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Ichthyornis dispar
Cretaceous Piscivore

Fish Bird

Ichthyornis dispar

"Different fish-bird"

Period
Cretaceous · Coniaciano-Campaniano
Lived
95–83 Ma
Length
up to 0.6 m
Estimated weight
0.6 kg
Country of origin
Estados Unidos
Described in
1872 by Othniel Charles Marsh, American Journal of Science

Ichthyornis dispar was a Late Cretaceous seabird that lived on the coasts and islands of the Western Interior Seaway, the vast epicontinental sea that split North America in two between 95 and 83 million years ago. About 60 centimeters long and roughly the weight of a large modern gull, it had fully modern wings, a keeled sternum anchoring robust pectoral muscles, and active flight capability. Yet it retained a striking ancestral trait: small, sharp teeth in its jaws, adapted to grip slippery fish. Described by Othniel Charles Marsh in 1872, it was presented as living proof of Darwinian theory, just thirteen years after the publication of On the Origin of Species. It disappeared in the K-Pg extinction.

The Niobrara Formation, specifically the Smoky Hill Chalk Member, is a Cretaceous limestone succession deposited in the Late Cretaceous Western Interior Seaway, between roughly 87 and 82 million years ago (Coniacian-Campanian). Located mainly in Kansas and adjacent states (Nebraska, Colorado, South Dakota), the formation preserves chalk layers formed by accumulation of calcareous plankton in a warm, shallow sea. The fauna includes giant mosasaurs, plesiosaurs, Archelon sea turtles, Xiphactinus and Bonnerichthys fish, and the toothed birds Ichthyornis and Hesperornis. It is a classic locality of American paleontology and the basis of the historic expeditions of Edward Drinker Cope and Othniel Charles Marsh during the Bone Wars.

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Habitat

Ichthyornis dispar lived on the coasts, islands, and open seas of the Western Interior Seaway, the vast epicontinental sea that divided North America into two landmasses (Laramidia to the west, Appalachia to the east) between 100 and 66 million years ago. The waters were warm and shallow, with surface temperatures around 30 degrees Celsius. The Niobrara Formation, the main fossil site of the taxon, records a marine ecosystem with mosasaurs, plesiosaurs, Archelon turtles, Xiphactinus fish, and the diving bird Hesperornis.

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Feeding

It was a specialized piscivore, feeding on small to medium pelagic fish caught in shallow dives or surface fishing, like modern gulls. Small, sharp teeth, distributed on the maxilla and dentary (but absent in the already beak-shaped premaxilla, according to Field et al. 2018), were adapted to grip slippery prey until swallowing. Total dependence on pelagic fish schools of the Western Interior Seaway made the taxon vulnerable to the ecological collapse of the K-Pg impact.

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Behavior and senses

Active flyer with a lifestyle similar to modern gulls, alternating gliding flight over water, shallow dives to catch fish, and resting on coastal islands. The wings had remige feather asymmetry typical of modern flying birds, and the robust keeled sternum supported powerful pectoral musculature. It probably nested in colonies on low islands, though no nesting site has been discovered to date. It may have undertaken seasonal migrations along the Western Interior Seaway.

Physiology and growth

Endothermic, with high metabolism typical of modern flying birds. It had fully modern wings with asymmetric remige feathers, Y-shaped furcula, robust keeled sternum, and pneumatic bones to reduce body weight. It retained, however, the ancestral character of small teeth in the maxilla and dentary, with wave-like dental replacement similar to other archosaurs. Neurocranium reconstruction by Torres et al. (2021) shows a brain with proportionally more developed olfaction than modern crown birds.

Continental configuration

Mapa paleogeográfico do Cretáceous (~90 Ma)

Ron Blakey · CC BY 3.0 · Cretáceous, ~90 Ma

Fóssil sites

Size comparison of Ichthyornis dispar with a human silhouette. Fossils were found in the Niobrara Formation, Kansas, deposited in the Western Interior Seaway of the Late Cretaceous.

