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  • Une découverte de fossile pourrait transformer notre compréhension de l’évolution du cerveau des oiseaux
    DUKAS_177613148_BES
    Une découverte de fossile pourrait transformer notre compréhension de l’évolution du cerveau des oiseaux
    Picture MUST credit: Stephanie Abramowicz A fossil discovery could transform our understanding of how the unique brains and intelligence of modern birds evolved, one of the most enduring mysteries of vertebrate evolution. Researchers have identified a remarkably well-preserved fossil bird, roughly the size of a starling. from the Mesozoic Era . This period lasted from 252 million to 66 million years ago when an asteroid strikes is believed to have prompted the extinction of the dinosaurs. The complete skull has been preserved almost intact:, a rarity for any fossil bird, but particularly for one so ancient, making this one of the most significant finds of its kind. The three-dimensional preservation allowed the researchers, led by the UK’s University of Cambridge and the Los Angeles County Natural History Museum in the USA, to digitally reconstruct the brain of the bird, which they have named Navaornis hestiae. Navaornis lived approximately 80 million years ago in what is now Brazil. The researchers say their discovery could be a sort of ‘Rosetta Stone’ for determining the evolutionary origins of the modern avian brain. The fossil fills a 70-million-year gap in our understanding of how the brains of birds evolved: between the 150-million-year-old Archaeopteryx, the earliest known bird-like dinosaur, and birds living today. Picture supplied by JLPPA
    JLPPA / Bestimage

     

  • Une découverte de fossile pourrait transformer notre compréhension de l’évolution du cerveau des oiseaux
    DUKAS_177613147_BES
    Une découverte de fossile pourrait transformer notre compréhension de l’évolution du cerveau des oiseaux
    Picture MUST credit: Stephanie Abramowicz A fossil discovery could transform our understanding of how the unique brains and intelligence of modern birds evolved, one of the most enduring mysteries of vertebrate evolution. Researchers have identified a remarkably well-preserved fossil bird, roughly the size of a starling. from the Mesozoic Era . This period lasted from 252 million to 66 million years ago when an asteroid strikes is believed to have prompted the extinction of the dinosaurs. The complete skull has been preserved almost intact:, a rarity for any fossil bird, but particularly for one so ancient, making this one of the most significant finds of its kind. The three-dimensional preservation allowed the researchers, led by the UK’s University of Cambridge and the Los Angeles County Natural History Museum in the USA, to digitally reconstruct the brain of the bird, which they have named Navaornis hestiae. Navaornis lived approximately 80 million years ago in what is now Brazil. The researchers say their discovery could be a sort of ‘Rosetta Stone’ for determining the evolutionary origins of the modern avian brain. The fossil fills a 70-million-year gap in our understanding of how the brains of birds evolved: between the 150-million-year-old Archaeopteryx, the earliest known bird-like dinosaur, and birds living today. Picture supplied by JLPPA
    JLPPA / Bestimage

     

  • Une découverte de fossile pourrait transformer notre compréhension de l’évolution du cerveau des oiseaux
    DUKAS_177613146_BES
    Une découverte de fossile pourrait transformer notre compréhension de l’évolution du cerveau des oiseaux
    Picture MUST credit: Stephanie Abramowicz A fossil discovery could transform our understanding of how the unique brains and intelligence of modern birds evolved, one of the most enduring mysteries of vertebrate evolution. Researchers have identified a remarkably well-preserved fossil bird, roughly the size of a starling. from the Mesozoic Era . This period lasted from 252 million to 66 million years ago when an asteroid strikes is believed to have prompted the extinction of the dinosaurs. The complete skull has been preserved almost intact:, a rarity for any fossil bird, but particularly for one so ancient, making this one of the most significant finds of its kind. The three-dimensional preservation allowed the researchers, led by the UK’s University of Cambridge and the Los Angeles County Natural History Museum in the USA, to digitally reconstruct the brain of the bird, which they have named Navaornis hestiae. Navaornis lived approximately 80 million years ago in what is now Brazil. The researchers say their discovery could be a sort of ‘Rosetta Stone’ for determining the evolutionary origins of the modern avian brain. The fossil fills a 70-million-year gap in our understanding of how the brains of birds evolved: between the 150-million-year-old Archaeopteryx, the earliest known bird-like dinosaur, and birds living today. Picture supplied by JLPPA
    JLPPA / Bestimage

