which organic remains are almost as well preserved
as they would be if they had been imbedded in so much
plaster of Paris. They have yielded the Archaeopteryx,
the existence of which was first made known by the
finding of a fossil feather, or rather of the impression
of one. It is wonderful enough that such a perishable
thing as a feather, and nothing more, should be discovered;
yet, for a long time, nothing was known of this bird
except its feather. But, by and by a solitary
skeleton was discovered, which is now in the British
Museum. The skull of this solitary specimen is
unfortunately wanting, and it is therefore uncertain
whether the Archaeopteryx possessed teeth or
not. But the remainder of the skeleton is so
well preserved as to leave no doubt respecting the
main features of the animal, which are very singular.
The feet are not only altogether bird-like, but have
the special characters of the feet of perching birds,
while the body had a clothing of true feathers.
Nevertheless, in some other respects, Archaeopteryx
is unlike a bird and like a reptile. There is
a long tail composed of many vertebrae. The structure
of the wing differs in some very remarkable respects
from that which it presents in a true bird. In
the latter, the end of the wing answers to the thumb
and two fingers of my hand; but the metacarpal bones,
or those which answer to the bones of the fingers
which lie in the palm of the hand, are fused together
into one mass; and the whole apparatus, except the
last joints of the thumb, is bound up in a sheath
of integument, while the edge of the hand carries the
principal quill-feathers. In the Archaeopteryx,
the upper-arm bone is like that of a bird; and the
two bones of the fore-arm are more or less like those
of a bird, but the fingers are not bound together—they
are free. What their number may have been is
uncertain; but several, if not all, of them were terminated
by strong curved claws, not like such as are sometimes
found in birds, but such as reptiles possess; so that,
in the Archaeopteryx, we have an animal which,
to a certain extent, occupies a midway place between
a bird and a reptile. It is a bird so far as its
foot and sundry other parts of its skeleton are concerned;
it is essentially and thoroughly a bird by its feathers;
but it is much more properly a reptile in the fact
that the region which represents the hand has separate
bones, with claws resembling those which terminate
the fore-limb of a reptile. Moreover, it had
a long reptile-like tail with a fringe of feathers
on each side; while, in all true birds hitherto known,
the tail is relatively short, and the vertebrae which
constitute its skeleton are generally peculiarly modified.