Matt Martyniuk (Dinoguy2), CC BY-SA 3.0

During the Coniaciano-Campaniano (~95–83 Ma), Ichthyornis dispar inhabited Laramidia, the western half of present-day North America, separated from the east by the Western Interior Seaway, a shallow sea dividing the continent. The continents were in very different positions: India was drifting toward Asia, Antarctica was still connected to Australia, and South America was an isolated island.

Estimated completeness 75%

Several excellent specimens contribute to high collective completeness. Yale Peabody fossils (over 80 individuals catalogued by Clarke 2004) cover the entire postcranial skeleton, and the three-dimensional skull described by Field et al. (2018) filled the last major anatomical gap. Feathers, soft tissues, and coloration were not preserved.

Found (15)
Inferred (3)
Esqueleto de dinossauro — theropod
Marsh, O.C. (1880), Odontornithes, Plate XXVI Domínio público

Found elements

skulllower_jawvertebraeribshumerusradiusulnahandfemurtibiafibulapelvisscapulasternumfurcula

Inferred elements

soft_tissuecomplete_skinfeathers

15 papers in chronological order — from the original description to recent research.

1872

Notice of a new and remarkable fossil bird

Marsh, O.C. · American Journal of Science, ser. 3, vol. 4: 344

Marsh formally names Ichthyornis dispar based on material collected by Benjamin Franklin Mudge in Kansas. Marsh initially interpreted some isolated fragments as belonging to a distinct reptile due to the archaic toothed jaw, only realizing weeks later that the bones formed part of the same bird skeleton. The note is brief, but marks the beginning of Mesozoic bird studies in North America and paves the way for the 1880 monograph. The name Ichthyornis means fish bird, referring to the amphicoelous vertebrae resembling those of fish.

Historical illustration of Ichthyornis dispar published in Popular Science Monthly (vol. 10, 1876), a few years after Marsh's original description in 1872. Shows the Victorian interpretation of the animal as a toothed seabird.

Historical illustration of Ichthyornis dispar published in Popular Science Monthly (vol. 10, 1876), a few years after Marsh's original description in 1872. Shows the Victorian interpretation of the animal as a toothed seabird.

Othniel Charles Marsh, Yale paleontologist, original describer of Ichthyornis dispar in 1872. He was a central figure in the Bone Wars with Edward Drinker Cope and responsible for the Odontornithes (1880) monograph.

Othniel Charles Marsh, Yale paleontologist, original describer of Ichthyornis dispar in 1872. He was a central figure in the Bone Wars with Edward Drinker Cope and responsible for the Odontornithes (1880) monograph.

1873

On a new sub-class of fossil birds (Odontornithes)

Marsh, O.C. · American Journal of Science, ser. 3, vol. 5: 161-162

After recognizing that Ichthyornis and Hesperornis preserved true teeth, Marsh erects the subclass Odontornithes to group toothed birds of the American Mesozoic. The paper positions these taxa as direct paleontological evidence for evolutionary theory, indicating a mosaic transition between dinosaurian reptiles and modern birds. Although the Odontornithes grouping is not monophyletic under modern systematics, the publication consolidated Ichthyornis's importance in the debate on the origin of birds and directly influenced the thinking of Thomas Huxley and Charles Darwin.

Diagram of the collapse of the Western Interior Seaway in the Late Cretaceous, the enclosed ecosystem where Ichthyornis and Hesperornis lived. Marsh (1873) erected the subclass Odontornithes to group the toothed birds of this environment.

Diagram of the collapse of the Western Interior Seaway in the Late Cretaceous, the enclosed ecosystem where Ichthyornis and Hesperornis lived. Marsh (1873) erected the subclass Odontornithes to group the toothed birds of this environment.

Reconstruction of Hesperornis regalis, a toothed bird grouped by Marsh with Ichthyornis in the subclass Odontornithes (1873). Comparative analysis between the two taxa was central to Marsh's argument on evolutionary transition.

Reconstruction of Hesperornis regalis, a toothed bird grouped by Marsh with Ichthyornis in the subclass Odontornithes (1873). Comparative analysis between the two taxa was central to Marsh's argument on evolutionary transition.

