‘Wonderchicken’ Fossil from the Age of Dinosaurs Reveals Origin of Modern Birds

Above: Artist’s reconstruction of the world’s oldest modern bird, Asteriornis maastrichtensis, in its original environment. 66.7 million years ago parts of Belgium were covered by a shallow sea, and conditions were similar to modern tropical beaches like The Bahamas. Credit: Phillip Krzeminski.

The oldest fossil of a modern bird yet found, dating from the age of dinosaurs, has been identified by an international team of paleontologists.

Dr. Daniel Ksepka, Curator of Science at the Bruce Museum, flew to Cambridge last summer to collaborate on the study of this remarkable fossil bird. Dr. Daniel Field, a professor at the University of Cambridge, discovered the fossil while sifting through some nuggets of rock. Only a small piece of bird bone was exposed at the surface of one piece, but when it was sent through a CT scanner a magnificent skull was revealed. Together the team reconstructed the skull and conducted an evolutionary tree analysis to figure out what type of bird it represented.



The spectacular fossil, affectionately nicknamed the ‘Wonderchicken,’ includes a nearly complete skull, hidden inside nondescript pieces of rock, and dates from less than one million years before the asteroid impact which eliminated all large dinosaurs.

Writing in the journal Nature, the team, led by the University of Cambridge, believe the new fossil helps clarify why birds survived the mass extinction event at the end of the Cretaceous period, while the giant dinosaurs did not.

“I was completely blown away by this discovery,” says Ksepka. “Fossil birds from this age are incredibly rare, and to find a complete skull is a once in a lifetime discovery.”

The delicate skull was only about 2 inches long, and reveals precious information about what types of birds were living side by side with giant dinosaurs immediately before an asteroid impact triggered one of the worst mass extinctions in Earth history. The small size and shoreline-dwelling habitats of Asteriornis maastrichtensis offer clues as to why the ancestors of modern birds survived the mass extinction. They needed less food and were not as dependent on trees (which burned in a global wildfire due to the asteroid impact), and so were able to weather the cataclysm.

Detailed analysis of the skull shows that it combines many features common to modern chicken- and duck-like birds, suggesting that the “Wonderchicken” is close to the last common ancestor of modern chickens and ducks. The fossil was found in a limestone quarry near the Belgian-Dutch border, making it the first modern bird from the age of dinosaurs found in the northern hemisphere.

The fossil doesn’t look like much on first glance, with only a few small leg bone fragments poking out from a piece of rock the size of a deck of cards. Even those small bones attracted the researchers’ interest, since bird fossils from this point in Earth’s history are so rare.

Using high-resolution X-ray CT scans, the researchers peered through the rock to see what was lying beneath the surface. What they saw, just one millimeter beneath the rock, was the find of a lifetime: a nearly complete 66.7-million-year-old bird skull.

“The moment I first saw what was beneath the rock was the most exciting moment of my scientific career,” said Dr. Daniel Field from Cambridge’s Department of Earth Sciences, who led the research. “This is one of the best-preserved fossil bird skulls of any age, from anywhere in the world. We almost had to pinch ourselves when we saw it, knowing that it was from such an important time in Earth’s history.

“The ability to CT scan fossils, like we can at the Cambridge Biotomography Centre, has completely transformed how we study paleontology in the 21st century.” These findings dovetail closely with the research presented in the Bruce Museum’s exhibition, Under the Skin. Curated by Dr. Ksepka and on view at the Bruce Museum upon its reopening through July 19, the exhibition highlights a dozen recent discoveries through a combination of remarkable imagery and real biological specimens.

“Finding the skull blew my mind,” said co-author Juan Benito, also from Cambridge, who was CT scanning the fossils with Field when the skull was discovered. “Without these cutting-edge scans, we never would have known that we were holding the oldest modern bird skull in the world.”

The skull, despite its age, is clearly recognizable as a modern bird. It combines many features common to the group that includes living chickens and ducks - a group called Galloanserae. Field describes the skull as a kind of ‘mash-up’ of a chicken and a duck.

“The origins of living bird diversity are shrouded in mystery — other than knowing that modern birds arose at some point towards the end of the age of dinosaurs, we have very little fossil evidence of them until after the asteroid hit,” said co-author Albert Chen, a PhD student based at Cambridge. “This fossil provides our earliest direct glimpse of what modern birds were like during the initial stages of their evolutionary history.”

While the fossil is colloquially known as the Wonderchicken, the researchers have given it the slightly more elegant name of Asteriornis, in reference to Asteria, the Greek Titan goddess of falling stars.

“We thought it was an appropriate name for a creature that lived just before the end-Cretaceous asteroid impact,” said co-author Dr. Daniel Ksepka. “In Greek mythology, Asteria transforms herself into a quail, and we believe Asteriornis was close to the common ancestor that today includes quails, as well as chickens and ducks.”

Dr. Ksepka considers the fossil one of the most important he has ever worked on, which is no small statement given he named the world's largest flying bird - the extinct Pelagornis sandersi - and the giant penguin Kairuku waitaki. “It was a period of great excitement for me when Dr. Field shared the news of the discovery and kindly invited me to help with the project” says Ksepka. “Every few days another bone would be isolated from the scans, and we would message one another constantly as we puzzled out what new information it provided. It was like opening a new birthday present every day to see the next scan images. This little bird is going to make a big impact on the fields of paleontology and ornithology.”

The fact that Asteriornis was found in Europe is another thing which makes it so extraordinary. “The late Cretaceous fossil record of birds from Europe is extremely sparse,” said co-author Dr John Jagt from the Natuurhistorische Museum Maastricht in the Netherlands. “The discovery of Asteriornis provides some of the first evidence that Europe was a key area in the early evolutionary history of modern birds.”

“This fossil tells us that early on, at least some modern birds were fairly small-bodied, ground-dwelling birds that lived near the seashore,” said Field. “Asteriornis now gives us a search image for future fossil discoveries — hopefully it ushers in a new era of fossil finds that help clarify how, when and where modern birds first evolved.”

The announcement of the Wonderchicken find coincides with a new exhibit, “Dawn of the Wonderchicken,” at Cambridge’s Sedgwick Museum of Earth Sciences, where visitors can learn more about Asteriornis.

Click on this link to watch a video presentation of the research finding.