     

  • Une découverte de fossile pourrait transformer notre compréhension de l’évolution du cerveau des oiseaux
    DUKAS_177613145_BES
    Une découverte de fossile pourrait transformer notre compréhension de l’évolution du cerveau des oiseaux
    Picture MUST credit: Stephanie Abramowicz A fossil discovery could transform our understanding of how the unique brains and intelligence of modern birds evolved, one of the most enduring mysteries of vertebrate evolution. Researchers have identified a remarkably well-preserved fossil bird, roughly the size of a starling. from the Mesozoic Era . This period lasted from 252 million to 66 million years ago when an asteroid strikes is believed to have prompted the extinction of the dinosaurs. The complete skull has been preserved almost intact:, a rarity for any fossil bird, but particularly for one so ancient, making this one of the most significant finds of its kind. The three-dimensional preservation allowed the researchers, led by the UK’s University of Cambridge and the Los Angeles County Natural History Museum in the USA, to digitally reconstruct the brain of the bird, which they have named Navaornis hestiae. Navaornis lived approximately 80 million years ago in what is now Brazil. The researchers say their discovery could be a sort of ‘Rosetta Stone’ for determining the evolutionary origins of the modern avian brain. The fossil fills a 70-million-year gap in our understanding of how the brains of birds evolved: between the 150-million-year-old Archaeopteryx, the earliest known bird-like dinosaur, and birds living today. Picture supplied by JLPPA
    JLPPA / Bestimage

     

  • Une découverte de fossile pourrait transformer notre compréhension de l’évolution du cerveau des oiseaux
    DUKAS_177613144_BES
    Une découverte de fossile pourrait transformer notre compréhension de l’évolution du cerveau des oiseaux
    Picture MUST credit: Stephanie Abramowicz A fossil discovery could transform our understanding of how the unique brains and intelligence of modern birds evolved, one of the most enduring mysteries of vertebrate evolution. Researchers have identified a remarkably well-preserved fossil bird, roughly the size of a starling. from the Mesozoic Era . This period lasted from 252 million to 66 million years ago when an asteroid strikes is believed to have prompted the extinction of the dinosaurs. The complete skull has been preserved almost intact:, a rarity for any fossil bird, but particularly for one so ancient, making this one of the most significant finds of its kind. The three-dimensional preservation allowed the researchers, led by the UK’s University of Cambridge and the Los Angeles County Natural History Museum in the USA, to digitally reconstruct the brain of the bird, which they have named Navaornis hestiae. Navaornis lived approximately 80 million years ago in what is now Brazil. The researchers say their discovery could be a sort of ‘Rosetta Stone’ for determining the evolutionary origins of the modern avian brain. The fossil fills a 70-million-year gap in our understanding of how the brains of birds evolved: between the 150-million-year-old Archaeopteryx, the earliest known bird-like dinosaur, and birds living today. Picture supplied by JLPPA
    JLPPA / Bestimage

     

