On MovieTome: New TERMINATOR 4 images are online!
Find Articles in:
all
Business
Reference
Technology
News
Sports
Health
Autos
Arts
Home & Garden
advertisement
CIO SessionsVision Series on ZDNet

See and hear what CIOs the world over thinks about the business of technology and how it's changing the way we live and work.

Most Popular White Papers
advertisement

Content provided in partnership with
Thomson / Gale

From China, the tiniest pterodactyl

Science News,  Feb 23, 2008  by Sid Perkins

Researchers excavating the fossil-rich rocks of northeastern China have discovered another paleontological marvel: a flying reptile the size of a sparrow.

The tiny, toothless creature, dubbed Nemicolopterus crypticus--meaning "hidden flying forest dweller"--lived about 120 million years ago, says Alexander W.A. Kellner, a vertebrate paleontologist at the National Museum of the Federal University of Rio de Janeiro. Other fossils found in the same rocks suggest that the fine-grained sediments were deposited on the bottom of a lake in a heavily forested region, Kellner and his colleagues report in the Feb. 12 Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

Many of the bones in the creature's feet were strongly curved, a sign that N. crypticus probably spent much of its time grasping limbs, Kellner says. Studies of modern birds have often noted a link between the curvature of a bird's claws and its lifestyle (SN: 10/26/02, p. 270).

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

N. crypticus was a reptile but wasn't a dinosaur. It was a pterodactyl, part of a group of flying reptiles called pterosaurs. While some species had a wingspan approaching 10 meters, N. crypticus probably had a wingspan of just 25 centimeters, says Kellner. Many of the fossilized bones were fully ossified but those in the skull weren't fused together, so this creature was a juvenile or young adult, the researchers speculate.

How much more the creature might have grown is up for debate, says Kellner. However, he notes, "even if it were doubled in size, it would still be the smallest pterosaur yet found."

COPYRIGHT 2008 Science Service, Inc.
COPYRIGHT 2008 Gale, Cengage Learning