<h2><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="P31"></SPAN></span><SPAN name="chapVII"></SPAN>VII<br/> THE FIRST BIRDS AND THE FIRST MAMMALS</h2>
<p>In a few paragraphs a picture of the lush vegetation and swarming reptiles of
that first great summer of life, the Mesozoic period, has been sketched. But
while the Dinosaurs lorded it over the hot selvas and marshy plains and the
Pterodactyls filled the forests with their flutterings and possibly with
shrieks and croakings as they pursued the humming insect life of the still
flowerless shrubs and trees, some less conspicuous and less abundant forms upon
the margins of this abounding life were acquiring certain powers and learning
certain lessons of endurance, that were to be of the utmost value to their race
when at last the smiling generosity of sun and earth began to fade.</p>
<p>A group of tribes and genera of hopping reptiles, small creatures of
the dinosaur type, seem to have been pushed by competition and the
pursuit of their enemies towards the alternatives of extinction or
adaptation to colder conditions in the higher hills or by the sea.
Among these distressed tribes there was developed a new type of
scale—scales that were elongated into quill-like forms and
that presently branched into the crude beginnings of feathers.
These quill-like scales layover one another and formed a
heat-retaining covering more efficient than any reptilian covering
that had hitherto existed. So they permitted an invasion of colder
regions that were otherwise uninhabited. Perhaps simultaneously
with these changes there arose in these creatures a greater
solicitude for their eggs. Most reptiles are apparently quite
careless about their eggs, which are left for sun and season to
hatch. But some of the varieties upon this new branch of the tree
of life were acquiring a habit of guarding their eggs and keeping
them warm with the warmth of their bodies.</p>
<p>With these adaptations to cold other internal modifications <span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="P32"></SPAN></span>were going on that made
these creatures, the primitive birds, warm-blooded and independent
of basking. The very earliest birds seem to have been seabirds
living upon fish, and their fore limbs were not wings but paddles
rather after the penguin type. That peculiarly primitive bird, the
New Zealand Ki-Wi, has feathers of a very simple sort, and neither
flies nor appears to be descended from flying ancestors. In the
development of the birds, feathers came before wings. But once the
feather was developed the possibility of making a light spread of
feathers led inevitably to the wing. We know of the fossil remains
of one bird at least which had reptilian teeth in its jaw and a long
reptilian tail, but which also had a true bird’s wing and
which certainly flew and held its own among the pterodactyls of the
Mesozoic time. Nevertheless birds were neither varied nor abundant
in Mesozoic times. If a man could go back to typical Mesozoic
country, he might walk for days and never see or hear such a thing
as a bird, though he would see a great abundance of pterodactyls and
insects among the fronds and reeds.</p>
<div class="fig"> <SPAN name="img-32"></SPAN> <ANTIMG src="images/img-32.jpg" alt="FOSSIL OF THE ARCHEOPTERYX; ONE OF THE EARLIEST BIRDS" width-obs="446" height-obs="565" /> <p class="caption">
FOSSIL OF THE ARCHEOPTERYX; ONE OF THE EARLIEST BIRDS
<br/>
<small><i>Nat. Hist. Mus.</i></small></p>
</div>
<p>And another thing he would probably never see, and that would be any
sign of a mammal. Probably the first mammals were in <span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="P33"></SPAN></span>existence millions of
years before the first thing one could call a bird, but they were
altogether too small and obscure and remote for attention.</p>
<div class="fig"> <SPAN name="img-33"></SPAN> <ANTIMG src="images/img-33.jpg" alt="HESPERORNIS IN ITS NATIVE SEAS" width-obs="500" height-obs="741" /> <p class="caption">
HESPERORNIS IN ITS NATIVE SEAS</p>
</div>
<p>The earliest mammals, like the earliest birds, were creatures driven
by competition and pursuit into a life of hardship and adaptation to
cold. With them also the scale became quill-like, and was developed
into a heat-retaining covering; and they too underwent
modifications, similar in kind though different in detail, to become
warm-blooded and independent of basking. Instead of feathers they
developed hairs, and instead of guarding and incubating their eggs
they kept them warm and safe by retaining them inside their bodies