  • Une découverte de fossile pourrait transformer notre compréhension de l’évolution du cerveau des oiseaux
    DUKAS_177613143_BES
    Une découverte de fossile pourrait transformer notre compréhension de l’évolution du cerveau des oiseaux
    Picture MUST credit: Stephanie Abramowicz A fossil discovery could transform our understanding of how the unique brains and intelligence of modern birds evolved, one of the most enduring mysteries of vertebrate evolution. Researchers have identified a remarkably well-preserved fossil bird, roughly the size of a starling. from the Mesozoic Era . This period lasted from 252 million to 66 million years ago when an asteroid strikes is believed to have prompted the extinction of the dinosaurs. The complete skull has been preserved almost intact:, a rarity for any fossil bird, but particularly for one so ancient, making this one of the most significant finds of its kind. The three-dimensional preservation allowed the researchers, led by the UK’s University of Cambridge and the Los Angeles County Natural History Museum in the USA, to digitally reconstruct the brain of the bird, which they have named Navaornis hestiae. Navaornis lived approximately 80 million years ago in what is now Brazil. The researchers say their discovery could be a sort of ‘Rosetta Stone’ for determining the evolutionary origins of the modern avian brain. The fossil fills a 70-million-year gap in our understanding of how the brains of birds evolved: between the 150-million-year-old Archaeopteryx, the earliest known bird-like dinosaur, and birds living today. Picture supplied by JLPPA
    JLPPA / Bestimage

     

  • Une découverte de fossile pourrait transformer notre compréhension de l’évolution du cerveau des oiseaux
    DUKAS_177613142_BES
    Une découverte de fossile pourrait transformer notre compréhension de l’évolution du cerveau des oiseaux
    Picture MUST credit: Stephanie Abramowicz A fossil discovery could transform our understanding of how the unique brains and intelligence of modern birds evolved, one of the most enduring mysteries of vertebrate evolution. Researchers have identified a remarkably well-preserved fossil bird, roughly the size of a starling. from the Mesozoic Era . This period lasted from 252 million to 66 million years ago when an asteroid strikes is believed to have prompted the extinction of the dinosaurs. The complete skull has been preserved almost intact:, a rarity for any fossil bird, but particularly for one so ancient, making this one of the most significant finds of its kind. The three-dimensional preservation allowed the researchers, led by the UK’s University of Cambridge and the Los Angeles County Natural History Museum in the USA, to digitally reconstruct the brain of the bird, which they have named Navaornis hestiae. Navaornis lived approximately 80 million years ago in what is now Brazil. The researchers say their discovery could be a sort of ‘Rosetta Stone’ for determining the evolutionary origins of the modern avian brain. The fossil fills a 70-million-year gap in our understanding of how the brains of birds evolved: between the 150-million-year-old Archaeopteryx, the earliest known bird-like dinosaur, and birds living today. Picture supplied by JLPPA
    JLPPA / Bestimage

     

  • Une découverte de fossile pourrait transformer notre compréhension de l’évolution du cerveau des oiseaux
    DUKAS_177613141_BES
    Une découverte de fossile pourrait transformer notre compréhension de l’évolution du cerveau des oiseaux
    Picture MUST credit: Stephanie Abramowicz A fossil discovery could transform our understanding of how the unique brains and intelligence of modern birds evolved, one of the most enduring mysteries of vertebrate evolution. Researchers have identified a remarkably well-preserved fossil bird, roughly the size of a starling. from the Mesozoic Era . This period lasted from 252 million to 66 million years ago when an asteroid strikes is believed to have prompted the extinction of the dinosaurs. The complete skull has been preserved almost intact:, a rarity for any fossil bird, but particularly for one so ancient, making this one of the most significant finds of its kind. The three-dimensional preservation allowed the researchers, led by the UK’s University of Cambridge and the Los Angeles County Natural History Museum in the USA, to digitally reconstruct the brain of the bird, which they have named Navaornis hestiae. Navaornis lived approximately 80 million years ago in what is now Brazil. The researchers say their discovery could be a sort of ‘Rosetta Stone’ for determining the evolutionary origins of the modern avian brain. The fossil fills a 70-million-year gap in our understanding of how the brains of birds evolved: between the 150-million-year-old Archaeopteryx, the earliest known bird-like dinosaur, and birds living today. Picture supplied by JLPPA
    JLPPA / Bestimage

     

