Bird Extinction Timeline

Are There Bird Fossils? Evidence, Types, and Where to Find Them

Fossil slab showing an Archaeopteryx specimen preserved in rock

Yes, bird fossils absolutely exist, and there are more kinds than most people expect. Scientists have found bird bones, feather impressions, carbonized soft-tissue films, footprints, and even whole bird body parts preserved in amber. The record is thinner than it is for, say, dinosaurs or marine reptiles, but it is rich enough to trace bird evolution from feathered dinosaur ancestors in the Jurassic all the way to the subfossil bones of the dodo, which was still alive just a few centuries ago.

What counts as a bird fossil

Small fossilized bird-like bones beside fossil footprints and drag marks in pale sediment.

The word fossil covers more ground than most people realize, and that matters a lot for birds. There are two main categories: body fossils and trace fossils. Body fossils are physical remains of the animal itself, which for birds usually means bones or teeth (some early birds had teeth). Trace fossils are the indirect evidence an animal left behind, such as footprints, track ways, and burrow impressions. Birds leave both.

Beyond those two basic buckets, birds also show up in a third category: impressions and compressions. When a bird's body was buried rapidly in fine-grained sediment, pressure and chemical changes could carbonize soft tissues and leave behind a thin film of the original material. This is how we get feather impressions. In exceptional cases, carbonization captures enough detail to see individual feather barbs and even color-producing structures called melanosomes, which are tiny organelles that researchers can study under high-powered imaging to reconstruct what color the bird's feathers actually were.

The rarest and most spectacular preservation happens in amber. Burmese amber from Myanmar's Hukawng Valley has produced actual bird wings and feathered body parts from around 99 million years ago, with feather structure so well preserved that researchers used X-ray imaging to confirm the specimens belong to enantiornithines, an entire extinct lineage of birds that shared the Cretaceous world with dinosaurs.

Fossil TypeWhat It PreservesHow Common for Birds
Body fossil (bones)Skeleton, skull, furcula (wishbone)Uncommon but found at key sites
Impression / compressionFeather outlines, skin, soft-tissue filmsRare; requires rapid burial in fine sediment
Carbonized filmFeather barbs, feather microstructureVery rare; exceptional deposits only
Trace fossil (footprints)Behavior, gait, foot anatomyOccasional; found in lakeside and mudflat deposits
Amber inclusionFeathers, wing segments, full body partsExtremely rare; limited to amber-producing regions

Why bird fossils are genuinely hard to find

The honest answer is that birds are biologically bad candidates for fossilization. Their skeletons are lightweight by design, with hollow, thin-walled bones that are an evolutionary adaptation for flight. That same lightness means less bone mass to survive burial, decay, and millions of years of geological change. When a bird dies in the open, those delicate bones scatter, dry out, and break down quickly. Scavengers and insects accelerate the process. Unless conditions are just right, there is simply nothing left to fossilize.

There is also a preservation bias problem. A bird's body needs to be transported to a depositional environment, such as the bottom of a calm lake or a lagoon, and buried fast enough to outrace decomposition. Most birds die in places where that never happens. The ones we do find in the fossil record are almost certainly a wildly unrepresentative sample of the birds that were actually alive at any given time in history. Researchers studying the completeness of the Mesozoic bird fossil record have documented how taphonomic and sampling bias affects which groups we even know about, which complicates attempts to draw a full picture of early avian evolution.

Feathers add another layer of difficulty. Keratin, the protein that feathers are made of, is more durable than many soft tissues but still degrades readily under natural conditions. Experiments on feather breakdown show that normal decay processes can destroy keratin's chemical signature before burial even begins. Even when feather impressions survive, diagenetic changes, meaning chemical transformations during fossilization, can alter melanosome structure and make color reconstruction tricky. Scientists now use taphonomic experiments and synchrotron chemical imaging to test whether what they are seeing is genuine biological signal or an artifact of preservation chemistry.