1880

Odontornithes: a monograph on the extinct toothed birds of North America

Marsh, O.C. · Memoirs of the Peabody Museum of Yale College / U.S. Geological Exploration of the Fortieth Parallel, vol. 7

Marsh publishes the definitive monograph on toothed Cretaceous birds of North America. The folio volume features 34 lithographed plates and bone-by-bone descriptions based on over 77 individuals of Ichthyornis and 50 of Hesperornis. This work established Ichthyornis as a gull-sized bird with modern wings, keeled sternum, and teeth in both jaws. Charles Darwin personally wrote to Marsh thanking him for the publication, describing the work as the best support for evolutionary theory produced in the previous twenty years. It remains a primary reference even after Clarke's (2004) revision.

Othniel Charles Marsh, author of the Odontornithes monograph (1880). The Yale paleontologist described Hesperornis and Ichthyornis side by side in 34 lithographed plates, based on over 77 Ichthyornis specimens collected in the Niobrara Formation.

Othniel Charles Marsh, author of the Odontornithes monograph (1880). The Yale paleontologist described Hesperornis and Ichthyornis side by side in 34 lithographed plates, based on over 77 Ichthyornis specimens collected in the Niobrara Formation.

Map of North America in the Campanian (Late Cretaceous) with the Western Interior Seaway. Marsh (1880) described Ichthyornis dispar based on 77 specimens collected in marine formations such as the Niobrara, in Kansas.

Map of North America in the Campanian (Late Cretaceous) with the Western Interior Seaway. Marsh (1880) described Ichthyornis dispar based on 77 specimens collected in marine formations such as the Niobrara, in Kansas.

1903

Notes on the osteology and relationships of the fossil birds of the genera Hesperornis, Hargeria, Baptornis, and Diatryma

Lucas, F.A. · Proceedings of the United States National Museum, vol. 26: 545-556

Lucas, then director of the US National Museum, conducts a critical revision of the osteology of North American fossil birds and contests several points of Marsh's synthesis. The paper clarifies that Hesperornis and Ichthyornis do not belong to a single natural group, anticipating by almost a century Clarke's (2004) conclusion that Odontornithes is not monophyletic. Lucas also details that the keeled sternum and Y-shaped furcula of Ichthyornis place the taxon much closer to modern birds than Hesperornis, which would have evolved diving capability secondarily.

Life restoration of Ichthyornis dispar showing gull-like posture and the characteristic toothed beak. Lucas (1903) interpreted this morphology as evidence of full adaptation to active flight, similar to modern birds.

Life restoration of Ichthyornis dispar showing gull-like posture and the characteristic toothed beak. Lucas (1903) interpreted this morphology as evidence of full adaptation to active flight, similar to modern birds.

Hesperornis regalis fossil, a close relative of Ichthyornis. Lucas (1903) compared the two lineages and demonstrated that Hesperornis was a secondarily derived diver, distinct from the flying Ichthyornis.

Hesperornis regalis fossil, a close relative of Ichthyornis. Lucas (1903) compared the two lineages and demonstrated that Hesperornis was a secondarily derived diver, distinct from the flying Ichthyornis.

1972

A new partial mandible of Ichthyornis

Gingerich, P.D. · Condor, vol. 74: 471-473

Philip Gingerich, then a young paleontologist starting the career that would make him a reference in Eocene mammals, describes a new fragment of Ichthyornis mandible. The paper details for the first time the configuration of dental alveoli and the presence of replacement teeth in development, a trait retained from the ancestral theropod body plan. The analysis supported that Ichthyornis teeth renewed in waves, as in other archosaurs, rather than being replaced individually as in mammals. The paper represents a small but important refinement between Marsh's monograph and Clarke's modern revision.

Niobrara Formation chalk outcrops at Castle Rock, Gove County, Kansas. Gingerich (1972) described Ichthyornis mandibular fragments collected in outcrops like this.

Niobrara Formation chalk outcrops at Castle Rock, Gove County, Kansas. Gingerich (1972) described Ichthyornis mandibular fragments collected in outcrops like this.

Opalized sample of the Niobrara Formation, Ellis County, Kansas. Gingerich (1972) described Ichthyornis mandibular fragments collected in outcrops like this, base of the Smoky Hill Chalk Member.