until they were almost mature. Most of them became altogether
vivaparous and brought their young into the world alive. And even
after their young were born they tended to maintain a protective and
nutritive association with them. Most <span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="P34"></SPAN></span>but not all mammals to-day have mammæ
and suckle their young. Two mammals still live which lay eggs and
which have not proper mammæ, though they nourish their young by
a nutritive secretion of the under skin; these are the duck-billed
platypus and the echidna. The echidna lays leathery eggs and then
puts them into a pouch under its belly, and so carries them about
warm and safe until they hatch.</p>
<p>But just as a visitor to the Mesozoic world might have searched for
days and weeks before finding a bird, so, unless he knew exactly
where to go and look, he might have searched in vain for any traces
of a mammal. Both birds and mammals would have seemed very
eccentric and secondary and unimportant creatures in Mesozoic times.</p>
<div class="fig"> <SPAN name="img-34"></SPAN> <ANTIMG src="images/img-34.jpg" alt="THE KI-WI, APTERYX, STILL FOUND IN NEW ZEALAND" width-obs="506" height-obs="595" /> <p class="caption">
THE KI-WI, APTERYX, STILL FOUND IN NEW ZEALAND<br/>
<small><i>Photo: Autotype Fine Art Co.</i></small></p>
</div>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="P35"></SPAN></span></p>
<div class="fig"> <SPAN name="img-35"></SPAN> <ANTIMG src="images/img-35.jpg" alt="SLAB OF LOWER PLIOCENE MARL" width-obs="600" height-obs="784" /> <p class="caption">
SLAB OF LOWER PLIOCENE MARL<br/>
<small>Discovered in Greece; it is rich in fossilized bones of early
mammals</small></p>
</div>
<p>The Age of Reptiles lasted, it is now guessed, eighty million years.
Had any quasi-human intelligence been watching the world through
that inconceivable length of time, how safe and eternal the sunshine
and abundance must have seemed, how assured the wallowing prosperity
of the dinosaurs and the flapping abundance of the flying lizards!
And then the mysterious rhythms and accumulating forces of the
universe began to turn against that quasi-eternal stability. That
run of luck <span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="P36"></SPAN></span>for
life was running out. Age by age, myriad of years after myriad of
years, with halts no doubt and retrogressions, came a change
towards hardship and extreme conditions, came great alterations of
level and great redistributions of mountain and sea. We find one
thing in the Record of the Rocks during the decadence of the long
Mesozoic age of prosperity that is very significant of steadily
sustained changes of condition, and that is a violent fluctuation
of living forms and the appearance of new and strange species.
Under the gathering threat of extinction the older orders and
genera are displaying their utmost capacity for variation and
adaptation. The Ammonites for example in these last pages of the
Mesozoic chapter exhibit a multitude of fantastic forms. Under
settled conditions there is no encouragement for novelties; they do
not develop, they are suppressed; what is best adapted is already
there. Under novel conditions it is the ordinary type that
suffers, and the novelty that may have a better chance to survive
and establish itself....</p>
<p>There comes a break in the Record of the Rocks that may represent
several million years. There is a veil here still, over even the
outline of the history of life. When it lifts again, the Age of
Reptiles is at an end; the Dinosaurs, the Plesiosaurs and
Ichthyosaurs, the Pterodactyls, the innumerable genera and species
of Ammonite have all gone absolutely. In all their stupendous
variety they have died out and left no descendants. The cold has
killed them. All their final variations were insufficient; they had
never hit upon survival conditions. The world had passed through a
phase of extreme conditions beyond their powers of endurance, a slow
and complete massacre of Mesozoic life has occurred, and we find now
a new scene, a new and hardier flora, and a new and hardier fauna in
possession of the world.</p>
<p>It is still a bleak and impoverished scene with which this new
volume of the book of life begins. The cycads and tropical conifers
have given place very largely to trees that shed their leaves to
avoid destruction by the snows of winter and to flowering plants and
shrubs, and where there was formerly a profusion of reptiles, an
increasing variety of birds and mammals is entering into their
inheritance.</p>
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