Famous examples: early birds and iconic extinct species

Archaeopteryx: the classic transitional fossil

Close-up of an Archaeopteryx fossil in a museum case showing feather and skeletal details

No discussion of bird fossils starts anywhere other than Archaeopteryx. If you are wondering is the erosion bird extinct, the answer depends on how and where the species was last documented and evaluated by researchers. Found in the Late Jurassic Solnhofen limestone of Bavaria, Germany, the most famous specimen (now in London) was unearthed in 1861 near Langenaltheim. Solnhofen is a Konservat-Lagerstätte, meaning a deposit so exceptional it preserves soft tissues that would normally vanish. That is why we know Archaeopteryx had feathers: the fine-grained limestone captured feather impressions in extraordinary detail. More recently, synchrotron X-ray fluorescence imaging revealed that Archaeopteryx feather material has a distinct chemical signature compared to the surrounding rock, confirming that what we are seeing is remnant feather body fossil material, not just a surface impression. Archaeopteryx sits at one of the most important junctions in the bird evolution timeline, a creature with bird-like feathers but also teeth and a bony tail, which made it a landmark in understanding how dinosaurs and birds are connected.

The Jehol Biota: early Cretaceous birds in abundance

If Solnhofen gives us the single most famous bird fossil, China's Jehol Biota gives us the richest Mesozoic bird collection in the world. Preserved in the Yixian and Jiufotang formations of western Liaoning (roughly 130 to 120 million years old), the Jehol deposits capture an entire Lower Cretaceous ecosystem in extraordinary detail. Volcanic pyroclastic flows are thought to be responsible for the rapid burial and exceptional soft-tissue preservation that defines the Jehol Biota. Dozens of bird species are known from here, alongside the feathered non-avian dinosaurs that help fill in the evolutionary story connecting theropods to modern birds.

Amber windows into Cretaceous birds

Macro close-up of glowing amber revealing preserved Cretaceous feather-like material inside.

Burmese amber from approximately 99 million years ago has produced some of the most visually striking bird fossils ever found. Researchers have identified wing sections and even baby bird specimens with feather patterns that resemble modern birds, all confirmed via X-ray analysis as belonging to enantiornithines. The detail preserved in amber is extraordinary because the resin encased the material before decay could set in, locking in feather geometry at a nanoscale level that allows direct study of structural coloration.

Iconic extinct birds: dodo, moa, and subfossils

Not all bird fossils come from the deep Mesozoic. Some of the most important and accessible examples are subfossils, meaning bones that have not fully mineralized because they are geologically recent. The dodo is the best-known case. Subfossil dodo bones have been recovered from Mauritius, particularly from a swamp site called Mare aux Songes, where ongoing excavations continue to produce new material. These bones are recent enough to also yield ancient DNA in some cases. Similarly, the giant moa of New Zealand is known from subfossil bones, eggs, and even preserved feathers and soft tissue fragments in dry cave deposits, giving researchers a far more complete picture of a bird that went extinct only around 600 years ago.

Where to look in the fossil record

Bird fossils cluster in a handful of exceptional preservation settings worldwide. The Late Jurassic Solnhofen limestone in Germany is the oldest of the major sites and produced Archaeopteryx. The Lower Cretaceous Jehol Biota in China is the richest Mesozoic bird locality. Burmese amber from Myanmar spans the mid-Cretaceous at around 99 million years ago. In the United States, Florissant Fossil Beds National Monument in Colorado has produced Eocene-era feather impressions, though vertebrate fossils there are described as rare because the environmental conditions were not ideal for preserving bird remains even when the site was otherwise exceptional.

