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ODONTORNITHES

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Originally appearing in Volume V20, Page 10 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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ODONTORNITHES  , the

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term proposed by O . C . Marsh (Am . Journ . Sci.
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ser 3, V . (1873) pp . 161–162) for birds possessed of teeth (Gr . Mobs, tooth, 6pvcs, 6pvLOos,
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bird), notably the genera Hesperornis and Ichthyornis from the Cretaceous deposits of Kansas . In 1875 (op . Cit . X. pp . 403–408) he divided the " subclass " into
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Odontolcae, with the teeth
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standing in grooves, and Odontotormae, with the teeth in
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separate alveoles or sockets .

In his magnificent

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work, C.iontornithes: A monograph on the
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extinct toothed birds of North
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America, New Haven,
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Connecticut, 188o, he logically added the Saururae, represented by
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Archaeopteryx, as a third order . As it usually happens with the selection of a single anatomical character, the resulting classification was unnatural . In the
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present case the Odontornithes are a heterogeneous assembly, and the fact of their possessing teeth proves nothing but that birds, possibly all of them, still had these
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organs during the Cretaceous epoch . This, by itself, is a very interesting point, showing that birds, as a class, are the descendants of well-toothed reptiles, to the
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complete exclusion of the Chelonia with which various authors persistently try to connect them . No fossil birds of later than Cretaceous age are known to have teeth, and concerning
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recent birds they possess not even embryonic vestiges . E . Geoffroy St Hilaire stated in 1821 (
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Ann . Gen . Sci . Phys. viii. pp . 373–380) that he had found a considerable number of tooth-germs in the upper and
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lower jaws of the parrot Palaeornis torquatus . E .

Blanchard (" Observations sur le systeme dentaire chez
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les oiseaux," Comptes rendus 50, 186o, pp . 540-542) felt justified in recognizing flakes of dentine . However, M . Braun (Arbeit Zool . Inst., Wiirzhurg, v . 1879) and especially P . Fraisse (Phys . Med . Ges., Wiirzburg, 188o) have shown that the structures in question are of the same kind as the well-known serrated teeth " of the
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bill of anserine birds . In fact the papillae observed in the embryonic birds are the soft cutaneous extensions into the surrounding horny sheath of the bill, comparable to the well-known nutritive papillae in a horse's hoof . They are easily exposed in the well-macerated under jaw of a parrot, after removal of the horny sheath . Occasionally calcification occurs in or around these papillae, as it does regularly in the " egg-tooth " of the embryos of all birds .

The best known of the Odontornithes are Hesperornis regalis, standing about 3 ft. high, and the somewhat taller H. crassipes . Both show the

general configuration of a
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diver, but it is only by analogy that Hesperornis can be looked upon as ancestral to the Colymbiformes . There are about fourteen teeth in a groove of the maxilla and about twenty-one in the mandible; the vertebrae are typically heterocoelous; of the wing-bones only the very slender and long humerus is known; clavicles slightly reduced; coracoids short and broad, movably connected with the scapula; sternum very long, broad and quite flat, without the trace of a
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keel .
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Hind limbs very strong and of the Colymbine type, but the
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outer or
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fourth capitulum of the metatarsus is the strongest and longest, an unique arrangement in an otherwise typically steganopodous
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foot . The pelvis shows much resemblance to that of the
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divers, but there is still an incisura ischiadica instead of a foramen . The tail is composed of about twelve vertebrae, without a pygostyle . Enaliornis of the Cambridge
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Greensand of England, and Baptornis of the
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mid-Cretaceous of North America, are probably allied, but imperfectly known . The vertebrae are biconcave, with heterocoelous indications in the cervicals; the metatarsal bones appear still somewhat imperfectly anchylosed . The absence of a keel misled Marsh who suspected relationship of Hesperornis with the Ratitae, and L . Dollo went so far as to call it a carnivorous, aquatic
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ostrich (Bull . Sci . Depart. du
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Nord, ser .

2, iv . 1881, p . 300), and this mistaken notion of the "

swimming ostrich " was popularized by various authors . B . Vetter (Festschr . Ges . Isis.,
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Dresden, 1885) rightly pointed out that Hesperornis was a descendant of Carinatae, but adapted to aquatic
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life, implying reduction of the keel . Lastly, M . Fiirbringer (Untersuchungen, Amsterdam, 1888, pp . 1543, 1505, 1580) relegated it, together with Enaliornis and the Colymbo-Podicipedes, to his suborder Podicipitiformes . The present writer does not feel justified in going so far . On account of their various, decidedly
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primitive characters, he prefers to look upon the Odontolcae as a separate
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group, one of the three divisions of the Neornithes, as birds which form an early offshoot from the later Colymbo-Pelargomorphous stock; in adaptation to a marine, swimming life they have lost the power of
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flight, as is shown by the absence of the keel and by the
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great reduction of the wing-
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skeleton, just as in another direction, away from the later Alectoromorphous stock the Ratitae have specialized as runners .

It is only in so far as the loss of flight is correlated with the absence of the keel that the Odontolcae and the Ratitae

bear analogy to each other . There remain the Odontotormae, notably Ichthyornis victor, I. dispar, Apatornis and Graculavus of the
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middle and upper Cretaceous of Kansas . The teeth stand in separate alveoles; the two halves of the mandible are, as in Hesperornis, without a symphysis . The vertebrae are amphicoelous, but at least the third cervical has somewhat saddle-shaped articular facets . Tail composed of five
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free vertebrae, followed by a rather small pygostyle . Shoulder girdle and sternum well
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developed and of the typical carinate type . Pelvis still with incisura ischiadica . Marsh based the restoration of Ichthyornis, which was obviously a well-flying aquatic bird, upon the skeleton of a tern, a relation-
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ship which cannot be supported . The teeth, vertebrae, pelvis and the small brain are all so many low characters that the Odontotormae may well form a separate, and very low, order of the typical Carinatae, of course near the Colymbomorphouu Legion . (H . F .

End of Article: ODONTORNITHES
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