Online Encyclopedia

ARCHAEOPTERYX

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V02, Page 356 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
Spread the word: del.icio.us del.icio.us it!

ARCHAEOPTERYX  . The name of Archaeopteryx lithographica was based by

Hermann vnMeyeruponafeather(Gr.rrrEpvE,wing) found in 1861 in the lithographic slate quarries of Solenhofen in Bavaria, the
See also:
geological horizon being that of the himmeridge clay of the Upper Orlite or
See also:
Jurassic
See also:
system . In the same
See also:
year and at the same place was discovered the specimen (
See also:
figs . 1 and 3) value of by the relics themselves and by their relation to
See also:
ethnology . now in the
See also:
British Museum, named by Andreas Wagner Griphosaurus .
See also:
Sir R . Owen has described it as A . ,nzacroura . Stimulated by the high price paid by the British Museum, the
See also:
quarry owners diligently searched, and in 1872 another, much finer, preserved specimen was found . This was bought by K . W . v .

Siemens, who presented it to the Berlin Museum . The
See also:
late W . Dames has written an excellent monograph on it . Archaeopteryx was a
See also:
bird, without any doubt, but still with so many low, essentially reptilian characters that it forms a
See also:
link between these two classes . About the
See also:
size of a rook, its most After a photograph taken from a cast . obvious peculiarity is the long reptilian tail, composed of 20 vertebrae and not ending in a pygostyle . The last dozen vertebrae each carry a pair of well-
See also:
developed typical quills . Upon these features of the tail E . Haeckel established the subclass Saururae, containing solely Archaeopteryx, in opposition to the Ornithurae, comprising all the other birds . Herein he has been followed by many zoologists . However, the fact that various
See also:
recent birds possess the same kind of caudal
See also:
skeleton, likewise without a pygostyle, although reduced to at least 13 vertebrae, shows that the two terms do not express a fundamental difference . The importance of Archaeopteryx justifies the following descriptive detail .

Vertebral

column composed of about 50 vertebrae, viz . 10-11 cervical, 12-11 thoracic, 2 lumbar, 5-6 sacral, and 20 or 21 caudal, with a
See also:
total caudal length of the Berlin specimen of 7 in . The cervical and thoracic vertebrae seem to be biconcave; the cervical ribs are much reduced and were apparently still movable; the thoracic ribs are devoid of uncinate processes . Paired abdominal ribs are doubtful . Scarcely anything is known of the sternum, and little of the shoulder-girdle, except the very stout furcula; scapula typically bird-like . Humerus about 2 z in. long, with a strong crista lateralis, which indicates a strongly developed
See also:
great
See also:
pectoral muscle and hence, by inference, the presence of a
See also:
keel to the sternum .
See also:
Radius and ulna typically avine, 2.1 in. in length . Carpus with two
See also:
separate bones . The hand skeleton consists of 3 completely separate metacarpals, each carrying a corn- plete, likewise
See also:
free,
See also:
finger; the shortened thumb with 2, the
See also:
index with 3, the third with 4 phalanges; each finger with a curved claw . The whole wing is consequently, although essentially avine, still reptilian in the unfused state of the metacarpals and the numbers of the phalanges . The pelvis is imperfectly known . The preacetabular portion of the ilium is shorter than the posterior
See also:
half .

The

See also:
hind-
See also:
limb is typically avine, with intertarsal joint, distally reduced fibula, and the three elongated metatarsals which show already considerable anchylosis; reduction of the toes to four, with 2, 3, 4 and 5 phalanges; the hallux is separate, and as usual in recent birds posterior in position .
See also:
Skull bird-like, except that the short
See also:
bill cannot have been enclosed in a horny rhamphotheca, since the upper jaw shows a row of 13, the
See also:
lower jaw 3 conical teeth, all implanted in distinct sockets . The remiges and rectrices indicate perfect feathers, with shaft and
See also:
complete vanes which were so neatly finished that they must have possessed typical radii and booklets . Some of the quills measure fully 5 in. in length . Six or seven remiges were attached to the hand, ten to the ulna . It is idle to speculate on the habits of this earliest of known birds . That it could fly is certain, and the feet show it to have pli ~
See also:
Ill' OjI been well adapted to arboreal
See also:
life . The clawed slender fingers did not make Archaeopteryx any more quadrupedal or
See also:
bat-like in its habits than is a kestrel hawk, with its equally large, or even larger thumb-claw . p . 679; Sir R . Owen, " On the Archaeopteryx von Meyer . . " Phil .

Trans., 1863, PP . 33-47, pls. i.-iv . ; T . H .

Huxley, " Remarks on the Skeleton of the Archaeopteryx and on the relations of the bird to the reptile," Geol .
See also:
Hag. i., 1864, pp . 55-57 ; C . Vogt, " L'Archaeo- pteryx macrura," Revue scient. de la France et de l'etranger, 1879, pp . 241-248; W . Dames, " Uber Archaeopteryx," Palaeontol . Abhandl. ii . (Berlin, 1884) ; Idem, " Uber Brustbein Schulter- and Beckengurtel der Archaeopteryx," Math. naturw .

Mitth . Berlin . Vii . (1897), pp . 476-492 . (H . F . G.) • ARCHAISM (adj . " archaic "; from Gr. apxaZos, old), an old-fashioned usage, or the deliberate employment of an out-of-date and

ancient mode of expression .

End of Article: ARCHAEOPTERYX
[back]
ARCHAEOLOGY OF CENTRAL
[next]
ARCHANGEL (ARCHANGELSK)

Additional information and Comments

There are no comments yet for this article.
» Add information or comments to this article.
Please link directly to this article:
Highlight the code below, right click and select "copy." Paste it into a website, email, or other HTML document.