  • Solnhofen Limestone, Bavaria, Germany (Late Jurassic, ~150 million years): Archaeopteryx and other Tithonian fauna
  • Jehol Biota, Liaoning Province, China (Early Cretaceous, ~130–120 million years): dozens of bird and feathered dinosaur species with soft-tissue preservation
  • Burmese Amber, Hukawng Valley, Myanmar (mid-Cretaceous, ~99 million years): enantiornithine wings, feathers, and body parts preserved in resin
  • Florissant Fossil Beds NM, Colorado, USA (Eocene, ~34 million years): occasional feather impressions via carbonization
  • Mare aux Songes, Mauritius (Holocene/sub-Recent): dodo subfossil bones
  • New Zealand cave deposits (Holocene/sub-Recent): moa bones, feathers, and soft tissue fragments

The pattern across these sites is consistent: exceptional bird fossil preservation requires either extremely fine-grained, anoxic (low-oxygen) sediments that slow decay and allow carbonization, resin entrapment as in amber, or dry cave environments where desiccation does the preserving. Ordinary burial in typical soils or river sediment is almost never enough to save bird material.

How scientists confirm a fossil is a bird

Close-up of a fossil on a worktable with a simple outline and arrows highlighting bird-like skeletal areas.

This is where paleontology gets genuinely interesting. You cannot just look at a feather impression and call it a bird, because non-avian dinosaurs also had feathers. Identification relies on a combination of skeletal anatomy and, where available, soft-part evidence. Some online discussions even question whether specific claims about a bird named “Zaza” are real, but those stories are not supported by established paleontology or fossil evidence Zaza bird claims.

The single most diagnostic skeletal feature is the furcula, or wishbone. The furcula is a fused collarbone structure that appears in birds and also in some close theropod dinosaur relatives, and tracking its presence and form across fossils has been central to understanding the theropod-to-bird transition. Other anatomical markers include features of the shoulder girdle, the reduced bony tail (compared to non-avian dinosaurs), and the structure of the foot and hand digits. For early birds, the presence of teeth does not disqualify a specimen since some early birds had teeth, while modern birds do not.

When soft tissue evidence is present, researchers use imaging and chemistry rather than just visual inspection. Synchrotron X-ray fluorescence (SRS-XRF) mapping, the technique used on Archaeopteryx, can detect chemical differences between feather remnants and the surrounding rock matrix, confirming that a feature is biological rather than a geological artifact. For feather color, scientists look for preserved melanosomes and compare their geometry and chemical composition against reference data from modern birds, while running taphonomic experiments to account for diagenetic alteration. Structural coloration in fossil feathers has even been demonstrated by connecting fossil nanostructures to known pigment patterns in living birds.

What fossil evidence tells us about extinction and flightless birds

The bird fossil record does not just answer evolutionary questions. It has direct relevance to understanding extinction and the history of flightless birds, which is central to much of what this site covers.

After the Cretaceous-Paleogene (K-Pg) mass extinction 66 million years ago, which wiped out the non-avian dinosaurs and the enantiornithines, early Paleocene fossils show that crown-group birds (the ancestors of all living birds) diversified rapidly. The transition from a world dominated by Mesozoic bird lineages to a world dominated by the ancestors of modern birds was fast by geological standards, and fossils from the early Paleocene document that rapid radiation.

For flightless birds, the fossil and genomic record together reveal a striking pattern: flight has been lost independently many times across bird lineages. Phylogenomic studies combining fossil-based timing constraints with genomic data support multiple independent flight losses in ratites (the group that includes ostriches, emus, kiwi, cassowaries, and moa). This means flightlessness is not a single ancestral condition but a repeated evolutionary response to particular ecological circumstances, usually island or isolated-continent environments where the pressures that keep birds in the air simply are not there.

Anthropogenic extinctions have actually obscured how widespread the evolution of flightlessness was. Research argues that human-driven losses of flightless species since the Holocene have removed a disproportionate slice of avian diversity, making the fossil and subfossil record for groups like moa, dodo, and others even more important as a baseline. By lining up those human-driven losses with the known fossil and subfossil dates, researchers build a bird extinction timeline for the last few millennia since the Holocene. Without subfossils, we would have almost no evidence that many of these lineages existed at all.