  • dukas 177579491 fer
    DUKAS_177579491_FER
    dukas 177579491 fer
    Ferrari Press Agency
    Brain 1
    Ref 16308
    13/11/2024
    See Ferrari text
    Picture MUST credit: Júlia D'Oliveira
    A fossil discovery could transform our understanding of how the unique brains and intelligence of modern birds evolved, one of the most enduring mysteries of vertebrate evolution.
    Researchers have identified a remarkably well-preserved fossil bird, roughly the size of a starling. from the Mesozoic Era .
    This period lasted from 252 million to 66 million years ago when an asteroid strikes is believed to have prompted the extinction of the dinosaurs.
    The complete skull has been preserved almost intact:, a rarity for any fossil bird, but particularly for one so ancient, making this one of the most significant finds of its kind.
    The three-dimensional preservation allowed the researchers, led by the UK’s University of Cambridge and the Los Angeles County Natural History Museum in the USA, to digitally reconstruct the brain of the bird, which they have named Navaornis hestiae.
    Navaornis lived approximately 80 million years ago in what is now Brazil.
    The researchers say their discovery could be a sort of ‘Rosetta Stone’ for determining the evolutionary origins of the modern avian brain.
    The fossil fills a 70-million-year gap in our understanding of how the brains of birds evolved: between the 150-million-year-old Archaeopteryx, the earliest known bird-like dinosaur, and birds living today.

    OPS: Artist's impression by Júlia D'Oliveiraof how Navaornis hestiae may have looked

    Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS)

     

  • dukas 177579489 fer
    DUKAS_177579489_FER
    dukas 177579489 fer
    Ferrari Press Agency
    Brain 1
    Ref 16308
    13/11/2024
    See Ferrari text
    Picture MUST credit: Guillermo Navalón
    A fossil discovery could transform our understanding of how the unique brains and intelligence of modern birds evolved, one of the most enduring mysteries of vertebrate evolution.
    Researchers have identified a remarkably well-preserved fossil bird, roughly the size of a starling. from the Mesozoic Era .
    This period lasted from 252 million to 66 million years ago when an asteroid strikes is believed to have prompted the extinction of the dinosaurs.
    The complete skull has been preserved almost intact:, a rarity for any fossil bird, but particularly for one so ancient, making this one of the most significant finds of its kind.
    The three-dimensional preservation allowed the researchers, led by the UK’s University of Cambridge and the Los Angeles County Natural History Museum in the USA, to digitally reconstruct the brain of the bird, which they have named Navaornis hestiae.
    Navaornis lived approximately 80 million years ago in what is now Brazil.
    The researchers say their discovery could be a sort of ‘Rosetta Stone’ for determining the evolutionary origins of the modern avian brain.
    The fossil fills a 70-million-year gap in our understanding of how the brains of birds evolved: between the 150-million-year-old Archaeopteryx, the earliest known bird-like dinosaur, and birds living today.

    OPS: The 3D scan of the Navaornis hestiae fossil skull was used to create this image of its brain.

    Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS)

     

  • dukas 177579488 fer
    DUKAS_177579488_FER
    dukas 177579488 fer
    Ferrari Press Agency
    Brain 1
    Ref 16308
    13/11/2024
    See Ferrari text
    Picture MUST credit: Guillermo Navalón
    A fossil discovery could transform our understanding of how the unique brains and intelligence of modern birds evolved, one of the most enduring mysteries of vertebrate evolution.
    Researchers have identified a remarkably well-preserved fossil bird, roughly the size of a starling. from the Mesozoic Era .
    This period lasted from 252 million to 66 million years ago when an asteroid strikes is believed to have prompted the extinction of the dinosaurs.
    The complete skull has been preserved almost intact:, a rarity for any fossil bird, but particularly for one so ancient, making this one of the most significant finds of its kind.
    The three-dimensional preservation allowed the researchers, led by the UK’s University of Cambridge and the Los Angeles County Natural History Museum in the USA, to digitally reconstruct the brain of the bird, which they have named Navaornis hestiae.
    Navaornis lived approximately 80 million years ago in what is now Brazil.
    The researchers say their discovery could be a sort of ‘Rosetta Stone’ for determining the evolutionary origins of the modern avian brain.
    The fossil fills a 70-million-year gap in our understanding of how the brains of birds evolved: between the 150-million-year-old Archaeopteryx, the earliest known bird-like dinosaur, and birds living today.