Opalized sample of the Niobrara Formation, Ellis County, Kansas. Gingerich (1972) described Ichthyornis mandibular fragments collected in outcrops like this, base of the Smoky Hill Chalk Member.

1985

The fossil record of birds

Olson, S.L. · Avian Biology, vol. 8: 79-238 (Academic Press)

Storrs Olson, of the Smithsonian, writes the greatest synthesis of the avian fossil record of the 20th century. The chapter dedicates significant space to Ichthyornis and Hesperornis, definitively separating the two lineages Marsh had grouped in Odontornithes. Olson positions Ichthyornis as a close sister taxon to crown Aves, while Hesperornithes would branch off earlier. The work lays the foundations for the modern systematics of Mesozoic birds and anticipates by almost 20 years the conclusions of Clarke (2004). It is mandatory reading to understand the evolution of paleontological thought on bird origins between 19th-century monographs and the cladistic revolution.

Life restoration of Hesperornis, a close relative of Ichthyornis. Olson (1985) separated the two lineages within Ornithurae, dissolving the monophyletic Odontornithes proposed by Marsh.

Life restoration of Hesperornis, a close relative of Ichthyornis. Olson (1985) separated the two lineages within Ornithurae, dissolving the monophyletic Odontornithes proposed by Marsh.

Skeletal replica of Ichthyornis at the Peabody Museum of Natural History, Yale. Olson (1985) used Yale Peabody material as the main reference for repositioning the taxon within Ornithurae.

Skeletal replica of Ichthyornis at the Peabody Museum of Natural History, Yale. Olson (1985) used Yale Peabody material as the main reference for repositioning the taxon within Ornithurae.

2002

Mesozoic Birds: Above the Heads of Dinosaurs

Chiappe, L.M. & Witmer, L.M. (eds.) · University of California Press, Berkeley, 536 pp.

Chiappe and Witmer edit the reference volume on Mesozoic birds. The chapter dedicated to Ornithurae details Ichthyornis's pivotal role as the immediate sister taxon to crown birds, with fully modern wings, keeled sternum, and Y-shaped furcula, but retained dentition. The book consolidates the consensus that Ichthyornis represents the most advanced evolutionary stage between avian dinosaurs and modern birds in the Cretaceous. It also serves as a bridge between 20th-century works and the definitive revision published by Clarke two years later, in 2004, remaining today the most comprehensive reference on the topic.

Hesperornis skeleton at the American Museum of Natural History. Chiappe and Witmer (2002) detail the phylogenetic relationships between Hesperornis and Ichthyornis within Ornithurae.

Hesperornis skeleton at the American Museum of Natural History. Chiappe and Witmer (2002) detail the phylogenetic relationships between Hesperornis and Ichthyornis within Ornithurae.

Hesperornis regalis in swimming posture. The Mesozoic Birds volume (Chiappe and Witmer, 2002) discusses the divergent adaptations of Hesperornis (flightless diver) and Ichthyornis (active flyer) within Ornithurae.

Hesperornis regalis in swimming posture. The Mesozoic Birds volume (Chiappe and Witmer, 2002) discusses the divergent adaptations of Hesperornis (flightless diver) and Ichthyornis (active flyer) within Ornithurae.

2004

Morphology, phylogenetic taxonomy, and systematics of Ichthyornis and Apatornis (Avialae: Ornithurae)

Clarke, J.A. · Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History, no. 286: 1-179

Julia Clarke revises in detail 81 Yale Peabody specimens of Ichthyornis and Apatornis, synthesizing 130 years of research in a 179-page monograph. Clarke concludes there is only one valid Ichthyornis species (I. dispar), rather than the eight previously proposed. Her phylogenetic analysis of 202 morphological characters and 24 taxa demonstrates that Marsh's Ichthyornithiformes is not monophyletic: I. dispar stands as the immediate sister taxon to crown Aves. The paper establishes the current consensus on the taxon's phylogenetic position and provides the comparative basis for all subsequent work, including the skull rediscovery by Field et al. (2018).