The kiwi is a sharp illustration of this problem. Kiwi have almost no pre-Quaternary fossil record, which makes reconstructing their deep evolutionary history extremely difficult using palaeontology alone. Researchers have had to turn to genome-wide data to infer demographic and evolutionary history going back roughly a million years, and conservation managers work with that uncertainty baked in. The cassowary faces similar challenges: a sparse fossil record means conservation decisions rely heavily on what we can observe in living populations rather than deep-time baselines.

This is exactly why integrating palaeontology with modern conservation is an active and growing research field. Fossil and subfossil evidence provides a deeper-time baseline for what bird diversity and distribution actually looked like before human impacts began, which is essential for setting realistic conservation targets. For endangered birds like the kiwi and cassowary, that baseline matters even when the fossils are frustratingly incomplete. The bird fossil record, fragmentary as it is, remains one of the most important tools we have for understanding where birds came from and what we stand to lose. If you are troubleshooting why a fossilized bird is not working in Cobblemon, a good place to start is checking which fossilized bird assets and item rules your setup actually loads.

FAQ

Can we get DNA from bird fossils?

Yes, but it is unusual for a bird fossil to preserve DNA. Subfossils from the last few thousand to tens of thousands of years (for example, some dodo bones and other very recent deposits) have the best chance of yielding DNA, while deep-time Mesozoic fossils typically cannot retain it. When DNA is found, it is often fragmented and requires specialized contamination-controlled lab work.

If a fossil has feathers, does it automatically mean it is a bird?

Not necessarily. Many “bird-like” features can occur in non-avian dinosaurs, so experts rely on multiple anatomical signals, not just the presence of feathers. A classic diagnostic clue is the furcula (wishbone), along with shoulder-girdle structure, toe and hand digit anatomy, and (when present) soft-part evidence that matches feather-producing biology.

How can scientists tell whether bird footprints are truly from birds?

You can, but identification is still tricky. Trace fossils like footprints can indicate a bird-like gait, but the maker could be a non-avian dinosaur or a true bird, and track preservation can distort size and toe counts. Researchers often compare trackway measurements (stride, pace angulation, digit proportions) against both modern bird track parameters and the broader non-avian dinosaur footprint record.

Why are feather colors sometimes uncertain in bird fossils?

Not always. A fossil can show feathers or soft-part remains without showing coloration, because color reconstruction depends on well-preserved pigment structures and careful testing for chemical alteration. Even when melanosomes are present, diagenesis can change their appearance, so scientists usually corroborate color interpretations with multiple imaging and chemistry checks.

What conditions make bird feathers more likely to fossilize?

Look for the preservation setting, not the species name on a label. Feathers tend to be preserved best in fine-grained, rapid burial conditions that support carbonization, or in rare contexts like amber resin encapsulation or dry cave desiccation. If the deposit is coarse-grained, oxygen-rich, or slow-burial, even a promising locality may yield mostly bones (or none) for birds.

What is a common mistake people make when interpreting bird fossil photos?

In many collections and museum displays, the specimen age and the deposit context can matter as much as the fossil itself. Without knowing whether the material is body fossil, compression, impression, or trace, it is easy to misinterpret what you are seeing. If you are evaluating a claim, check whether the original description explains the taphonomic pathway and the diagnostic characters used for classification.

How can I assess whether a bird fossil identification seems reliable?

If a specimen is labeled “bird,” it should still have a taxonomic basis, but misidentifications do happen when evidence is incomplete. A good decision aid is to ask whether the furcula and other skeletal markers are reported, whether imaging supports biological tissue versus rock artifacts, and whether the conclusion relies on a single line of evidence (like shape alone) rather than multiple corroborations.

Are there risks of contamination when testing subfossil bird material?

