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Washington – When the Wright Brothers first took to the sky in a biplane, they were using a design nature may have tried 125 million years earlier.

A new study of one of the earliest feathered dinosaurs suggests it may have had upper and lower sets of wings, much like the biplanes of early aviation.

Today, the biplane is widely considered an old-fashioned rarity. And the design is no longer seen in birds, although it’s not clear whether it was a step on the way to modern birds or a dead end in nature and discarded.

The intriguing possibility of a biplane dinosaur – Microraptor gui – is suggested by Sankar Chatterjee of Texas Tech University in this week’s online issue of Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

Microraptor was described by Xing Xu of the Chinese Academy of Sciences in 2003 as having aerodynamic feathers on its arms and legs. Xu suggested that it glided, extending its legs backward so its wings were arranged one behind the other, like a dragonfly.

But that would be aerodynamically inefficient for a feathered creature, Chatterjee concluded, noting that the feathers on the legs would not face forward. Instead, he suggested, the legs of the 2-pound creature could have been held below the body in flight, creating two staggered wing sections, the upper one slightly ahead of the lower one.

Another flying dinosaur, Pedopenna, also had feathers on its legs, Chatterjee said, and modern raptors such as falcons have short feathers on their upper legs that reduce air resistance as they fly.

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