Evolutionists Imagine Dinosaur Feathers
Something unlikely to appear in a dinosaurs-go-bezerk-and-eat-people movie is Psittacosaurus. The largest species is not all that impressive. There is a prairie schooner-full of specimens, including intact skeletons. Adults were bipedal like the iconic T. rex.
This particular specimen from China had an interesting fossilization characteristic. Some of its skin was turned to glass, so to speak. Instead of the usual minerals, silica found its way in. Watch how Darwin's acolytes get bizarre — and illogical — promoting dino-to-bird and also feather evolution.
Psittacosaurus specimen, Nature Communications / Maria McNamara et al. (CC BY 4.0) |
Fossil experts from University College Cork in Ireland took stunning images of Psittacosaurus skin. The dinosaurs’ belly shows patches of skin that glow orange under UV light. However, the top of this dinosaur’s tail has long fibers that many assume were feather-like bristles. So, these study authors suggest that since this dinosaur had two types of skin, perhaps the evolutionary ancestors of today’s birds did, too. Do this fossil’s details really help solve the riddle of feather evolution?
To read it all, click on "Scaly Skin on a Feathered Dinosaur?"