Sometimes. Subfossils can be contaminated by modern DNA or microbial processes, and that can mislead analyses if the workflow is not strict. Researchers mitigate this by using negative controls, sequencing approaches designed for degraded ancient material, and comparing results across labs when feasible.

Can fossils prove a bird was flightless?

Yes, flightlessness can be inferred from fossils, but it is not proven by one trait. A robust argument usually combines skeletal proportions and wing and pectoral anatomy, plus context like island-related ecology when available. The article’s broader point holds here: flightlessness evolved multiple times, so the evolutionary pathway matters, not just whether wings are reduced.

Citations

  1. Birds (as well as birdlike dinosaurs/avian dinosaurs) leave fossil evidence such as body fossils (bones) and, in some exceptional deposits, soft-part evidence like feather impressions and carbonaceous films.

    https://education.nationalgeographic.org/resource/fossil/

  2. The U.S. National Park Service notes that impressions/compressions can preserve soft parts (including feathers and skin), which is crucial for bird fossils in exceptional preservation settings.

    https://home.nps.gov/articles/000/impressions-and-compressions.htm

  3. Exceptional fossil preservation around birds/dinosaur feathered ancestors is documented by major Lagerstätten such as the Jehol Biota, which includes fossils with preserved soft tissues across birds and non-avian dinosaurs.

    https://www.nature.com/articles/nature01420

  4. In the Jehol Biota, researchers have specifically studied avian and non-avian dinosaur specimens from multiple fossiliferous localities as part of work on why preservation is exceptional (e.g., including bird specimens).

    https://www.nature.com/articles/ncomms4151

  5. Early bird transition examples include Archaeopteryx, described as a “feathered dinosaur” from Late Jurassic strata and treated as a key transitional fossil historically.

    https://www.smithsonianmag.com/science-nature/150-years-of-archaeopteryx-94931659/

  6. Modern imaging/chemistry work demonstrates that Archaeopteryx feather material can preserve more than a simple surface impression (e.g., using synchrotron X-ray fluorescence to detect chemical differences between feather remnants and rock matrix).

    https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC2889062/

  7. For beginners: fossils are commonly taught as “body fossils” (e.g., bones and shells) versus “trace fossils” (e.g., footprints, tracks).

    https://education.nationalgeographic.org/resource/fossil/

  8. For beginners: trace fossils are explicitly defined as the imprint left after an organism’s activity (e.g., footprints/tracks), i.e., indirect evidence rather than body remains.

    https://www.nps.gov/dena/learn/nature/trace-fossils.htm

  9. For bird-fossil identification categories, impressions/compressions (often carbonized films) preserve soft parts such as feathers and can show fine detail of feather-bearing regions.

    https://home.nps.gov/articles/000/impressions-and-compressions.htm

  10. NPS notes feather preservation can occur via carbonization: a bird’s feathers were carbonized after it drowned and then was rapidly buried (example from Florissant).

    https://www.nps.gov/flfo/learn/nature/fossil-vertebrates.htm

  11. For specialists: feather-based evidence commonly relies on microstructure/preservation types—e.g., melanosomes (pigment-bearing organelles) can be preserved and used for feather color in exceptionally preserved fossils.

    https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC4611652/

  12. For specialists: anatomical diagnostic traits used to place fossils as avian/avian-grade include elements like the furcula (wishbone), which is a key structure in birds (and also in some close theropod relatives).

    https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/19206153/

  13. A common bias problem is that fossilization likelihood varies strongly by tissue type; NPS notes that birds/vertebrates are rarer in some settings because preservation requires conditions that allow bodies to be transported to the right depositional environment and preserved rather than decomposed/scavenged.

    https://www.nps.gov/flfo/learn/nature/fossil-vertebrates.htm

  14. Bird bones are lightweight; the literature discusses how bird skeletons are structurally lightweight (an adaptation), which can affect how much bone mass/tissue survives and therefore how common bird skeletal fossils can be.

