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Assorted funny guys. Brasileodactylus, Anurognathus, Moganopterus and Dsungaripterus.
Archovember Day 18: Moganopterus zhuiana
Moganopterus is a ctenochasmatid pterosaur from Early Cretaceous China. It is only known from a skull and some neck vertebrae, but this is enough to see that it was a pretty strange-looking creature. The skull was 3.12 feet long: the longest known of any toothed pterosaur. By estimating from the size of the skull and neck and comparing Moganopterus to relatives, we can estimate a wingspan of around 23 feet!
Hi there!
Day 6: Moganopterus zhuiana (not a dinosaur)
Moganopterus zhuiana
By Joschua Knüppe, retrieved from http://www.pteros.com/, a website dedicated to education about Pterosaurs.
A reminder that we will not be able to do every pterosaur until we reach $240 in donations on our patreon, so please donate even a dollar if you can.
Name: Moganopterus zhuiana
Name Meaning: Mo & Gan’s Wing
First Described: 2012
Described By: Lü et al.
Classification: Avemetatarsalia, Ornithodira, Pterosauromorpha, Pterosauria, Macronychoptera, Novialoidea, Breviquartossa, Pterodactylomorpha, Monofenestrata, Pterodactyliformes, Caelidracones, Pterodactyloidea, Archaeopterodactyloidea, Euctenochasmatia, Ctenochasmatoidea, Ctenochasmatidae, Gnathosaurinae
Moganopterus was a large Ctenochasmatid pterosaur from the Yixian Formation of China, living about 125 million years ago, in the Barremian age of the Early Cretaceous. It had a wingspan of around 6 meters, with the largest skull of any toothed pterosaur of nearly a meter long. It, like other Ctenochasmatids, was a filter feeder, with many comb-like teeth. It also had a ridiculously long neck like other members of its group, though it’s only known from the skull and neck vertebrae, this was enough to show that it would have had a thin and lengthy neck. This would have allowed for it to reach for more food than shorter-necked species, as it filter fed in its forested environment. It also had a display crest on its head, though the exact shape of this crest is unclear.
Sources:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Moganopterus
http://www.pteros.com/pterosaurs/moganopterus.html
Shout out goes to @maddogmahoney!