Thursday, June 4, 2026

[Paleontology • 2026] Jian changmaensis • First non-Avian Theropod (Dromaeosauridae: Microraptorinae) from the Bird-bearing Lower Cretaceous Xiagou Formation of the Changma Basin, Gansu Province, Northwestern China

 

Jian changmaensis 
Zhou, Lamanna, Poust, Li, You & O’Connor, 2026
attacks the early bird Gansus yumenensis 
  
 illustration by Lewis LaRosa, colorized by Jão Canola.

ABSTRACT
Lacustrine sediments of the Lower Cretaceous (lower Aptian) Xiagou Formation exposed near the village of Changma in the Changma Basin of northwestern Gansu Province, China have yielded more than 100 avian partial skeletons, many of which also preserve remnants of soft tissues such as feathers and skin. Collectively, these fossils characterize a rich avifauna dominated by the crownward ornithuromorph Gansus yumenensis Hou and Liu, 1984. Despite this wealth of Early Cretaceous bird material, no skeletal remains of other dinosaurs have been described from Changma to date. Here we report the first non-avian dinosaur body fossil from the Xiagou Formation of the Changma Basin. Consisting of an articulated left pectoral girdle and forelimb lacking the carpus and manus, the specimen pertains to a new dromaeosaurid theropod taxon, Jian changmaensis, gen. et sp. nov. Phylogenetic analysis recovers Jian within Microraptorinae, expanding the definitive fossil record of this clade to include northwestern China. The new Changma microraptorine constitutes an additional similarity between the theropod faunas of the Xiagou Formation of the Changma Basin and penecontemporaneous strata of the Jehol Group of northeastern China. In particular, the Changma theropod assemblage closely resembles that of the Sihedang locality of the Jehol Group in that both include representatives of Microraptorinae and are overwhelmingly dominated by single ornithuromorph taxa that phylogenetic analyses have repeatedly resolved as close relatives. This raises the possibility that the two sites were deposited under comparable paleoenvironmental settings that are otherwise poorly represented at known Jehol localities. 

Key Words: Early Cretaceous, Gansus yumenensis, Jian changmaensis, microraptorine, paleobiogeography, paleoenvironment, phylogeny, Sihedang.

SYSTEMATIC PALEONTOLOGY 

Dinosauria Owen, 1842 
Saurischia Seeley, 1888 
Theropoda Marsh, 1881 
Maniraptora Gauthier, 1986 
Dromaeosauridae Matthew and Brown, 1922 
Microraptorinae Xu, 2002 

Holotype of Jian changmaensis, gen. et sp. nov. (GSGM-D050), an articulated partial left pectoral girdle (scapulocoracoid) and forelimb (humerus, radius, and ulna). A, silhouette of generalized microraptorine dromaeosaurid theropod (courtesy Scott Hartman) showing skeletal elements preserved; B, photograph of specimen as preserved, exposed primarily in dorsomedial (scapulocoracoid), caudodorsal (humerus), and dorsal (radius and ulna) views; C, interpretive line drawing of B; D, detail photograph of scapulocoracoid and proximal end of humerus in caudodorsal view, showing supracoracoid fenestra and other structures; E, interpretive line drawing of D.
Abbreviations: ac, acromion; bc, bicipital crest; C, coracoid; cr, caudal ridge; dep, dorsal epicondyle; dpc, deltopectoral crest; dr, dorsal ridge; ed, epicondylar depression; fs?, fossa for M. supinator?; H, humerus; hh, humeral head; lp, lateral process; ‘mb’, ‘medial bar’; op, olecranon process; R, radius; S, scapula; scb, scapular blade; scf, supracoracoid fenestra; sta, sternal articulation; U, ulna.

Jian changmaensis, gen. et sp. nov.

Diagnosis.—Medium-sized (intermediate in skeletal dimensions between adult specimens of Microraptor zhaoianus and Sinornithosaurus millenii Xu et al., 1999; see Table 2) microraptorine dromaeosaurid theropod characterized by the following three autapomorphies: (1) a coracoid that is proportionally longer relative to the humerus than in any other microraptorine (~36% humerus length; the next closest individuals are the immature Microraptor IVPP V31612, with a value of ~35%, and IVPP V12811, the holotype of Sinornithosaurus, with a value of 33%) (Table 2); (2) humeral distal condyles developed on the cranial surface of this bone (Figs. 2B–C, 3E; a local autapomorphy within Microraptorinae, shared with nonmicroraptorine theropods such as the therizinosaur Erlikosaurus andrewsi Barsbold and Perle, 1980, and Aves); and (3) a well-developed foramen on the ventral aspect of ...

Etymology.—The genus name is for the Jiān (鹣), a one winged bird in Chinese mythology, in reference to the bird-like, possibly volant nature of this microraptorine taxon and the skeletal composition of its holotype (an isolated partial pectoral girdle and forelimb). The specific name is for Changma (昌马), the locality where the holotype was discovered.

 The new microraptor dinosaur Jian changmaensis (left) attacks the early bird Gansus yumenensis (right) in what is now the Changma Basin of northwestern China approximately 120 million years ago. 
 illustration by Lewis LaRosa, colorized by Jão Canola.


Ling-Qi Zhou, Matthew C. Lamanna, Ashley W. Poust, Da-Qing Li, Hai-Lu You and Jingmai K. O’Connor. 2026. First non-Avian Theropod (Dromaeosauridae, Microraptorinae) from the Bird-bearing Lower Cretaceous Xiagou Formation of the Changma Basin, Gansu Province, Northwestern China. ANNALS OF CARNEGIE MUSEUM. 92(2); 89–110. [4 June 2026]