    https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC2880151/

  15. Keratin is durable relative to many soft tissues but still degrades; experiments on feather degradation emphasize that natural processes can destroy keratin signals before fossilization, limiting feather fossil frequency.

    https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC4934732/

  16. Diagenetic/thermal alteration can affect how fossil feather pigments (e.g., melanin/melanosomes) are preserved and therefore can be hard to interpret; chemical/taphonomic models are needed for reliable identification.

    https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC10558522/

  17. Evidence/interpretation of feather preservation also depends on the feather’s color-organelle preservation pathways; this is why taphonomic testing is emphasized in fossil feather color reconstructions.

    https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC3645052/

  18. The completeness of the Mesozoic bird fossil record is affected by taphonomic/sampling bias; older and younger groups may be unequally represented, altering what we can infer about early avian evolution.

    https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC3382576/

  19. Flagship early-bird example: Archaeopteryx is from the Late Jurassic Solnhofen limestone; Britannica describes Solnhofen as containing exceptionally preserved fossils from the Tithonian age and notes Archaeopteryx as the most famous fossil from Solnhofen.

    https://www.britannica.com/science/Solnhofen-Limestone

  20. Flagship early-bird example (location/provenance): Archaeopteryx’s London specimen (BMNH 37001) was unearthed in 1861 near Langenaltheim, Germany (Solnhofen area).

    https://www2.geo.utexas.edu/specimens/Archaeopteryx_lithographica/

  21. Flagship early-bird transition evidence: Jehol Biota deposits (Yixian/Jiufotang) preserve diverse feathered dinosaurs and early birds (supports the broader bird-dinosaur relationship via multiple fossil lines).

    https://www.nature.com/articles/nature01420

  22. Flagship Mesozoic feathered-avian evidence beyond compression fossils: Burmese amber has produced bird/avian-dinosaur wing and feather inclusions; National Geographic reports rare ~100-million-year-old wing material from Myanmar that is attributed to enantiornithines.

    https://www.nationalgeographic.com/science/article/dinosaur-era-bird-amber-fossils-paleontology-science

  23. Flagship Mesozoic bird example tied to amber evidence: PBS News describes two ~99-million-year-old baby bird specimens in amber and notes feather patterns that resemble modern birds, plus x-ray confirmation they belong to enantiornithines.

    https://www.pbs.org/newshour/science/amber-fossils-tell-99-million-year-old-story-of-odd-baby-birds

  24. Iconic extinct flightless birds (dodo): the dodo’s subfossil bones were found in Mauritius in the swamp/area “Mare aux Songes”; a source documents abundance discovered after searches and excavations there.

    https://phys.org/news/2005-12-sensational-discovery-dodo-bones-mauritius.html

  25. Best-known Mesozoic avian evidence regions include Solnhofen (Germany), described as a Tithonian-age Jurassic Konservat-Lagerstätte famous for exceptionally preserved fossils including Archaeopteryx.

    https://www.britannica.com/science/Solnhofen-Limestone

  26. Jehol Biota is a major early Cretaceous Lagerstätte (western Liaoning and surrounding areas in China) yielding numerous bird and feathered dinosaur fossils with soft-tissue preservation.

    https://www.nature.com/articles/ncomms4151

  27. Jehol Biota is also described as a key exceptional ecosystem including birds and non-avian dinosaurs, with radiometrically dated horizons reported in Nature’s overview paper.

    https://www.nature.com/articles/nature01420

  28. A Cenozoic example of bird fossil preservation settings in the U.S. is Florissant Fossil Beds NM, where feather impressions can occur even though vertebrate fossils are described as rare due to environmental/preservation constraints.

    https://www.nps.gov/flfo/learn/nature/fossil-vertebrates.htm

  29. Burmese amber is another globally cited preservation setting for birdlike/avian-dinosaur feathers and body parts because it can preserve fine feather structures inside resin; National Geographic reports a collection from northern Myanmar’s Hukawng Valley.

