True colors of some fossil feathers now in doubt

Geological processes can affect evidence of the original colors of fossil feathers, according to new research by Yale University scientists, who said some previous reconstructions of fossil bird and dinosaur feather colors may now merit revision.

True colors of some fossil feathers now in doubt
Studies indicate the colours of feathers — especially melanin-based colors — can be altered during
fossilization [Credit: Living Fossils]
The discovery reveals how the evidence for the colors of feathers — especially melanin-based colors — can be altered during fossilization, and suggests that past reconstructions of the original colors of feathers in some fossil birds and dinosaurs may be flawed.

“Here we have concrete experimental evidence for how the colors of feathers are affected by pressure and temperature during burial,” said lead researcher Maria E. McNamara, a former Yale postdoctoral researcher now based at the University of Bristol in the United Kingdom. The study was published online in the journal Biology Letters on March 27.

Derek E. G. Briggs, the Yale University paleontologist whose lab hosted the research, is a co-author. Briggs also is director of the Yale Peabody Museum of Natural History.

In modern birds, black, brown, and some reddish-brown colors are produced by tiny granules of the pigment melanin. These features — called melanosomes — are preserved in many fossil feathers, and their precise size and shape have been used to reconstruct the original colors of fossil feathers.