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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
A 5 page outline of current paleontological thought regarding the evolutionary path of birds and the question of whether or not they descended from dinosaurs. Bibliography lists four sources.
Page Count:
5 pages (~225 words per page)
File: D0_Dinobird.doc
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
the most hotly debated questions in science today. Scientists in the past have speculated that this is indeed the case and that birds actually evolved from a group of
dinosaurs referred to as theropods (Dadachanji). Mark Norell, a paleontologist at the American Museum of Natural History, in fact claims that:
Birds are more closely related to Tyrannosaurus rex than Tyrannosaurus is to almost any dinosaur youve ever heard of.(Lemoncik).
Just as in the quest to find the origin of man and to determine his evolutionary path, there
has been the same quest for birds and the same problem of a "missing link" which had sufficient intermediate characteristics between a dinosaur and a bird to effectively demonstrate that
the two are related from an evolutionary standpoint. Paleontologists are constantly looking for new evidence to prove, or to disprove, the evolutionary path of birds and their relationship to
the dinosaurs. Fossil beds have recently been unearthed which could eventually provide a definitive answer to this quandary. These include beds located in the Gobi Desert, and those
in the mountains of China, at the margin of the Andes Mountains in Argentina, and in the sweltering jungles of Laos and Thailand (Lemonick). The pace in paleontology is
frantically fast despite the fact that their are only about one-hundred dinosaur specialist worldwide and little research funds with which to work (Lemonick). It is reported that a new
dinosaur species is identified approximately every six weeks (Lemonick). This makes information change very quickly and keeps the scientific community hopping trying to keep up with the new discoveries
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