Left hindlimb of Hesperornis gracilis. Clarke (2004) revised comparative Hesperornithes material in parallel with the Ichthyornis monograph to confirm the paraphyly of Odontornithes.

Left hindlimb of Hesperornis gracilis. Clarke (2004) revised comparative Hesperornithes material in parallel with the Ichthyornis monograph to confirm the paraphyly of Odontornithes.

Type specimen of Hesperornis altus (previously Coniornis). Clarke (2004) reanalyzed Ichthyornis-correlate material in Yale Peabody, AMNH, and other museum collections in the definitive revision of the genus.

Type specimen of Hesperornis altus (previously Coniornis). Clarke (2004) reanalyzed Ichthyornis-correlate material in Yale Peabody, AMNH, and other museum collections in the definitive revision of the genus.

2011

Mass extinction of birds at the Cretaceous-Paleogene (K-Pg) boundary

Longrich, N.R., Tokaryk, T. & Field, D.J. · Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, vol. 108(37): 15253-15257

Longrich, Tokaryk, and Field analyze fossil bird remains from the latest Maastrichtian of North America and demonstrate that most lineages, including Ichthyornithes and Hesperornithes, went extinct at the K-Pg event. The paper establishes that the K-Pg was a selective evolutionary filter: only crown Aves, with toothless beaks and the ability to exploit seeds and debris in the post-impact period, survived. Ichthyornis's specialized piscivory, fully dependent on healthy marine ecosystems, helps explain why the taxon did not cross the boundary. It is mandatory reference for understanding why modern birds survived and Ichthyornis did not.

Map of North America at the end of the Cretaceous (65 Ma), at the K-Pg boundary. Longrich et al. (2011) show that the impact wiped out Ichthyornithes and Hesperornithes, leaving only crown Aves as survivors.

Map of North America at the end of the Cretaceous (65 Ma), at the K-Pg boundary. Longrich et al. (2011) show that the impact wiped out Ichthyornithes and Hesperornithes, leaving only crown Aves as survivors.

Map of the Western Interior Seaway in the Late Cretaceous. Coastal and pelagic habitat of Ichthyornis dispar. Longrich et al. (2011) link the collapse of this marine ecosystem to the taxon's extinction at the K-Pg.

Map of the Western Interior Seaway in the Late Cretaceous. Coastal and pelagic habitat of Ichthyornis dispar. Longrich et al. (2011) link the collapse of this marine ecosystem to the taxon's extinction at the K-Pg.

2017

Avian Evolution: The Fossil Record of Birds and its Paleobiological Significance

Mayr, G. · Wiley-Blackwell, Chichester, 312 pp.

Gerald Mayr, of the Senckenberg Research Institute, publishes the most up-to-date synthesis on avian evolution. The book discusses in detail Ichthyornis's pivotal role: a bird of fully developed active flight, with modern wings and keeled sternum, yet with retained dentition that evidences the mosaic character of avian body plan evolution. Mayr also explores hypotheses for why Ichthyornis is exclusive to North America: the Western Interior Seaway functioned as a closed ecosystem and the taxon would have regional ecological specialization. This work is the current reference in graduate courses on bird evolution.

Map of North America 75 Ma, with the Western Interior Seaway dividing Laramidia (west) from Appalachia (east). Mayr (2017) discusses the regional specialization of Ichthyornis dispar to this enclosed ecosystem.

Map of North America 75 Ma, with the Western Interior Seaway dividing Laramidia (west) from Appalachia (east). Mayr (2017) discusses the regional specialization of Ichthyornis dispar to this enclosed ecosystem.

Size comparison of Ichthyornis dispar with a human silhouette. Mayr (2017) discusses the regional ecological specialization of the taxon to the Western Interior Seaway of the Late Cretaceous.

Size comparison of Ichthyornis dispar with a human silhouette. Mayr (2017) discusses the regional ecological specialization of the taxon to the Western Interior Seaway of the Late Cretaceous.

