Z. yangi was initially believed to be the most primitive (though not earliest) bird species that completely lacked teeth, and one of the most
basal birds known. It was described by Zhou, Zhang and Li, in a paper published in January 2010 (though the paper had appeared on the Internet during 2009). They found that
Zhongjianornis was more primitive than
Confuciusornis, and that it predated the split between
euornithean and
enantiornithean birds. The authors also reported that
Zhongjianornis shared features with very basal birds like
Jeholornis,
Sapeornis and
Confuciusornis, including a highly expanded deltopectoral crest, and suggest that this was an early flight architecture that was replaced by an enlarged, keeled breastbone in more advanced birds. However, later analysis of the anatomy of
Z. yangi cast doubt on this interpretation of the bird as very primitive. Research published in 2012 found that some of the apparently primitive features were due to poor preservation of the bones, and that
Zhongjianornis is more similar in anatomy to primitive euornitheans like
Chaoyangia and
Schizooura. A phylogenetic analysis showed that a very primitive position in the bird family tree for
Z. yangi is unlikely given current evidence. ==References==