Part three of Dinosaurs of China, Nottingham. Pictured: - epidexipteryx hui - protopteryx fengningensis - confuciusornis sanctus - dilophosaurus sinensis - alxasaurus elesitaiensis - velociraptor mongoliensis - deinonychus antirhoppus - phororhacos

#dc comics#dc#batman#tim drake#dick grayson#bruce wayne#batfam#batfamily#dc fanart




seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from Greece
seen from Malaysia
seen from Brazil
seen from Canada
seen from China

seen from United States

seen from Brazil
seen from United States
seen from United Kingdom

seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
Part three of Dinosaurs of China, Nottingham. Pictured: - epidexipteryx hui - protopteryx fengningensis - confuciusornis sanctus - dilophosaurus sinensis - alxasaurus elesitaiensis - velociraptor mongoliensis - deinonychus antirhoppus - phororhacos
Protopteryx fengningensis
By José Carlos Cortés on @quetzalcuetzpalin-art
PLEASE SUPPORT US ON PATREON. EACH and EVERY DONATION helps to keep this blog running! Any amount, even ONE DOLLAR is APPRECIATED! IF YOU ENJOY THIS CONTENT, please CONSIDER DONATING!
Name: Protopteryx fengningensis
Name Meaning: Primitive Feather
First Described: 2000
Described By: Zhang & Zhou
Classification: Dinosauria, Theropoda, Neotheropoda, Averostra, Tetanurae, Orionides, Avetheropoda, Coelurosauria, Tyrannoraptora, Maniraptoriformes, Maniraptora, Pennaraptora, Paraves, Eumaniraptora, Averaptora, Avialae, Euavialae, Avebrevicauda, Pygostylia, Ornithothoraces, Enantiornithes
Protopteryx is an Opposite Bird from the Yixian Formation of Hebei Province, China, living about 131 million years ago, in the Hauterivian age of the Early Cretaceous. It is known from an almost complete skeleton on a slab that also preserves feathered integument - and its mixture of feathers and scales was, at the time, an indication of importance; however, since then discoveries of non-Avialan theropods with similar integument have essentially rendered Protopteryx run-of-the-millin terms of its mixture of feathers and scales; and any indication that it may have had of a non-dinosaurian origin of birds has been thoroughly disproven by the sheer amount of evidence demonstrating birds as living theropod dinosaurs. At any rate, it was a small but not terribly so bird, about the size of a starling with a body length of 16 centimeters and a wingspan of 33 centimeters. It had a round head and a pointed snout, with teeth only in the tips of the jaws. Its short and broad wings would have been good for maneuvering in its forested environment, and it is one of the earliest known birds that definitely could power its own flight. It didn’t have a tail fan like modern birds, so it would have been more clumsy in flight than modern birds, but of course avian evolution was a bit of a learning curve. It had two long feathers extending from its short tail, again probably for display.
Sources:
Martyniuk, M. P. 2012. A Field Guide to Mesozoic Birds and other Winged Dinosaurs. Pan Aves; Vernon, New Jersey.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Protopteryx
Shout out goes to @pipius!
Part three of Dinosaurs of China, Nottingham. Pictured: - epidexipteryx hui - protopteryx fengningensis - confuciusornis sanctus - dilophosaurus sinensis - alxasaurus elesitaiensis - velociraptor mongoliensis - deinonychus antirhoppus - phororhacos
The first wing, Protopteryx (2000)
Phylum : Chordata Class : Aves Order : Protopterygiformes Family : Protopterygidae Genus : Protopteryx Species : P. fengningensis
Early Cretaceous (131 Ma)
30 cm long (size)
Hebei province, China (map)
Protopteryx is an extinct genus of bird, perhaps an enantiornithine, from the Cretaceous in China. The type species is P. fengningensis. It was found in the Sichakou Member of the Huajiying Formation of Hebei Province, China and so dates to 131 Ma ago.