Name:
Pterorhynchus
(Wing snout).
Phonetic: Teh-ro-rink-us (the P is silent and not
pronounced).
Named By: Stephen Czerkas & Ji Qiang - 2002.
Classification: Chordata, Reptilia, Pterosauria,
Rhamphorhynchoidea, Rhamphorhynchidae.
Species: P. wellnhoferi (type).
Type: Carnivore.
Size: 85 centimetre wingspan.
Known locations: Mongolia - Daohugou Formation.
Time period: Bathonian to Oxfordian of the
Jurassic.
Fossil representation: Almost complete articulated
specimen with impressions of soft tissue.
'Wing
snout' may be an unusual name, but this one is in reference to the tall
head crest of Pterorhynchus, which in itself is
unusual by its very
presence in a rhamphorhynchoid pterosaur.
This crest rose up from where
the nostrils began, rising at a steep angle before curving round to
join the back of the skull. The crest was also reinforced by a series
of ridges. The teeth of Pterorhynchus are quite
robust and seem to
be more suited for
seizing small animals as opposed to fish and insects.
The
Pterorhynchus holotype is another example of the
finely preserved
fossils that are known from Asia. The presence of pycnofibres in the
specimen is indicative of insulation which in turn suggests a high
metabolic rate, which certainly would have been better for maintaining
active flight.
Further reading
- A new rhamphorhynchoid with a headcrest and complex integumentary
structures. S. Czerkas & Q. Ji - In - Feathered
Dinosaurs and the Origin of Flight. The Dinosaur Museum:Blanding, Utah,
15-41 - Czerkas, S.J. (Ed.). - 2002.
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