Inside Modern Biotech
In 1859, Darwin predicted the fossil record would reveal creatures caught mid-evolution. Two years later, workers in a German quarry found one: feathers of a bird, teeth of a lizard. They called it Archaeopteryx. For 164 years, one question stayed unanswered: could it actually fly? In this episode, we walk through the Chicago Archaeopteryx — the 14th and smallest known specimen, acquired by the Field Museum in 2022, still encased in rock. After 1,300 hours of preparation using UV light and CT scanning, what emerged was unlike anything seen in 160 years of study. We cover the soft tissue glowing under UV. The tertial feathers that finally settled the flight debate. What the roof of the mouth tells us about how rigid dinosaur skulls became the nimble, kinetic structures of modern birds. And the finding hiding beneath it all: flight may have evolved not once, but multiple times across the dinosaur family tree. A 150-million-year-old animal. A 165-year argument. The moment science finally got a good enough look to settle it. Source: O’Connor et al., Nature, May 2025. DOI: 10.1038/s41586-025-08912-4
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