Pterosaurs / Noripterus
Noripterus

Noripterus

Art: Vitor Silva

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Dsungaripteridae

Noripterus

/nor-IP-ter-us/

This stout pterosaur hunted shellfish on the shores of ancient lakes and rivers in China and Mongolia.

Pterosaur data

Age
Aptian
125–113 Ma
Fossil record
partial
Partial skeleton recovered
Diet
durophagivore

Mesozoic era · 252–66 Ma

Aptian
Triassic
Jurassic
Cretaceous
252 Ma 201 145 66 Ma

About this pterosaur

Noripterus is an Early Cretaceous dsungaripterid known from the Tsagan Tsab Formation of western Mongolia and the Lianmuqin Formation of western China. It lived approximately 140 million years ago in a terrestrial environment with many lakes and rivers. It represents one of the only pterosaurs known from Mongolia, and is known from several well-preserved skeletons. 

Noripterus was first named in 1973 and was based on a partial specimen from China. A new well-preserved specimen was found in Mongolia and given the name Phobetor. It was soon realized that the name Phobetor was already taken by an Arctic sculpin so could not be used for the pterosaur. A 2009 study by Junchang Lü and colleagues showed that Noripterus and Phobetor are one and the same. 

Noripterus is similar in many respects to Dsungaripterus, which lived at the same time and place as Norpiterus. The skull and mandible are remarkably stout for pterosaurs. They are long and pointed, and lack any teeth at their tips. The teeth are cone shaped and widely spaced. Noripterus has a fin-like crest on the top of its snout. The front edge arises from the middle of the snout and extends all the way to the end of its skull. In life, the crest may have been made taller by soft tissue as it seen in many other pterosaurs. Noripterus's wingspan has been calculated at four meters (thirteen feet), about the same size as the contemporaneous Dsungaripterus. The body had stout proportions which suggest a terrestrial lifestyle. The stout skull shows that Noripterus fed on hard shelled animals such as shelled mollusks and crustaceans. 

Noripterus differs from Dsungaripterus in two notable ways. First, the tips of Noripterus's jaws are straight, but in Dsungaripterus they curve upwards. Secondly, the cone-shaped teeth of Noripterus fully erupt from the jaw bones, but in Dsungaripterus the teeth are almost entirely covered with bone tissue. 

Both Noripterus and Dsungaripterus are members of the Dsungaripteridae. Dsungaripterids are members of the short-tailed pterosaur clade known as the Pterodactyloidea. A 2013 phylogenetic analysis published by Brian Andres and Timothy Myers found dsungaripterids to be within the azhdarchoids, a large clade of pterosaurs that includes azhdarchids, chaoyangopterids, thalassodromines, and tapejarids; and are most closely related to the thalassodromines. Other analyses have found dsungaripterids to be closely related to the azhdarchoids, but not within that clade.

Across the network

Credits

Vitor Silva
Vitor Silva

Vitor Silva, born in 1994, graduated in Graphic Design and is one of those who liked to draw since childhood. It was also as a kid when he got fascinated about prehistoric life. As a paleoartist, his goal is to artistically restore the past ages in a visually attractive but scientifically accurate way, combining art and science. He works with illustrations and sculptures in scale, both digitally and traditionally.

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