enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Timeline of pterosaur research - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Timeline_of_pterosaur_research

    This timeline of pterosaur research is a chronologically ordered list of important fossil discoveries, controversies of interpretation, and taxonomic revisions of pterosaurs, the famed flying reptiles of the Mesozoic era. Although pterosaurs went extinct millions of years before humans evolved, humans have coexisted with pterosaur fossils for ...

  3. Graphical timeline of pterosaurs - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Graphical_timeline_of...

    Timeline showing the development of the extinct reptilian order Pterosauria from its appearance in the late Triassic period to its demise at the end of the Cretaceous, together with an alphabetical listing of pterosaur species and their geological ages.

  4. Timeline of paleontology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Timeline_of_paleontology

    1861 — The first Archaeopteryx, skeleton is found in Bavaria, Germany, and recognized as a transitional form between reptiles and birds. 1869 — Joseph Lockyer starts the scientific journal Nature. 1871 — Othniel Charles Marsh discovers the first American pterosaur fossils.

  5. Rare fossil of flying dinosaur reveals 76-million-year-old ...

    www.aol.com/rare-fossil-flying-dinosaur-reveals...

    A crocodile-like creature bit the neck of a flying dinosaur some 76 million years ago – and scientists have proof.. Archaeologists found the fossilized neck bone of the young pterosaur in Canada ...

  6. 'These fossils seal the deal': Pterosaur research challenges ...

    www.aol.com/news/why-did-feathers-evolve...

    A few years ago, Maria McNamara was invited to Brussels by fellow paleontologist Pascal Godefroit and presented with an intriguing opportunity.

  7. 'A gorgeous skeleton': Scientists unearth a near-complete ...

    www.aol.com/fossil-flying-reptile-once-ruled...

    The ptersosaur lived roughly 170 million years ago and ruled the skies with a wingspan of more than 8 feet, roughly equivalent to a modern-day albatross.

  8. Pterosaur - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pterosaur

    The first known pterosaur eggs were found in the quarries of Liaoning, the same place that yielded feathered dinosaurs, and in Loma del Pterodaustro (Lagarcito Formation, Argentina). The eggs from Liaoning were squashed flat with no signs of cracking, so evidently the eggs had leathery shells, as in modern lizards. [192]

  9. Pterosauromorpha - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pterosauromorpha

    Different phylogenetic analyses found it as a basal pterosauromorph, [4] [5] a non-aphanosaurian, non-pterosaur basal avemetatarsalian, a basal dinosauromorph, [11] or a basal archosauriform. [12] This has resulted in a large gap between the fully aerial pterosaurs and their terrestrial ancestors, as the earliest pterosaurs were already capable ...