Guide / Pterosauria
The Conquest of the Air
The first vertebrates ever to fly under their own power — and, for 160 million years, the only ones competing for the open sky.
Pl. II · Pterosauria
Rhamphorhynchus muensteri — long-tailed Jurassic flyer, preserved with wing membrane. Lithographic plate.
Pterosaurs were flying reptiles — close cousins of the dinosaurs, but a separate branch entirely. They appear in the fossil record around 228 million years ago already fully capable of flight, which means the crucial transition happened earlier, in animals we have not yet found. By the time the curtain rises, they are airborne.
Their defining feature is the wing, and it is unlike anything alive today. Where a bird spreads its wing across an entire arm and hand, and a bat stretches skin between four long fingers, a pterosaur built its entire wing on a single, monstrously elongated fourth finger. From the tip of that finger a tough membrane — the patagium — ran back to the ankle, laced with fibres that let the animal change the wing's shape and stiffness in flight.
Flight is a war against weight, and pterosaurs fought it everywhere. Their bones were hollow and walled with struts, inflated by extensions of the lungs — a system of air sacs that also helped them breathe. Some giant species had skeletons that weighed only a fraction of what their size suggests. Many were covered in pycnofibres, hair-like filaments that insulated the body and tell us these were active, warm-running animals, not sluggish reptiles.
Two broad grades: the early, long-tailed "rhamphorhynchoids" of the Triassic and Jurassic, and the later, short-tailed, often spectacularly crested pterodactyloids that dominated the Cretaceous.
Many pterosaurs wore elaborate head crests — bony blades, soft-tissue sails, even antler-like prongs. Most were almost certainly display structures: billboards for attracting mates and signalling species, the Mesozoic equivalent of a peacock's tail. A few may have helped with steering or temperature, but show was the main business.
The group spanned an astonishing range. The smallest were the size of small birds, snapping insects out of the dusk. The largest — the azhdarchids like Quetzalcoatlus — stood as tall as a giraffe with wings spanning eleven metres, and likely stalked the ground like enormous storks, plucking up prey the size of a dog.
No. 01The tallest flyer ever found — a giraffe-sized stork of the Cretaceous floodplains.
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No. 02The iconic crested, toothless flyer — a fish-hunter of the great inland sea.
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No. 03Long-tailed Jurassic flyer with needle teeth and a tail-vane rudder.
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No. 05A deep, puffin-like skull with two sizes of teeth — an Early Jurassic generalist.
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No. 10Crowned with an antler-like crest twice the length of its skull; it had lost its grasping fingers.
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No. 04The first pterosaur ever named (1809) — small, short-tailed, the original "wing-finger".
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No. 06A tiny, wide-mouthed, fuzzy night-flyer that hawked insects like a Mesozoic bat.
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No. 07Wore an enormous semicircular head-sail — among the most extravagant crests known.
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No. 08Keeled jaw-tips for snatching fish at the surface — a skim-feeding Cretaceous giant.
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No. 09An upturned, tweezer-like beak for prising shellfish off the bottom, with crushing back teeth.
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No. 11A stocky, thick-necked azhdarchid — the apex predator of an island Europe with no big dinosaurs.
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No. 12One of the earliest pterosaurs known — Triassic, with complex multi-cusped fish-catching teeth.
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