The Dinosaur on Your Dinner Table - video 1 Denver Museum of Nature & Science
"Proaves" by Gerhard Heilmann (1916) Denver Museum of Nature & Science
Birds evolved from small, meat-eating dinosaurs that had feathers, hollow bones, and feet similar to modern birds. These and other traits helped scientists determine that birds are actually avian dinosaurs.
Archaeopteryx Fossil Cast Denver Museum of Nature & Science
The earliest known avian dinosaur is 150 million years old. Archaeopteryx had birdlike wings and a long, bony dinosaur tail.
The Dinosaur on Your Dinner Table - video 2 Denver Museum of Nature & Science
The Dinosaur on Your Dinner Table - video 3 Denver Museum of Nature & Science
Ancestral Pueblo Clay Bowl Denver Museum of Nature & Science
Turkeys were first domesticated by Native Americans. Primarily raised for their feathers, the traits of these penned turkeys were relatively unchanged—until Europeans got ahold of them.
Turkey Vs. Wild Turkey Denver Museum of Nature & Science
The Dinosaur on Your Dinner Table - video 4 Denver Museum of Nature & Science
Profile Portrait of Wild Turkey Denver Museum of Nature & Science
Next Thanksgiving, reserve a moment of thanks for the avian dinosaur that survived an asteroid and millions of years of natural selection only to end up on your dinner table.