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Wednesday 2/6/21 - Your Pterosaurs Are Wrong
Mark Witton, Cimoliopterus
A few weeks ago, I made a post talking about dinosaurs, and some common mistakes that artists make when reconstructing them. A lot of these issues bleed into how dinosaurs look in mainstream media, so I wanted to show what scientists know is the right way to do a dinosaur.
But dinosaurs weren't the only reptiles alive at the time, and many other ancient reptile groups also feature heavily in pop culture... and they're done just as dirty. Today I wanna talk about a group closely related to dinosaurs, the Pterosaurs, and the various way they're misreconstructed.
Firstly: Pterosaurs aren't Dinosaurs
Most people with at least a passing interest in dinosaurs understand that dinosaurs were not the only group of reptiles widespread in the Mesozoic. But the other day, my sister was approaching me for information she could link to a cheap bag of "dinosaur" toys. Among Tyrannosaurus and Triceratops, there was also other reptiles like Pteranodon and Elasmosaurus, and I was shocked to find that the fact that not all of these were dinosaurs was not common knowledge.
A typical cheap assortment of plastic "Dinosaur" toys
I might tackle extinct marine reptiles in the future, but for now, the basics to know is that most dinosaurs were not strong swimmers; plesiosaurs, icthyosaurs, and mososaurs were not dinosaurs. And the only flying dinosaurs had feathered wings; birds and their close extinct relatives. Pterosaurs, which fly with stretched membrane wings, are not dinosaurs.
Pterosaurs are closely related to dinosaurs, both groups share the very light bone structure that allowed flight to develop in each group. Ornithodira (bird-neck), is the name of the group containing the oldest ancestors of dinosaurs and pterosaurs, and their descendants. But that's enough cladistics. Let's get to physical inaccuracies.
Bipedal vs Quadrupedal
The classic image of a man-shaped Pterosaur standing on its hind limbs like a vulture is very verrrry outdated. We now know that, like modern membrane-winged bats, pterosaurs walked on all fours on the ground. And they weren't clumsy either, some larger species may have hunted on the ground too.
The Lost World: Jurassic Park, Pteranodon (inaccurate)
Mark Witton, Thalassodromeus (accurate)
This quadrupedal stance helped pterosaurs take off with all four limbs, a much more powerful leap. Meaning that pterosaurs could reach greater sizes than any other flying animal in history. Another, minor quip, is that the fingers of the front limbs faced backwards when pterosaurs were grounded.
Wings were not pointed
Walking With Dinosaurs, Ornithocheirus (now inaccurate wings)
Julio Lacerda, Pteranodon (accurate wings)
When you draw a pterosaur it can be very easy to draw mishapen pointed triangles for the wings, but if you're going for a scientifically accurate depiction, the edges of a pterosaur wing were actually slightly rounded, and this helps reduce drag. Which is important in particular for gliding and soaring species.
Tails... were not Universal
The earliest ancestors of pterosaurs were likely a quadrupedal, possibly arboreal species, and would have definitely had a tail. But as pterosaurs diversified and got bigger, there was a trend toward a smaller tail.
Gabriel Ugueto, Articodactylus (a tailed Pterosaur)
Brian Engh, Nyctosaurus (a tailless Pterosaur)
The stereotypical long, arrow-headed tail was present in some species for sure, but the bigger crested species like Pterodactylus did not have tails.
Scaly Monsters?
Like many mainstream misrepresentation of dinosaurs, pterosaurs have long been shown off as serpent-like monsters with bare, scaled skin. I mentioned in the Your Dinosaurs Are Wrong post that even very primitive feathers are ancestral to all dinosaurs, and some palaeontologists think that this ancestral trait might extend to all of Ornithodira.
Most, if not all Pterosaurs, possessed hair-like filaments called Pycnofibers. In dinosaurs, this fuzz gave rise to feathers, but in pterosaurs, they developed into fluff that was superficially analogous to mammal fur. So rather than shrink wrapped scaly monsters, more accurate pterosaurs would've appeared fairly furry. But like dinosaurs, this would vary between genera.
Walking With Dinosaurs, Anurognathus (now inaccurate)
Andrey Atuchin, Anurognathus (accurate)
Thanks For Reading
These things I've mentioned today are the main glaring inaccuracies that pop up in PaleoMedia and mainstream SciFi in general. There's a couple other smaller things that I wouldve brought up, but tumblr only allows 10 images in one post.
The clade Pterosauria is also very varied, so smaller gripes, such as toothless jaws or wings without external fingers, may be inaccurate in some groups, but they are perfectly accurate in others (the toothless Quetzalocoatlus, and fingerless Nyctosaurus for example).
Cheers for the read, and if you want me to tackle other groups of ancient animals and their misrepresentation in media, let us know.
Also check out Dr Mark Witton on his twitter, and his blogspot. He is very skilled paleoartist, and I use a lot of his art in general, but he's also a palaeontologist who is very knowledgeable in Pterosaurs.
In your poll on palaeontological oopsies, you mentioned pterosaurs not being classified as dinosaurs. Do you wish they would be? On the one hand, they're different enough for it to make sense for them to be their own thing. On the other hand, that would really make feathers a dinosaur-only trait. (Plus everyone's calling them dinosaurs already anyway.)
part of me wishes they had been lumped just because I don't *like* correcting everyone all the time, I know it makes me sound like a douche. but. pterosaurs are a distinct thing from what we now call dinosauria. They do not have open acetabulums and have different anatomies. We'd always need two different terms to describe the two groups. I just wish more people would learn Ornithodira or something so that when they mean dinosaurs + pterosaurs, they use the right word, I guess
kongonaphon, a tiny lagerpetid ornithodiran archosaur from the mid triassic of madagascar that was revealed only a few days ago. thought it would be fun to try out drawing something very recently described
A newly described proto-dino-pterosaur provides new insights into the evolution of both dinosaurs and pterosaurs.
Some Ornithodirans with speculative integument! The Ixalerpeton is not “fluffy”, those long things are just weird scales. I did this for an art contest on a Discord server I’m on. I only recently switched this blog from a FF7 fandom blog to a general art blog (where I will post my paleoart and other animal art), so more stuff like this is coming! I’m looking to connect with other paleoartists on this site, too. My DeviantART - Anguilupus (to be changed to Knarme in the future)
My IG/Twitter - Knarme
Day 2: Rest. This ornithopod Convolosaurus is resting for the day after grazing along with herbivores. Originally I want to picture the whole page, but it would be easy to give it up close and then added with darker gray and then counter shades as resemble to coastal Iguanodon from JWE which the latter is highly inspired by Walking with Dinosaurs featured with American Iguanodon but latter known today as Dakotadon. P.S. As an (paleo) artist, I also give this male version of Convolosaurus with filaments on the crown as for showy style of Congo peacock, a bearded Tom like wild turkey and non avian ceratopsian psittacosaurus with bristled on the tail. #paleoart #cartoon #inktober #inktober2019 #convolosaurus #ornithopoda #ornithischia #ornithodira #myart #inkdrawings #inkdrawing #dinosauria https://www.instagram.com/p/B3I3YPxlQ6j/?igshid=mnva1twzmgjc
Day 27: Anurognathus ammoni
This is a frog-mouth pterosaur that was originate from German rock formation called Solnhofen Limestone, which was home of the numbers of late Jurassic pterosaurs and two non-avian dinosaurs such as Coelurosaurian compsognathus and avialae Archaeopteryx.