What's next... Ah, yes, our friend archaeoptryx, somehow I just knew someone would trot out that old cliche (pun not intended). Evolutionist paleontologist Larry Martin, a challenger of the dinosaurs-to-birds theory, was quoted as saying that such comparisons "are riddled with characters based on mistaken anatomy" and such theories of dinosaur origins of birds are a good example of "garbage in, garbage out"( Feathers, or Flight of Fancy? Newsfocus article by Erik Stokstad. Science, vol 288, Pg 2124-2125.)
Further, Evolutionist paleontologist Sankhar Chatterjee has found what appears to be a fossil bird, Protoavis, in Late Triassic strata--at the same geological period as the appearance of the first dinosaurs. This fossil appears to have more features in common with true birds than Archaeopteryx did. Given that it appears in the fossil record at the same time as the earliest dinosaurs, then it seems highly unlikely that birds are descended from dinosaurs. In other words, if an almost true bird existed with the first dinosaurs, how can it be said that birds are descended from dinosaurs? As one evolutionist paleontologist puts it, "[t]here�s going to be a lot of people with Archaeopteryx eggs on their face." (Anderson, Alan, "Early Bird Threatens Archaeopteryx's Perch," Science, p. 35, 5 July 1991.) (Portions of this discussion excerpted from Nova southeastern University, et al).
Further, the diversity of opinion (re: archae) extends to the question i the animals were ectotherms (i.e., were "cold-blooded") or were endotherms (i.e., were "warm- blooded") and which had a thermal physiology which fell between the two extremes (Randolph 1994, p. 391). this appears to be a minor concern, but in determining transition, it's of huge importance.
Contd.>