Feathered baby dinosaur tail, mistaken for a plant, found trapped in amber

While browsing amber markets in Myanmar, scientists discovered the feathers and partial tail of a tiny baby dinosaur that lived some 99 million years ago.
The find, described in the journal Current Biology, offers a rare window onto the structure and organisation of dinosaur feathers – one that could help shed new light on their evolution.
Scientists have long studied feathers that pop up in the fossil record in part because they want to understand the origins of birds. Birds are thought to be the only living descendants of dinosaurs – and questions about how and when their ancestors first developed flight and the feathers that enabled it remain confounding mysteries.
In recent years, palaeontologists have also realised that many dinosaurs were not scaly (a la “Jurassic Park”) but feathered like birds. However, their plumage’s original purpose (for example, for insulation or for camouflage) remains up for debate. Researchers want to understand the origin of feathers, as well as figure out how they eventually evolved for flight.