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Is it a bird? Is it a plane?! TheCrownless Send a noteboard - 29/09/2009 04:54:14 PM
No... its a fake.

Only insects have managed flight with 4 wings, the two different evolutionary chains that have managed flight in vertabrates (bats and birds) have both managed it by adaption of the forelimbs into wings. Birds dont use their legs for flying, they use them for walking, it makes no biological sense for something to use its back legs for walking, then flying, then walking again.
The example of the flying squirrel is a mammal, not a bird.

Logically I just cant see something using two sets of "wings" to fly, its evolutionary and mechanically pointlessly complicated. Sadly it's going to be a fake, or a human error, it's sad but indicative of paleontology at the moment.
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This message last edited by TheCrownless on 29/09/2009 at 04:56:26 PM
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China finds bird-like dinosaur with four wings - 29/09/2009 06:34:36 AM 979 Views
found an article with an actual pic of the fossil - 29/09/2009 06:47:15 AM 801 Views
It's a gryphon! *NM* - 29/09/2009 02:30:21 PM 482 Views
Re: It's a gryphon! - 29/09/2009 03:57:33 PM 1034 Views
Is it a bird? Is it a plane?! - 29/09/2009 04:54:14 PM 715 Views
It's suggesting they used the rear two for lift, just little winglets. - 29/09/2009 05:09:03 PM 652 Views
How many other birds have used their legs for this? - 29/09/2009 05:37:06 PM 652 Views
Re: How many other birds have used their legs for this? - 29/09/2009 05:44:44 PM 689 Views
Oh I agree that it is a method of flying - 02/10/2009 01:39:48 AM 667 Views
There's an entire NOVA program on this discovery - 29/09/2009 06:00:59 PM 855 Views

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