San Antonio Express-News

Soaring predator was a weird one

Of all the prehistori­c creatures that once filled the skies, they don’t get much bigger — or weirder — than the Quetzalcoa­tlus. “You’re talking an animal that stands up like a giraffe, the size of a small plane,” said Gary Staab, the Missouri sculptor be

- By René Guzman STAFF WRITER rguzman@express-news.net

Some Texas-size proportion­s. The Quetzalcoa­tlus did indeed loom large, with a wingspan alone around 33 to 36 feet, about half the length of a bowling lane.

It’s believed the Quetzalcoa­tlus flew at speeds up to 100 miles per hour. That must have looked like a giant sandstorm, what with the Quetzalcoa­tlus’ sandy color and hairlike structures called pycnofiber­s.

The Quetzalcoa­tlus weighed around 550 pounds and stood 8 feet tall at the shoulder, with a 10-foot-long neck and a 6-footlong pointy beak.

A big flier, but not a dinosaur. Quetzalcoa­tlus (Quetzalcoa­tlus northropi) existed around 70 million to 65 million years ago during the late Cretaceous period. The Quetzalcoa­tlus is a pterosaur, which basically means a flying reptile. So it’s not a dinosaur.

“Pterosaurs evolutiona­rily are closely related to dinosaurs,” Adams said, “but they are just really close cousins.” Quetzalcoa­tlus, however, did live in the time of dinosaurs in what’s now Texas and North America.

A Texas titan named after a god and an aircraft buff. Geology grad student Douglas Lawson discovered the first Quetzalcoa­tlus fossils in 1971 at Big Bend National Park in Southwest Texas.

Lawson named his find “Quetzalcoa­tlus northropi,” with nods to Quetzalcóa­tl, the Aztecs’ feathered serpent god, and John Northrop, an American aircraft industrial­ist who was an early proponent of tailless aircraft design.

But they probably started out small. It’s believed pterosaurs laid eggs, so Quetzalcoa­tlus young likely hatched. And those kids grew up fast.

“The fact that this is an animal that goes from an egg the size of a papaya or maybe smaller to the size of a giraffe in a fairly short amount of time is amazing,” Adams said.

It ate like a heron, or perhaps a vulture. Early theories suggested the Quetzalcoa­tlus ate fish by skimming over water, but the Quetzalcoa­tlus’s size and inland fossils point to feeding on land or near streams.

The Quetzalcoa­tlus did not have teeth, so it likely speared its prey with its long beak like a heron. It’s believed to have picked off small dinosaurs but also, like a giant vulture, to have fed on carcasses.

“They were carnivores,” Adams said. “I imagine something this large would have had a high metabolism.”

It likely used all four limbs to walk and to get in the air. You’d think an animal as big as the Quetzalcoa­tlus would not even get off the ground. But recent study shows that not only did the Quetzalcoa­tlus walk on all fours, it likely used all four limbs to push itself up into air.

“It would have been a magnificen­t flier, more of a soarer,” Adams said.

The Quetzalcoa­tlus was no Rodan. Despite its massive size, the Quetzalcoa­tlus doesn’t pop up much in pop culture. Movies and television shows tend to give screen-time to other pterosaurs or variations such as Rodan, the flying monster that debuted in 1956 and appeared in several Godzilla films.

But even if the Quetzalcoa­tlus never gets its Hollywood due, at least it steals the show in San Antonio with its larger-than-life stand-in at the Witte.

“The whole goal of creating these sculptures is to elicit a ‘wow,’ ” Staab said. “And if we can get that and cause kids to think about the world in a different way … they can make a tiny discovery that might influence further investigat­ion. We need visual impact and we want to inspire.”

 ?? Jessica Phelps / Staff photograph­er ?? A replica of Quetzalcoa­tlus, a prehistori­c pterosaur that flew over what’s now Texas millions of years ago, dominates the space above the Witte Museum entrance.
Jessica Phelps / Staff photograph­er A replica of Quetzalcoa­tlus, a prehistori­c pterosaur that flew over what’s now Texas millions of years ago, dominates the space above the Witte Museum entrance.
 ?? Mark Stevenson / Stocktrek Images / Getty Images ?? This illustrati­on shows a flock of Quetzalcoa­tluses, which flew at speeds up to 100 mph during the late Cretaceous period. The flying reptile probably took on T. rex, one expert says.
The huge Quetzalcoa­tlus pales in comparison to Rodan, the mutant pterosaur that made its pop culture debut in 1956.
Mark Stevenson / Stocktrek Images / Getty Images This illustrati­on shows a flock of Quetzalcoa­tluses, which flew at speeds up to 100 mph during the late Cretaceous period. The flying reptile probably took on T. rex, one expert says. The huge Quetzalcoa­tlus pales in comparison to Rodan, the mutant pterosaur that made its pop culture debut in 1956.
 ?? Getty Images ??
Getty Images

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