Pterosaurs / Hornby Island Azhdarchid
Hornby Island Azhdarchid

Hornby Island Azhdarchid

Art: Joschua Knüppe

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Azhdarchidae

Hornby Island Azhdarchid

Meet the cat-sized relative of the giraffe-sized azhdarchids that lived on Canada's west coast at the end of the Mesozoic.

Pterosaur data

Family
Azhdarchidae
Age
Maastrichtian
72.1–66 Ma
Fossil record
fragmentary
Known from isolated fragments
Diet
carnivore

Mesozoic era · 252–66 Ma

Maastrichtian
Triassic
Jurassic
Cretaceous
252 Ma 201 145 66 Ma

About this pterosaur

All of the pterosaurs that lived at the very end of the Cretaceous were giants and belonged to the marine-hunting pteranodontids and nyctosaurids, or the terrestrial-hunting azhdarchids. Conventional wisdom seemed to imply that birds had out-competed pterosaurs in most of the small to medium-sized flying vertebrate niches. 

That is until a cat-sized fossil azhdarchid was discovered in Late Cretaceous sediments of the Northumberland Formation exposed on Hornby Island, British Columbia. Hornby Island lies off the east coast of Vancouver Island between the towns of Campbell River and Nanaimo. The fossils were found in a small nodule and consist of a humerus and some dorsal vertebrae. 

Although the remains are incomplete, they show that this pterosaur is most closely related to the giraffe-sized azhdarchids like Quetzalcoatlus and Hatzegopteryx, especially in details of the humerus. Was this specimen a juvenile of one of the very large azhdarchids, or was it an adult of a small unknown species? To find out, scientists conducted detailed examinations and comparisons of the bone texture of this fossil and other fossil azhdarchids under a microscope. They found that this specimen was not yet fully grown, but exhibited features that are seen in near-adult azhdarchid specimens.

Because of the incomplete nature of the specimen, it wasn’t given a scientific name by the authors. This specimen expands our knowledge about the last pterosaurs, as well as our knowledge of Late Cretaceous pterosaurs, especially those in the far west of North America.

Across the network

Credits

Joschua Knüppe
Joschua Knüppe

Born in 1992 in Mettingen, Germany Began drawing at age 3 2010, diploma (Fachabitur) dicipline design Studying art since 2010 at the Academy for fine Arts Münster Since 2013 in the class of Shana Moulton Since 2014 master student <b>Exhibitions</b> -2012 "Pyrungata", Kunst in der Region, Kloster Gravenhorst -2013 Förderpreisausstellung, Kunsthalle Münster -2013 "Studentennester", Stadtmuseum Münster -2013 "Ausgrabung eines Eurovenator anglicus westfalia", Museumsdorf Detmold -2013 "All Yesterdays", SkF Osnabrück -2014 Förderpreisausstellung, Kunsthalle Münster -2014 "Silvanus" in F24, Münster -2014 "Seeschlangen, schützenswerte Exoten aus den Reiche der Legende", Geomuseum Münster -2015 “Ein lebender Mythos”, Kunstraum Unten, Bochum <b>Scientific work</b> Sachs et al 2015, Cenomanian–Turonian marine amniote remains from the Saxonian Cretaceous Basin of Germany

Illustrator
Vasi Devi
Vasi Devi
Author
Nick Garland
Nick Garland
Exhibit designer
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