Archaeornithura had a moderately advanced plumage, fan-shaped tail feathers, a U-shaped
furcula, highly fused wing apexes, and a well-developed
alula – a feathered first finger projecting on the front edge of the wing that is typically used to boost manoeuvrability during flight. Before its discovery, the oldest known ornithuromorphs had been species living about 125 million years ago. It also suggests that key evolutionary advantages of birds – skilled flight and rapid growth in development – arose rapidly, and that
habitat specialization happened early in bird history. The species had long legs and feet similar to modern
plovers, suggesting that it was a shore bird that waded into shallow water to feed. The species appears to have been adept at flying. Both known specimens of
A. meemannae are excellently preserved, including substantial feathers. Some
Archaeornithura feathers feature a central groove, a trait thought to arise from derived flight feathers. This feature was not previously known in the Ornithuromorpha, suggesting that modern feather morphology, in which it is lacking, evolved separately from the
Archaeopteryx lineage in a later subset of the ornithuromorphs.
Archaeornithura is distinguished from its closest relatives by a combination of the following traits, each in itself not a unique
autapomorphy. The front edge of the sternum is strongly vaulted. The
xiphoid process at the rear of the sternum is well-developed and has a rectangular outline. The first finger projects further than the second
metacarpal. The second phalanx of the second finger is longer than the first phalanx. The thighbone is short relative to the
tarsometatarsus. ==Classification==