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Pterodactyl

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Pterodactyl (derived from the Greek words πτερυζ (wing) and δακτυλος (finger) meaning "winged finger", "wing-finger" or "finger-wing") is a common term for some types of pterosauria or ("flying lizards"), especially the later (mainly late Jurassic or Cretaceous) shorter-tailed examples. They belong to the sub-order Pterodactyloidea. The wing was a leathery skin covering, over the forelimb. Some had a thin covering of fur.

Prehistoric flying reptiles are sometimes referred to as dinosaurs but this is strictly incorrect. The dinosaur term is more correctly restricted to the upright-stance terrestrial reptiles, therefore including neither the flying reptiles nor the aquatic reptiles, such as Ichthyosaurs, Plesiosaurs and Mosasaurs. (Pelycosaurs such as Dimetrodon are also commonly confused with dinosaurs but are strictly-speaking a separate category.)

Important examples of pterodactyls are: Pterodactylus, Dsungaripterus, Pteranodon and Quetzalcoatlus.

The other group of pterosaurs is the sub-order Rhamphorhynchoidea, which are mainly found in earlier (Jurassic) deposits and usually have long tails. Examples include Dimorphodon, Eudimorphodon, Scaphognathus, Anurognathus, Sordes and Campylognathus.

It is likely that the classification system quoted here will be updated, as newer finds fill in evolutionary gaps and clarify distinctions.

Fossilised Pterosaurs have been found in North America, United Kingdom, Europe, Africa and Australia. The first pterosaur fossil was found by an Italian naturalist, Collini, in 1784. The name "pterodactyle" was first coined by Georges Cuvier in 1809. A famous UK find was an example of Dimorphodon by Mary Anning, at Lyme Regis in 1828.

A dusty hoax

It was reported in an article in The Illustrated London News (February 9, 1856, page 166) that, in 1856, workmen laboring in a tunnel for a railway line, between Saint-Dizier and Nancy, in France, were cutting through Jurassic limestone when a large creature stumbled out from inside it. It fluttered its wings, made a croaking noise and dropped dead. According to the workers, the creature had a 10 foot wingspan, four legs joined by a membrane, black leathery skin, talons for feet and a toothed mouth. A local student of paleontology identified the animal as a pterodactyl. The report had the animal turn to dust, as soon as it had died.

Supported by the lack of evidence, this story is believed to have been a hoax, stimulated in part by contemporary Franco-Prussian palaeontological rivalry. The Solnhofen limestone from Bavaria (in which Archaeopteryx would later be discovered) was producing many prized fossils, each of which was proudly announced by German paleontologists. The tunnel in question was through limestone of similar age to the Solnhofen Limestone, so it presented an opportunity for a graphic rival French story.

Pterodactyls in popular culture

A number of creatures in popular culture are called pterodactyls. Often, these creatures are in fact pteranodons.

See also

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