2018

Complete Ichthyornis skull illuminates mosaic assembly of the avian head

Field, D.J., Hanson, M., Burnham, D., et al. · Nature, vol. 557: 96-100

Field and collaborators present the first complete three-dimensional skull of Ichthyornis dispar, scanned by high-resolution computed tomography from specimen ALMNH PV2002.0010. The paper published in Nature reveals mosaic assembly of the avian head: the premaxilla was already beak-shaped, but the rest of the skull retained a temporal region typical of non-avian theropods, with strong bite muscles. Posterior teeth were retained mainly in the maxilla and dentary. This result redefines understanding of avian beak evolution and shows that the modern beak emerged before complete tooth loss. It is the most important discovery about Ichthyornis in the 21st century.

Modern reconstruction of Ichthyornis dispar updated based on the cranial data from Field et al. (2018): beak-shaped premaxilla already present, with teeth retained in the maxilla and dentary.

Modern reconstruction of Ichthyornis dispar updated based on the cranial data from Field et al. (2018): beak-shaped premaxilla already present, with teeth retained in the maxilla and dentary.

Photograph of Othniel Charles Marsh, Yale paleontologist. Field et al. (2018) revisit Marsh's legacy by presenting for the first time the complete three-dimensional skull of Ichthyornis dispar via computed tomography in Nature.

Photograph of Othniel Charles Marsh, Yale paleontologist. Field et al. (2018) revisit Marsh's legacy by presenting for the first time the complete three-dimensional skull of Ichthyornis dispar via computed tomography in Nature.

2018

Early evolution of modern birds structured by global forest collapse at the end-Cretaceous mass extinction

Field, D.J., Bercovici, A., Berv, J.S., et al. · Current Biology, vol. 28(11): 1825-1831

Daniel Field and collaborators investigate the ecological structure of the K-Pg extinction for birds. Combining paleobotanical data (pollen and spores from the K-Pg boundary) with molecular phylogeny of crown Aves, they demonstrate that global forest destruction was the main filter: arboreal birds and pelagic fish specialists were decimated, while small ground-dwelling birds with generalist beaks survived. The paper positions Ichthyornis as a victim of the marine ecological collapse, given its total dependence on pelagic fish schools of the Western Interior Seaway. Combined with Field et al. (2018) on the skull, it closes the understanding of Ichthyornis's role in avian evolution.

Reconstruction of Ichthyornis dispar in a Late Cretaceous coastal environment. Field et al. (2018) show that specialization in pelagic fish sealed the taxon's fate in the K-Pg extinction.

Reconstruction of Ichthyornis dispar in a Late Cretaceous coastal environment. Field et al. (2018) show that specialization in pelagic fish sealed the taxon's fate in the K-Pg extinction.

Reconstruction of the mosasaur Plioplatecarpus, predator of the Western Interior Seaway. Field et al. (2018) on forest collapse show that both piscivorous birds like Ichthyornis and marine reptiles were wiped out in the K-Pg extinction.

Reconstruction of the mosasaur Plioplatecarpus, predator of the Western Interior Seaway. Field et al. (2018) on forest collapse show that both piscivorous birds like Ichthyornis and marine reptiles were wiped out in the K-Pg extinction.

2018

A new clade of basal Early Cretaceous pygostylian birds and developmental plasticity of the avian shoulder girdle

Wang, M., Stidham, T.A. & Zhou, Z. · Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, vol. 115(42): 10708-10713

Wang, Stidham, and Zhou analyze new finds from the Chinese Early Cretaceous and conduct a comprehensive phylogenetic analysis of Pygostylia. The paper places Ichthyornis as the immediate sister taxon to crown Aves, confirming the position established by Clarke (2004) and refined by Field et al. (2018). The analysis also documents developmental plasticity of the shoulder girdle in Mesozoic birds, showing that the keeled sternum configuration and Y-shaped furcula of Ichthyornis emerged by convergence or independent retention in multiple lineages. It is the most robust phylogenetic paper involving Ichthyornis in the 2010s decade.

Skeletal reconstruction of Ichthyornis dispar highlighting the Y-shaped furcula and keeled sternum, traits analyzed by Wang et al. (2018) in their comprehensive phylogeny of Pygostylia.