    https://www.nationalgeographic.com/science/article/dinosaurs-birds-trapped-amber-fossils-paleontology-science

  30. Scientists confirm avian/avian-related identity by combining skeletal anatomy with soft-part evidence when available; for example, feather/shoulder/wing evidence is central in fossils like Archaeopteryx, while for other fossils anatomical elements (e.g., furcula) help diagnose bird ancestry.

    https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC2889062/

  31. For avian/theropod linkage, the furcula (wishbone) is highlighted as a structure important for understanding bird-and-theropod links and appears early in theropod history in the literature.

    https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/19206153/

  32. Fossil feather coloration studies emphasize that interpretation can depend on preserved melanosome geometry and chemistry, and that diagenesis must be considered; taphonomic models and experiments are used to test what signals survive.

    https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC4611652/

  33. Imaging/tech: synchrotron chemical imaging (SRS-XRF) has been used on Archaeopteryx to test whether feather features are impressions vs remnant body fossil structures, illustrating tool-based confirmation beyond “looks like a feather.”

    https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC2889062/

  34. Feather microstructure/color evidence can also involve looking for preserved nanoscale structures; structural coloration in fossil feathers has been demonstrated via studies connecting fossil feather structures to pigment nanostructures.

    https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/19710052/

  35. Flightlessness evolution is documented as having many independent losses of flight; phylogenomics supports multiple independent flight losses across bird families and implies repeated evolutionary transitions.

    https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC2533212/

  36. Human-driven (recent) extinctions can conceal the broader fossil/evolutionary record of flightlessness; one paper argues anthropogenic extinctions mask widespread evolution of flightlessness in birds by increasing bias in what survives/gets sampled.

    https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC7710364/

  37. Cretaceous–Paleogene context: fossils in the Paleocene show rapid diversification of crown-group birds after the K–Pg mass extinction, with evidence based on early Paleocene landbird fossils.

    https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC5544281/

  38. Ratite flightlessness timing/evolution is supported by molecular phylogenies and fossils where available; time trees combine palaeontological constraints with genomic information (difficulty noted due to sparse fossils for some lineages).

    https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC2533212/

  39. Kiwi deep-time evolutionary history is hard to resolve from fossils alone (few pre-Quaternary fossils), so conservation genetics/phylogeography often uses genomic data to infer deep-time relationships relevant to management.

    https://savethekiwi.nz/about-kiwi/kiwi-facts/how-kiwi-evolved/

  40. A conservation-genomics paper on kiwi notes the lack of pre-Quaternary fossils obscures deep evolutionary relationships and uses genome-wide data to infer deep-time history up to ~1 Ma demographic trends (relevant to conservation narratives).

    https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC9550048/

  41. A research direction in conservation paleobiology explicitly targets integrating deep-time palaeontology with modern conservation prioritization (a credible linkage used by researchers).

    https://www.frontiersin.org/journals/ecology-and-evolution/articles/10.3389/fevo.2022.959364/pdf

  42. Example of an actionable conservation-research document for kiwi: NZ DOC provides management/translocation material and includes statements that fossil record of kiwi distribution has limitations, showing how uncertainty around fossils is handled in conservation practice.

    https://www.doc.govt.nz/globalassets/documents/conservation/land-and-freshwater/land/translocation-of-great-spotted-kiwi.pdf

  43. (Coverage note) Several major beginner-to-specialist categories for bird fossil evidence and identification are explicitly described by teaching/overview sources (body fossils vs trace fossils; impressions/compressions; carbonization).

    https://education.nationalgeographic.org/resource/fossil/

  44. (Coverage note) The best-evidenced early-to-mid Mesozoic bird fossil record relies heavily on exceptional preservation contexts (e.g., Solnhofen, Jehol Biota, and sometimes amber).

    https://www.nature.com/articles/nature01420

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