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| A fossilized Anchioris huxleyi, a bird-lke dinosaur, carries evidence of pigment and the subcellular organelles that made it [Credit: Thierry Hubin/RBINS] |
"We have integrated structural and molecular evidence that demonstrates that melanosomes do persist in the fossil record," said Carney, who helped design and write the study. "This evidence of animal-specific melanin in fossil feathers is the final nail in the coffin that shows that these microbodies are indeed melanosomes and not microbes."
The finding has important implications for the interpretation of both past and future studies on fossil color, Carney said, and substantiates prior proposals that Anchiornis had some dark black feathers.
Signatures of animal pigment
In the new study, led by Johan Lindgren of Lund University in Sweden, the team used electron microscopes to observe what appear to be rod-like melanosome structures and imprints within the barbules of feathers all over the body.
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| Researchers found what appear to be melanosome organelles in the barbules of the dinosaur feathers. Chemical tests associated them with animal pigment [Credit: J. Lindgren, et. al.] |
The researchers also analyzed the observed spectral signatures to compare them with melanins produced by various microbes, just to make sure that the pigments were not from any other source. The closest spectral agreement remained with an animal source, however.
"This is animal melanin, not microbial melanin, and it is associated with these melanosome-like structures in the fossil feathers," Carney said.
Furthermore, no other types of molecules from potential microbes were detected.
Source: Brown University [August 27, 2015]







