Explore Natural Philosophy

Science • Phil • Cr. Think • Hist •

STORY

Toothed Birds Go Extinct

By Michael Alan Prestwood

Wed 18 Mar 2026
Published 3 months ago.
Updated 2 months ago.
Related Stories
Argentinosaurus
Hesperornithiformes Birds Emerge (Now Extinct)
Palaeognathae Birds Emerge
Pterosaurs Emerge
Pteranodons Emerge
Confuciusornithiformes Birds Emerge (Now Extinct)
Share :
At the K–Pg boundary, birds were already diverse, but most of that Late Cretaceous variety died out, leaving only a small toothless slice of the bird world to continue.

Toothed Birds Go Extinct

By the final stretch of the Cretaceous, the last toothed birds still came in more than one form. Some were Ichthyornis-like, strong-flying coastal birds with teeth set farther back in the jaws, giving them a strange mix of modern bird body and ancient reptilian mouth. Others were Hesperornis-like, large diving birds that had also kept teeth but had taken a very different path, becoming specialized swimmers rather than strong fliers. Alongside them were other archaic bird groups, including enantiornithines, some of which were hawk-sized and likely predatory or at least strongly grasping-footed. So the last toothed birds were not one fading little remnant. They were part of a broader, still-varied Late Cretaceous bird world.

And the birds that vanished were not only the toothed ones. Many toothless birds also disappeared at 66 million years ago. The great Mesozoic bird branch Enantiornithes went extinct, even though many of them looked surprisingly birdlike to modern eyes, and at least some had already evolved beaks and reduced or absent teeth. Latest Cretaceous bird faunas also included a wider mix of small archaic forms than the few famous names suggest. In other words, the extinction did not just prune away “primitive toothed birds.” It erased a much richer avian experiment, including many toothless birds that simply belonged to the wrong branches.

The future story is both bleak and hopeful. As far as current evidence shows, no toothed bird lineage made it through the K–Pg extinction, and the survivors belonged to crown birds, the branch that leads to living birds. We can say with confidence that at least one crown-bird lineage survived, because birds are still here. Beyond that, the strongest current picture is that the ancestors of the three great modern bird divisions—Palaeognathae, Galloanserae, and Neoaves—were already present or took shape very near that boundary, making it very likely that three major surviving branches crossed into the Paleogene. Researchers also argue that the impact devastated forests globally, so the survivors were probably small, mostly ground-dwelling or shore-associated birds rather than tree specialists. We are still looking, and the fossils are frustratingly sparse, but the broad story is now fairly clear: most bird branches died, and a small crown-bird remnant inherited the Earth.

— map / TST —

Michael Alan Prestwood
Author & Natural Philosopher
Prestwood writes on science-first philosophy, with particular attention to the convergence of disciplines. Drawing on his TST Framework, his work emphasizes rational inquiry grounded in empirical observation while engaging questions at the edges of established knowledge. With TouchstoneTruth positioned as a living touchstone, this work aims to contribute reliable, evolving analysis in an emerging AI era where the credibility of information is increasingly contested.
Email
Print
This month @ TST
Column Menu
June 2026
»COLUMN ARCHIVE
Column Research….
1. Timeline Story
Secular Spirituality Settles
2. Linked Quote
“Extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence.”
3. Science FAQ »
What is the difference between a spiritual and empirical belief?
4. Philosophy FAQ »
What is secular spirituality?
5. Critical Thinking FAQ »
How does spirituality relate to public belief?
6. History FAQ!
Is secular spirituality supported in history and science?
Bonus Deep-Dive Article
The Material-Spiritual Framework: A Philosophy of Spirituality

Comments

Join the Conversation! Currently logged out.

Leave a Reply

NEW BOOK! NOW AVAILABLE!!

30 Philosophers: A New Look at Timeless Ideas

by Michael Alan Prestwood
The story of the history of our best ideas!
Scroll to Top