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Archaeopteryx Fossil Reveals Bird-Like Mouth Features Linked to Flight Demands

A peer-reviewed study of the Field Museum’s Chicago specimen identifies mouth structures found in living birds.

Overview

  • The Innovation published the findings on February 2, 2026, based on the Chicago Archaeopteryx, first described in 2025 and currently on display at the Field Museum.
  • Meticulous preparation led by chief preparator Akiko Shinya used ultraviolet checks to safeguard soft tissues, with unusual traces flagged to lead author Jingmai O’Connor.
  • The team documents oral papillae on the palate, marking the first confirmed examples of these fleshy structures in the fossil record.
  • A tiny hyoid fragment indicates a highly mobile tongue, while CT scans reveal nerve canals at the beak tip consistent with a sensory bill-tip organ.
  • The authors argue these mouth traits represent feeding specializations tied to the high energy costs of flight and offer new criteria for distinguishing early birds from closely related feathered dinosaurs.