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African Pterosaur Illustration
© Todd Marshall
Giant flying reptile lands
on Chicago's West Side
Paleontologists discover pterosaur fossils
in the Sahara
© University of
Chicago
A new species of pterosaur with a 16-foot wingspan
has been discovered in the southern Sahara by
a team led by University of Chicago paleontologist
Paul Sereno. "This find puts African pterosaurs
on the map," said Sereno, who is also an explorer-in-residence
at the National Geographic Society.
Previous finds of these winged reptiles in Africa
had been limited to individual bones or teeth.
The 110-million-year-old fossils include most
of one wing and several slender teeth from its
over-sized jaws. "To find a wing composed of a
string of paper-thin bones in a river deposit
next to the sturdy bones of dinosaurs is a remarkable
feat of preservation," Sereno said. The bones
and teeth were found in Cretaceous-age rocks in
Niger that were deposited by ancient rivers. Near
the pterosaur site, Sereno's team also found bones
of the 35-foot-long, sail-backed fish-eater Suchomimus
and the enormous crocodile Sarcosuchus,
dubbed "SuperCroc." "Definitely a fish-eater,"
remarked Sereno, who will describe and name the
new species with David Blackburn, an expedition
member from the University of Chicago and now
a graduate student at Harvard University.
Like its contemporaries Suchomimus and
Sarcosuchus, it dined on the abundant
fish in the rivers, as evidenced by its long and
slender teeth. As the jaws closed, the teeth interlocked
to snare fish, leaving signs of wear on their
sides."Somehow this huge species was able to fish
on the wing. We imagine a pterosaur soaring over
the water and somehow stalling to snag a fish,"
Sereno said. "It was a tremendous animal."
Based on numerous trackways, paleontologists
now believe that pterosaurs were relatively clumsy
on land or in shallow water, walking slowly on
all fours. The African species preserves sharp
hand claws on the front edge of the wing, which
probably helped it climb when on land. The African
pterosaur resembles another species discovered
previously in the highlands of Brazil. When the
Niger species lived, 110 million years ago, South
America and Africa were just beginning to eparate."Pterosaurs
wouldn't have had much trouble getting across
at that point, so it's not surprising to find
a close relative over there," Sereno said.
A life-size skeleton and flesh reconstruction
of the new pterosaur, the first for a species
from Africa, will go on display in Chicago's Garfield
Park Conservatory, 300 N. Central Park Ave., as
part of the "GIANTS" exhibit. The exhibit, created
by Sereno's educational organization Project Exploration,
opens Dec. 20 and will run through Sept. 6, 2004.
The flesh model incorporates the latest information
on pterosaurs. "Pterosaurs are close cousins of
the dinosaurs but had a very different look and
lifestyle. Their bodies were covered by hair-like
structures that arose independently from the hair
we know today on mammals," Sereno said. The flesh
model also has translucent wings, as scientists
now believe from detailed impressions that the
skin forming the wing would have allowed light
to pass through. For more information on GIANTS,
see www.dinogiants.org.
Visit the Pterosaur Discoveries
page
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Photo
© Mike Hettwer
Photo
© Mike Hettwer
Illustration
© Todd Marshall
See
more photos of the African Pterosaur
in our image gallery

Watch
Gary Staab's creation of flesh
model of African Pterosaur
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