Reprint from: http://paleontology.edwardtbabinski.us/feathered_dinosaurs.html
Warm Blooded" Dinosaurs with Feathers
Fossils that were discovered recently, seem to imply that feathers were more widespread than previously assumed. Many of Tyrannosaurus Rex' relatives had feathers, paleontologists now believe T-Rex may have also had them, at an early development stage. Hatchlings may have shed down as they aged.
Full Scale Image or click, here.
This species, Archaeoraptor liaoningensis was discovered in Liaoning Province, China having arms of a primitive bird and a tail of a dinosaur. This fossil represents a missing link between dinosaurs and birds. Studies that have been done on the arms suggest it was better equipped at flight than Archeopteryx.
Archaeoraptor liaoningensis shares similarities to a family of predatory dinosaurs known as dromaeosaurs. A mixture of advanced and primitive traits is what scientists anticipated to find in experimental flight. Says Stephen Czerkas, who lead the study on the newly discovered species, "This fossil is perhaps the best evidence since Archeopteryx that birds did, in fact, evolve from certain types of carnivorous dinosaurs."
Modified image from an original by O. Louis Mazzatenta
Four dinosaur fossils with birdlike bones and trace of feathers have been discovered, not that any of these dinosaur species flew, but the evidence points to feathers being widespread among the carnivorous dinosaurs, including Tyrannosaurus rex.

Three fossils were recently discovered (November 1999), in Liaoning Province, China. Further discoveries of flightless feathered dinosaurs have also been unearthed in this region, 1996-1997. All four of the new fossils, are theropods, classified as meat-eating. Dromaeosaur, belonging to a family of predators that includes the raptors made famous in Jurassic Park. An oviraptorosaur from Mongolia with bird-like tail and seven foot therizinosaur, and one other fossil, which has arms like a bird, but a tail like a dinosaur.

Yale University paleontologist, John Ostrom, proposed that modern birds descended from theropods. Clear impressions of feathers on the Liaoning fossils increase the growing number of known feathered theropod species.
Surrounding the bones on Archaeoraptor liaoningensis, are what clearly appears to be feathers. Some are similar to hairlike protofeathers of the flightless Sinosauropteryx, discovered in 1996. Others look long, broad and suggest feathers suited for flight. Stephen tells us, "It's a missing link. We can't prove that it flew, but even aside from its feathers, its' anatomy [contains] long arms, birdlike shoulders, hands and wrists, [which] doesn't make sense unless it did."

Fast, bipedal meat-eaters called theropods have four new species:

All theropods, including T. rex, may have had feathers, one of the adaptations that led to flight in Archaeopteryx and perhaps Archaeoraptor.
November 1999, National Geographic
Sinornithosaurus millenii, a dromaeosaur, was the size of an eagle, fierce in appearance, with teeth resembling a barracuda and long, curved claws. Paleontologist Xu Xing explained how the shoulder girdle; scapula, coracoid and furcula, are more similar to bones of a bird, than a dinosaur. These bones are critical for flight, joining at the glenoid fossa, an area determining the degree at which birds can raise their wings above the shoulders to flap. "If you saw just this shoulder girdle, you would think it was Archeopteryx, the earliest bird."
Beipiaosaurus inexpectus is only one of a few therizinosaur fossils known. An important feature is the hollow cores. Hollow, hairlike structures are characteristic of protofeathers -an evolutionary intermediate between feathers and the skin of a reptile. It is the largest known dinosaur with feathers, at a length of seven feet. One theory holds that dinosaurs may have evolved feathers for insulation, which raises another question: were dinosaurs warm blooded?

A small birdlike fossil, discovered in Mongolia, named Shuvuuia deserti, has been studied by Biologist Mary Schweitzer of Montana State University, who is helping to answer the question of warm-blooded dinosaurs. Tests performed on the fossil have shown the fibers are similar to feathers, both chemically and structurally. "The only animals living today with body coverings of hair or feathers have the high metabolic rates of warm-blooded creatures. It seems reasonable to assume that this was true in the past as well. Dinosaurs that possessed body coverings were probably either warm-blooded or had metabolic rates significantly higher than those of modern cold-blooded animals."
The article concludes with, a large-bodied animal likeTyrannosaurus Rex in the sub-tropical Cretaceous did not likely have need of feathers, unless they were for purpose of display. The larger the body of an animal, the more heat it could produce, but juvenile T-Rex hatchlings may have had down on their bodies.

Scientists can say that BIRDS ARE THEROPODS with the same
confidence, when they say humans are mammals.
Impressions of
feathers surround the fossilized bones of the 120 million year old
Sinonithosaurs millenii. According to paleontologist Xu Xing, this
birdlike dinosaur likely fed on lizards and small mammals. The creature was
likely covered in small (down) feathers. It could leap, but not fly. It's
furcula, or wishbone was boomerang-shaped and resembled that of
Archaeopteryx. The tail vertebrae contain bundles of slim rods that
stiffened the tail which assisted the bird in maneuvering. This characteristic
helped scientists identify the fossil as a dromaeosaur. This fossil contributes
to the theory that feathers evolved for insulation or display, rather than
flight, and that quite possibly, some species of dinosaurs were
warm-blooded.
Images adapted from, and text paraphrased from an article by National
Geographic Magazine, November 1999
Feathers for T. Rex, by
Christopher P. Sloane, with Photographs by O. Louis Mazzatenta
REFERENCES
The Complete National
Geographic, 111 Years; 1888-2000
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