Dinosaur hunters in Brazil have just found the skull of a huge flying
reptile that lived about 110 million years ago. The skull belonged to a
previously unknown species of flying reptiles called pterosaurs
(pronounced TER-oh-sawrs), researchers announced last week.
The Facts on Pterosaurs
Pterosaurs are the Earth's largest known flying reptiles. They became
extinct along with dinosaurs about 65 million years ago, when a giant
asteroid crashed into the Earth. Scientists say the pterosaur flew on
15-foot wings of furry skin over a land dominated by dinosaurs.
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Thalassodromeus sethi
dipped into water to catch its prey.
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Soaring Sea Runners
Researchers believe the newly discovered species caught fish by dipping
and diving into the ocean as fast as 25 miles per hour. This
characteristic inspired researchers to name the new pterosaur
Thalassodromeus sethi. The first word is Greek for "sea
runner" and the second honors the ancient Egyptian god Seth. In
ancient Egyptian history, Seth is known as the god of wind and storms.
The pterosaur is thought to have lived on the shores of an ancient
lagoon (or shallow body of water) called the Araripe. The lagoon was not
far from the ocean. "One can only imagine the incredible sight of
these flying reptiles skimming the Araripe lagoon some 110 million years
ago," said Alan Feduccia, a dinosaur expert at the University of
North Carolina at Chapel Hill.
A Rare Fossil Find
Unlike other animals from the age of dinosaurs, fossils of pterosaurs
are very rare. Like birds of today, the bones of pterosaurs were thin
and usually didn't survive as fossils. That is what makes this fossil
find so important, according to researcher Alexander Kellner, one of the
scientists who found the fossils.
In a telephone interview from Brazil with Reuters news agency,
Kellner said: "If you didn't have the fossils, you wouldn't believe
that such an animal would have ever lived."