Flight Loss, Underdetermination, and the Origin of Birds: A Case Study of the Oviraptorosauria

£70.95

Available for Pre-order. Due August 2026.

Flight Loss, Underdetermination, and the Origin of Birds: A Case Study of the Oviraptorosauria Authors: , Format: Hardback First Published: Published By: Cambridge Scholars Publishing
string(3) "293"
Pages: 293 Language: English ISBN: 9781036476168 Categories: , , , ,

What if fossils of “feathered theropod dinosaurs” are instead misidentified secondarily flightless birds? Flight loss induces anatomical transformations that make bird species appear misleadingly primitive while obscuring their true evolutionary relationships. What would this imply for the popular consensus that birds are simply living dinosaurs? We explore a well-documented group with unambiguous feathers, the Oviraptorosauria, in an empirical case study of this problem using a skeptical theoretical and methodological framework. Our study emphasizes how conflicting data are mutually consistent with, and therefore underdetermine, alternative hypotheses for the origin and early evolution of birds. This work is intended to engage a wide range of researchers in evolutionary biology and the history and philosophy of the sciences, and addresses issues intersecting all these disciplines. In adopting a wider perspective for insights into the origin and early evolution of birds, we hope to stimulate multidisciplinary investigation of this complex problem in evolutionary history.

Weight0.478484 kg
Author

,

Editor
Photographer
Format

Illustrators
Publisher

Reviews

There are no reviews yet.

Only logged in customers who have purchased this product may leave a review.

Author Biography

John A. Pourtless IV is an independent scholar with research interests in philosophy and the biological sciences. His previous work on the origin and early evolution of birds has appeared in Ornithological Monographs (with Frances C. James) and Biology and Philosophy. Alan Feduccia is an evolutionary biologist and S. K. Heninger Distinguished Professor Emeritus at the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, USA. He has authored eight books, including The Age of Birds (1980), The Origin and Evolution of Birds (1996, 1999), Riddle of the Feathered Dragons (2012), and Romancing the Birds and Dinosaurs (2020), as well as numerous research papers on the origin and evolution of birds.