author and Field Museum associate curator of fossil reptiles, explained in a statement.
Named after a winged mythological creature from Chinese folklore, J. changmaensis belongs to a dinosaur subgroup known as microraptors. These feathered predators were speedy and small, often only about the size of a crow. J. changmaensis was comparatively large, however. While OâConnorâs team has so far only recovered a portion of its upper arm, they believe the dinosaur likely featured a roughly four-foot wingspan. That puts it at about the size of a barn owl.
Although larger than its fellow microraptors, paleontologists believe J. changmaensis physically resembled its relatives. This means the dinosaur likely featured both forearm wings as well as rudimentary âwingsâ on its hind legs. Microraptors couldnât soar through the skies, but their feathers served a purpose
âJian and the other microraptors probably werenât capable of true, powered flight, but they could probably glide like a flying squirrel,â explained OâConnor.
Matt Lamanna, a study co-author and Carnegie Museumâs curator of vertebrate paleontology, said the teamâs discovery offers âcritical new insightâ into the Changma regionâs biological history while helping contextualize todayâs avian dinosaur descendents.
âFor decades, the Changma site has been renowned among paleontologists for its extraordinary bird fossils,â Lamanna added. âNow, with the discovery of Jian, we finally know what was eating them.â