Skeletal reconstruction of Ichthyornis dispar highlighting the Y-shaped furcula and keeled sternum, traits analyzed by Wang et al. (2018) in their comprehensive phylogeny of Pygostylia.

Map of the Western Interior Seaway 95 Ma with Cretaceous continents. Wang et al. (2018) reposition Ichthyornis as sister-group to crown Aves, confirming the importance of the North American taxon for global avian phylogeny.

Map of the Western Interior Seaway 95 Ma with Cretaceous continents. Wang et al. (2018) reposition Ichthyornis as sister-group to crown Aves, confirming the importance of the North American taxon for global avian phylogeny.

2021

Bird neurocranial and body mass evolution across the end-Cretaceous mass extinction: the avian brain shape left other dinosaurs behind

Torres, C.R., Norell, M.A. & Clarke, J.A. · Science Advances, vol. 7(31): eabg7099

Torres, Norell, and Clarke use computed tomography to reconstruct the Ichthyornis dispar neurocranium and compare brain shape with modern birds and other dinosaurs. The paper published in Science Advances shows that the brain shape characteristic of crown birds, with expanded cerebral lobes and developed cerebellum, evolved after the K-Pg extinction. Ichthyornis preserved an intermediate configuration with a more elongated brain and a more prominent olfactory region than modern birds. The results help explain why crown birds survived the impact while Ichthyornis did not: cognitive and sensory advantage may have been a decisive factor in the K-Pg evolutionary filter.

Ichthyornis dispar skull used in computed tomography analyses by Torres et al. (2021) for three-dimensional neurocranium reconstruction and comparison with modern birds.

Ichthyornis dispar skull used in computed tomography analyses by Torres et al. (2021) for three-dimensional neurocranium reconstruction and comparison with modern birds.

Reconstruction of Megalocoelacanthus, giant coelacanth of the Western Interior Seaway. Torres et al. (2021) show that Ichthyornis dispar brain had more developed olfaction than modern birds, possibly to detect pelagic prey in turbid waters.

Reconstruction of Megalocoelacanthus, giant coelacanth of the Western Interior Seaway. Torres et al. (2021) show that Ichthyornis dispar brain had more developed olfaction than modern birds, possibly to detect pelagic prey in turbid waters.

2022

Forty new specimens of Ichthyornis provide unprecedented insight into the postcranial morphology of crownward stem group birds

Benito, J., Chen, A., Wilson, L.E., et al. · PeerJ, vol. 10: e13919

Benito and collaborators describe 40 new postcranial specimens of Ichthyornis dispar, including previously unknown pelvic and hindlimb material. The paper published in PeerJ refines the osteology of the species at an unprecedented scale since Marsh (1880) and Clarke (2004), with implications for understanding locomotion, flight, and phylogenetic position. The authors confirm that Ichthyornis dispar is the only valid species in the genus, but detect morphological variation sufficient to question whether geographically distinct populations exist. It is the most complete postcranial study of the 21st century on the taxon and updates knowledge from Clarke's monumental revision.

Reconstruction of Ptychodus mortoni, giant shark of the Western Interior Seaway contemporaneous with Ichthyornis dispar. Benito et al. (2022) reanalyze the associated fauna to understand the ecological niche of Ichthyornis in the Niobrara Formation.

Reconstruction of Ptychodus mortoni, giant shark of the Western Interior Seaway contemporaneous with Ichthyornis dispar. Benito et al. (2022) reanalyze the associated fauna to understand the ecological niche of Ichthyornis in the Niobrara Formation.

Monument Rocks in Gove County, Kansas, classic outcrop of the Niobrara Formation where many of the postcranial specimens described by Benito et al. (2022) were collected.

Monument Rocks in Gove County, Kansas, classic outcrop of the Niobrara Formation where many of the postcranial specimens described by Benito et al. (2022) were collected.

