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He and other researchers say the findings also strongly suggest these are feathers and not cartilage or some other tissue. Benton said it disproves the concept that the material is bacteria, a theory floated by a handful of scientists who still disagree with the mainstream view that dinosaurs had feathers. One of those feather skeptics, John Feduccia at the University of North Carolina, was not convinced by the Benton study. He said the melanosomes are not similar to those of other animals and doesn't disprove the bacteria concept. "Many people want dinosaurs to be feathered, so evidence is typically stretched beyond its content," Feduccia said in an e-mail. "There is a strong lure to be able to vicariously study dinosaurs at the backyard bird feeder." However, Sereno said Benton's research makes the case that color cells couldn't be bacteria because they are packed
in an orderly way instead of randomly. The idea of feathers on dinosaurs and the link to birds "is pretty much, I think, a done deal," Sereno said. ___ On the Net: Nature: http://www.nature.com/nature/
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