    OPS: The 3D scan of the Navaornis hestiae fossil skull was used to create this image of its brain.

    Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS)

     

  • dukas 177579486 fer
    DUKAS_177579486_FER
    dukas 177579486 fer
    Ferrari Press Agency
    Brain 1
    Ref 16308
    13/11/2024
    See Ferrari text
    Picture MUST credit: Guillermo Navalón
    A fossil discovery could transform our understanding of how the unique brains and intelligence of modern birds evolved, one of the most enduring mysteries of vertebrate evolution.
    Researchers have identified a remarkably well-preserved fossil bird, roughly the size of a starling. from the Mesozoic Era .
    This period lasted from 252 million to 66 million years ago when an asteroid strikes is believed to have prompted the extinction of the dinosaurs.
    The complete skull has been preserved almost intact:, a rarity for any fossil bird, but particularly for one so ancient, making this one of the most significant finds of its kind.
    The three-dimensional preservation allowed the researchers, led by the UK’s University of Cambridge and the Los Angeles County Natural History Museum in the USA, to digitally reconstruct the brain of the bird, which they have named Navaornis hestiae.
    Navaornis lived approximately 80 million years ago in what is now Brazil.
    The researchers say their discovery could be a sort of ‘Rosetta Stone’ for determining the evolutionary origins of the modern avian brain.
    The fossil fills a 70-million-year gap in our understanding of how the brains of birds evolved: between the 150-million-year-old Archaeopteryx, the earliest known bird-like dinosaur, and birds living today.

    OPS: The 3D scan of the Navaornis hestiae fossil skull was used to create this image of its brain.

    Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS)

     

  • dukas 177579483 fer
    DUKAS_177579483_FER
    dukas 177579483 fer
    Ferrari Press Agency
    Brain 1
    Ref 16308
    13/11/2024
    See Ferrari text
    Picture MUST credit: Guillermo Navalón
    A fossil discovery could transform our understanding of how the unique brains and intelligence of modern birds evolved, one of the most enduring mysteries of vertebrate evolution.
    Researchers have identified a remarkably well-preserved fossil bird, roughly the size of a starling. from the Mesozoic Era .
    This period lasted from 252 million to 66 million years ago when an asteroid strikes is believed to have prompted the extinction of the dinosaurs.
    The complete skull has been preserved almost intact:, a rarity for any fossil bird, but particularly for one so ancient, making this one of the most significant finds of its kind.
    The three-dimensional preservation allowed the researchers, led by the UK’s University of Cambridge and the Los Angeles County Natural History Museum in the USA, to digitally reconstruct the brain of the bird, which they have named Navaornis hestiae.
    Navaornis lived approximately 80 million years ago in what is now Brazil.
    The researchers say their discovery could be a sort of ‘Rosetta Stone’ for determining the evolutionary origins of the modern avian brain.
    The fossil fills a 70-million-year gap in our understanding of how the brains of birds evolved: between the 150-million-year-old Archaeopteryx, the earliest known bird-like dinosaur, and birds living today.