YPM 1450 (holótipo) — Yale Peabody Museum of Natural History, New Haven, Connecticut, EUA

Greygirlbeast, CC BY-SA 3.0

YPM 1450 (holótipo)

Yale Peabody Museum of Natural History, New Haven, Connecticut, EUA

Completeness: ~50%
Found in: 1872
By: Benjamin Franklin Mudge

Holotype of Ichthyornis dispar, collected by Benjamin Franklin Mudge in the Niobrara Formation, Kansas, and described by Othniel Charles Marsh in 1872. It is the reference specimen for the taxon and part of the Yale Peabody collection, the basis of over 80 individuals catalogued by Clarke (2004).

ALMNH PV2002.0010 — Alabama Museum of Natural History, Tuscaloosa, EUA

Wikimedia Commons, domínio público

ALMNH PV2002.0010

Alabama Museum of Natural History, Tuscaloosa, EUA

Completeness: ~70% (com crânio tridimensional)
Found in: 2002
By: Coletor anônimo (formação Niobrara, Kansas)

Central specimen of the Field et al. (2018) study, published in Nature, which presented the first complete three-dimensional skull of Ichthyornis dispar via computed tomography. The discovery revealed the mosaic assembly of the avian head and redefined understanding of beak evolution in birds.

KU 119673 — Biodiversity Institute, University of Kansas, Lawrence, EUA

Wikimedia Commons, domínio público

KU 119673

Biodiversity Institute, University of Kansas, Lawrence, EUA

Completeness: ~40%
Found in: 1973
By: Equipe de campo da Universidade do Kansas

Relevant specimen from the Kansas University collection, part of the material analyzed in modern phylogenetic revisions. Collected in the Niobrara Formation, Kansas, it contributes important postcranial data for comparative analyses such as Benito et al. (2022).

Ichthyornis dispar occupies a unique place in popular science: it is remembered more as Darwinian proof than as a fictional character. Its gull-like silhouette with toothed beak became a visual icon of the transition between dinosaurs and modern birds, present in museums, textbooks, and documentaries worldwide. In cinema, it is rarely a protagonist, but appears frequently in productions about the North American Late Cretaceous, such as When Dinosaurs Roamed America (Discovery, 2001) and BBC's Sea Monsters (2003), in Western Interior Seaway environments alongside mosasaurs and plesiosaurs. Prehistoric Planet (Apple TV+, 2022) features similar toothed birds with unprecedented visual quality, incorporating post-2018 discoveries. The PBS Eons educational channel dedicated an entire episode to toothed birds in 2018, shortly after the publication of the three-dimensional skull by Field and collaborators in Nature. The cultural relevance of Ichthyornis grows whenever the discussion about why birds survived the K-Pg resurfaces.

2001 📹 When Dinosaurs Roamed America — Pierre de Lespinois (Discovery Channel) Wikipedia →
2003 📹 Sea Monsters: A Walking with Dinosaurs Trilogy — Jasper James (BBC) Wikipedia →
2018 📹 PBS Eons: When Birds Had Teeth — PBS Digital Studios Wikipedia →
2022 📹 Prehistoric Planet — Jon Favreau (produtor executivo), Apple TV+ / BBC Studios Wikipedia →
Dinosauria
Saurischia
Theropoda
Coelurosauria
Maniraptora
Avialae
Ornithurae
Ichthyornithes
First fossil
1872
Discoverer
Benjamin Franklin Mudge (geólogo Kansas)
Formal description
1872
Described by
Othniel Charles Marsh, American Journal of Science
Formation
Niobrara Chalk Formation, Smoky Hill Member
Region
Kansas
Country
Estados Unidos
Marsh, O.C. (1872) — American Journal of Science, ser. 3, vol. 4: 344

Fun fact

Othniel Charles Marsh presented Ichthyornis in 1872 as living proof of Darwinian evolutionary theory, just 13 years after the publication of On the Origin of Species. It was an extraordinary animal: it had modern wings, flew like a gull, but kept teeth in its jaws. Charles Darwin personally wrote to Marsh in 1880 saying that his monograph on toothed birds was the best support for evolutionary theory produced in the previous two decades. Ichthyornis did not cross the K-Pg extinction, precisely because it was a specialist piscivore dependent on pelagic fish schools of the Western Interior Seaway that collapsed after the impact.

Last reviewed: April 25, 2026

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