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microrobert
08-14-2014, 04:10 AM
Ancient Butterfly-Headed Flying Reptile Discovered

http://media4.s-nbcnews.com/j/newscms/2014_33/616841/140813-pterosaur-caiuajara-dobruskii-jms-1923_7842d09133614daf06d997737732a7c3.nbcnews-ux-720-900.jpg


An ancient flying reptile with a bizarre, butterflylike head has been unearthed in Brazil.

A huge triceratops skeleton was found in Wyoming, but researchers say it's not a triceratops -- that dinosaur never existed.

The newfound reptile species, Caiuajara dobruskii, lived about 80 million years ago in an ancient desert oasis. The beast sported a strange bony crest on its head that looked like the wings of a butterfly, and had the wingspan needed to take flight at a very young age.

Hundreds of fossils from the reptile were unearthed in a single bone bed, providing the strongest evidence yet that the flying reptiles (http://www.livescience.com/46589-map-pterosaurs-on-google-earth.html) were social animals, said study co-author Alexander Kellner, a paleontologist at the Museu Nacional/Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro in Brazil.

Though pterosaur fossils have been unearthed in northern Brazil (http://www.livescience.com/37361-flying-reptiles-cretaceous-england.html), no one knew of pterosaurs fossils in the southern part of the country. In the 1970s, a farmer named Dobruski and his son discovered a massive Cretaceous Period bone bed in Cruzeiro do Oeste in southern Brazil, a region not known for any fossils, Kellner said. The find was forgotten for decades, and then rediscovered just two years ago. The team dubbed the reptile Caiuajara dobruskii, after the geologic formation, called the Caiuá Group, where it was found, as well as the farmer who discovered the species, Kellner said.

C. dobruskiibelonged to a group of winged reptiles known as pterosaurs, which are more commonly known as pterodactyls (http://www.livescience.com/24071-pterodactyl-pteranodon-flying-dinosaurs.html).

Hundreds of bone fragments from the species were crammed in an area of just 215 square feet (20 square meters). At least 47 individuals — and possibly hundreds more — were buried at the site. All but a few were juveniles, though the researchers found everything from youngsters with wingspans of just 2.1 feet (0.65 m) long to adults with wingspans reaching 7.71 feet (2.35 m). The fossils weren't crushed, so the 3D structure of the animals was preserved, the authors wrote in a research article published today (Aug. 13) in the journal PLOS ONE (http://dx.plos.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0100005).

The ancient reptiles' bony crests changed in size and orientation as the pterosaurs grew.

Ancient Butterfly-Headed Flying Reptile Discovered : Discovery News (http://news.discovery.com/animals/dinosaurs/ancient-butterfly-headed-reptile-discovered-140813.htm)