    OPS: The 3D scan of the Navaornis hestiae fossil skull

    Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS)

     

  • dukas 177579481 fer
    DUKAS_177579481_FER
    dukas 177579481 fer
    Ferrari Press Agency
    Brain 1
    Ref 16308
    13/11/2024
    See Ferrari text
    Picture MUST credit: Guillermo Navalón
    A fossil discovery could transform our understanding of how the unique brains and intelligence of modern birds evolved, one of the most enduring mysteries of vertebrate evolution.
    Researchers have identified a remarkably well-preserved fossil bird, roughly the size of a starling. from the Mesozoic Era .
    This period lasted from 252 million to 66 million years ago when an asteroid strikes is believed to have prompted the extinction of the dinosaurs.
    The complete skull has been preserved almost intact:, a rarity for any fossil bird, but particularly for one so ancient, making this one of the most significant finds of its kind.
    The three-dimensional preservation allowed the researchers, led by the UK’s University of Cambridge and the Los Angeles County Natural History Museum in the USA, to digitally reconstruct the brain of the bird, which they have named Navaornis hestiae.
    Navaornis lived approximately 80 million years ago in what is now Brazil.
    The researchers say their discovery could be a sort of ‘Rosetta Stone’ for determining the evolutionary origins of the modern avian brain.
    The fossil fills a 70-million-year gap in our understanding of how the brains of birds evolved: between the 150-million-year-old Archaeopteryx, the earliest known bird-like dinosaur, and birds living today.

    OPS: The 3D scan of the Navaornis hestiae fossil skull

    Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS)

     

  • dukas 177579477 fer
    DUKAS_177579477_FER
    dukas 177579477 fer
    Ferrari Press Agency
    Brain 1
    Ref 16308
    13/11/2024
    See Ferrari text
    Picture MUST credit: Stephanie Abramowicz
    A fossil discovery could transform our understanding of how the unique brains and intelligence of modern birds evolved, one of the most enduring mysteries of vertebrate evolution.
    Researchers have identified a remarkably well-preserved fossil bird, roughly the size of a starling. from the Mesozoic Era .
    This period lasted from 252 million to 66 million years ago when an asteroid strikes is believed to have prompted the extinction of the dinosaurs.
    The complete skull has been preserved almost intact:, a rarity for any fossil bird, but particularly for one so ancient, making this one of the most significant finds of its kind.
    The three-dimensional preservation allowed the researchers, led by the UK’s University of Cambridge and the Los Angeles County Natural History Museum in the USA, to digitally reconstruct the brain of the bird, which they have named Navaornis hestiae.
    Navaornis lived approximately 80 million years ago in what is now Brazil.
    The researchers say their discovery could be a sort of ‘Rosetta Stone’ for determining the evolutionary origins of the modern avian brain.
    The fossil fills a 70-million-year gap in our understanding of how the brains of birds evolved: between the 150-million-year-old Archaeopteryx, the earliest known bird-like dinosaur, and birds living today.

    OPS: The Navaornis hestiae fossil used in the study.

    Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS)

     

  • dukas 177579475 fer
    DUKAS_177579475_FER
    dukas 177579475 fer
    Ferrari Press Agency
    Brain 1
    Ref 16308
    13/11/2024
    See Ferrari text
    Picture MUST credit: Guillermo Navalón
    A fossil discovery could transform our understanding of how the unique brains and intelligence of modern birds evolved, one of the most enduring mysteries of vertebrate evolution.
    Researchers have identified a remarkably well-preserved fossil bird, roughly the size of a starling. from the Mesozoic Era .
    This period lasted from 252 million to 66 million years ago when an asteroid strikes is believed to have prompted the extinction of the dinosaurs.
    The complete skull has been preserved almost intact:, a rarity for any fossil bird, but particularly for one so ancient, making this one of the most significant finds of its kind.
    The three-dimensional preservation allowed the researchers, led by the UK’s University of Cambridge and the Los Angeles County Natural History Museum in the USA, to digitally reconstruct the brain of the bird, which they have named Navaornis hestiae.
    Navaornis lived approximately 80 million years ago in what is now Brazil.
    The researchers say their discovery could be a sort of ‘Rosetta Stone’ for determining the evolutionary origins of the modern avian brain.
    The fossil fills a 70-million-year gap in our understanding of how the brains of birds evolved: between the 150-million-year-old Archaeopteryx, the earliest known bird-like dinosaur, and birds living today.

    OPS: The 3D scan of the Navaornis hestiae fossil skull

    Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS)