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Old 05-29-2002, 07:44 AM   #11
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In effect, some of birds' dinosaurian amcestors had reinterpreted their fingers as they grow; reinterpreting fingers 2, 3, and 4 (index, middle, and ring finger) as fingers 1, 2, 3 (thumb, index, middle finger). A reinterpretation that has been faithfully preserved in the only surviving dinosaurian lineage.
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Old 05-29-2002, 08:39 AM   #12
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Quote:
Originally posted by lpetrich:
<strong>In effect, some of birds' dinosaurian amcestors had reinterpreted their fingers as they grow; reinterpreting fingers 2, 3, and 4 (index, middle, and ring finger) as fingers 1, 2, 3 (thumb, index, middle finger). A reinterpretation that has been faithfully preserved in the only surviving dinosaurian lineage.</strong>
My prediction is that the interpretation of the embryological development of bird digits will turn out to be wrong. The interpretation doesn't seem to be as clear-cut as Feduccia et al. would have us believe.
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Old 05-29-2002, 09:52 AM   #13
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Well, hmmm.

From <a href="http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/1997/10/971027064254.htm" target="_blank">the first link</a>:

Quote:
"We know that dinosaurs developed "hands" with digits one, two and three -- which are the same as the thumb, index and middle fingers of humans -- because digits four and five remain as tiny bumps or vestiges on early dinosaur skeletons," Feduccia said. "Apparently dinosaurs developed a very specialized, almost unique "hand" for grasping and raking.
So, dinos had all five digits, which means they had the genes that coded for five digits. Then they go on to say,

Quote:
"Our studies of bird embryos, however, show that only digits two, three and four develop, and this creates a new problem," he said. "How do you derive a bird "hand," for example, with digits two, three and four from a dinosaur hand that has only digits one, two and three" The answer is that you can't."
By altering the gene expression, the same way that the dinos started out with 5 digits in utero, but only really developed 3. I don't see this as a problem at all, but maybe I'm missing something.

scigirl

Edited to add: Plus, do they really know what was going on in embryonic development for the early birds? You can't always infer the embryo from the fossil. . .

[ May 29, 2002: Message edited by: scigirl ]</p>
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Old 05-29-2002, 10:15 AM   #14
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Quote:
Originally posted by MrDarwin:
<strong>
My prediction is that the interpretation of the embryological development of bird digits will turn out to be wrong. The interpretation doesn't seem to be as clear-cut as Feduccia et al. would have us believe.</strong>
But does the Wagner-Gauthier digit-reinterpretation hypothesis seem reasonable?

I think that the ultimate test will arise from locating the molecular mechanisms responsible for controlling hand development; location of such mechanisms elsewhere has already resolved one major riddle -- the Geoffroy St. Hilaire dorsoventral inversion between annelids and arthropods on one side and vertebrates on the other. The hypothesis of a connection would be periodically revived -- and then picked apart each time. However, discovery of molecular mechanisms of dorsoventral patterning has generally been considered to strongly clench it.

Basically, the internal organs are arranged

Arthropods, annelids:

dorsal
heart
gut
CNS
ventral

Vertebrates:

dorsal
CNS
gut
heart
ventral

CNS = central nervous system

The ancestor was likely only a simple strip; the arthropod/annelid CNS has a ladder shape with a ganglion at each joint, while the vertebrate CNS is tube-shaped. And it was such dissimilarities which had caused the earlier rejection.
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Old 05-29-2002, 11:05 AM   #15
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Quote:
Feduccia paper:
"Our studies of bird embryos, however, show that only digits two, three and four develop, and this creates a new problem," he said. "How do you derive a bird "hand," for example, with digits two, three and four from a dinosaur hand that has only digits one, two and three" The answer is that you can't."

scigirl:
By altering the gene expression, the same way that the dinos started out with 5 digits in utero, but only really developed 3. I don't see this as a problem at all, but maybe I'm missing something.

Edited to add: Plus, do they really know what was going on in embryonic development for the early birds? You can't always infer the embryo from the fossil. . .
I think that the embryonic development that they are talking about is present-day embryonic development.

The Wagner-Gauthier reconciliation of 1-2-3 vs. 2-3-4 goes as follows:

Early dinosaurs:

1 -&gt; 1
2 -&gt; 2
3 -&gt; 3
4 -&gt; 4
5 -&gt; 5

Some early theropods:

1 -&gt; 1
2 -&gt; 2
3 -&gt; 3
4 -&gt; 4
X (digit does not grow)

Some later theropods and birds:

X (digit does not grow)
2 -&gt; 1 (first digit from low end)
3 -&gt; 2
4 -&gt; 3
X

In effect:

Digits start to form
Some digits may be supressed
Digits differentiate, with the low-side one becoming 1, the next one becoming 2, etc.

[ May 29, 2002: Message edited by: lpetrich ]</p>
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Old 05-29-2002, 07:14 PM   #16
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Quote:
Originally posted by KCdgw:
<strong>


Larry Martin is the guy from University of Kansas. However, I wouldn't dismiss his or Feduccia's objections out of hand. One can learn a lot about the subject itself by studying what they have to say, and why.

Cheers,

KC</strong>
That's it! My anomic aphasia strikes again.

Once again, I certainly do not want to give the impression that I advocate dismissing "out of hand" what Feduccia or anyone else says on this matter. I can maybe evaluate 10% to 20% of what any professional in a relevant field says on this matter. However, in field's that I am better qualified to evaluate, I have learned that it is indeed good to "know your players". If other paleontologists or known figures in other related fields, who were known to be more neutral to the dino-bird question, were to indicate that given evidence made them question a dino-bird link, it would probably get my attention more.

[ May 29, 2002: Message edited by: ksagnostic ]</p>
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Old 05-29-2002, 07:42 PM   #17
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Quote:
Originally posted by ksagnostic:
<strong>

That's it! My anomic aphasia strikes again.

Once again, I certainly do not want to give the impression that I advocate dismissing "out of hand" what Feduccia or anyone else says on this matter. I can maybe evaluate 10% to 20% of what any professional in a relevant field says on this matter. However, in field's that I am better qualified to evaluate, I have learned that it is indeed good to "know your players". If other paleontologists or known figures in other related fields, who were known to be more neutral to the dino-bird question, were to indicate that given evidence made them question a dino-bird link, it would probably get my attention more.

[ May 29, 2002: Message edited by: ksagnostic ]</strong>
God, I wish I had gone to class instead of staying up all night playing Spades at GIT.

You folks are the best - providing a slacker like me with a free education.. all of you.. thanks!
 
Old 05-29-2002, 07:43 PM   #18
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Quote:
Originally posted by Jerry Smith:

God, I wish I had gone to class instead of staying up all night playing Spades at GIT.

You folks are the best - providing a slacker like me with a free education.. all of you.. thanks!
For you Brits - that's Georgia Tech. For you Americans, it was only the AP's bias that kept us from being #1 in '90 - my freshman and (alas) final year....
 
 

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