China Daily

Newfound species of dinosaur was ‘built for flying’

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PARIS — Scientists on Monday unveiled a previously unknown species of giant pterosaur, the first creatures with a backbone to fly under their own power.

Neither dino nor bird, pterosaurs — more commonly known as pterodacty­ls — emerged during the late Triassic period more than 200 million years ago and lorded over primeval skies until a massive space rock slammed into Earth, wiping out the dinosaurs and most other forms of life some 65 million years ago.

The newly discovered member of the family, identified through remains found in the US state of Utah, had a wingspan of 1.5 meters and 112 teeth, including fang-like spikes sticking out near the snout.

A jutting lower jaw suggests a pelican-like pouch, perhaps to scoop up fish and unsuspecti­ng small reptiles.

“They are delicately framed animals that are built for flying,” said Brooks Britt, a paleontolo­gist at Brigham Young University in Utah and lead author of a study in Nature Ecology & Evolution.

Caelestive­ntus hanseni — which roughly translates as “heavenly wind” — is probably the most complete skeletal remains of a pterosaur ever found.

“Most pterosaurs bones look like roadkill,” Britt said, noting that there are only 30-odd specimens worldwide from the Triassic period which lasted some 51 million years.

By contrast, the new specimen comprises dozens of intact bones and teeth, along with an entire brain casing.

The wings are in fact skin membranes largely held up by the fourth “finger”, or digit, of their forelimbs. Huge sockets suggest C. hanseni had “fantastic eyesight”, said Britt.

Saints & Sinners

When not soaring in search of a meal, it walked on all fours with its wings folded vertically.

The fossil remains are still encased in sandstone, but scientists generated accurate 3D images and models of each bone using CAT-scan technology.

The site where C. hanseni was unearthed, known to fossil hunters as Saints & Sinners, reveals a dramatic story of survival and local extinction in the face of climate change, the researcher­s said.

The rocks it was found in were part of an oasis in a 2 million square kilometer desert covered with giant sand dunes.

“During droughts, large numbers of animals — including pterosaurs, predatory dinosaurs and crocodylom­orphs — were drawn to the pond in the middle of the oasis, where they died as water dried up,” said Britt.

The result was a treasure trove of more than 18,000 bones and fragments from dozens of water-starved animals.

C. hanseni is not the biggest pterosaur ever found, but was likely the largest of its era, especially for a desert environmen­t.

It also predates other desert-dwelling specimens by about 65 million years. Pterosaurs from the same period found so far came from ancient coastal areas in what is now Europe and Greenland.

That the highflying creatures were spread across much of the globe may have helped them survive the endof-Triassic mass extinction, which wiped out half of the species on land and in the sea.

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