Pterosaurs / Palaeocursornis
Palaeocursornis

Palaeocursornis

Art: Joschua Knüppe

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Palaeocursornis

Once thought to be the earliest ratite bird, Palaeocursornis was probably an early azhdarchoid pterosaur instead.

Pterosaur data

Wingspan
0.75 m
/ 12 m

Mesozoic era · 252–66 Ma

Triassic
Jurassic
Cretaceous
252 Ma 201 145 66 Ma

About this pterosaur

In 1986 Eugen Kessler and Tiberiu Jurcsák named the genus and species Palaeocursornis biharicus for a fossil bone fragment found in the Lower Cretaceous Cornet locality in Bihor County, northwestern Romania. They initially considered the bone to be the distal femur of a ratite, giving it a genus name that translates to “ancient running bird,” with the species name honoring the county. 

In 2012, Federico Agnolin and David Varricchio reinterpreted Palaeocursornis and concluded that the fossil was not from a femur or a bird, but was in fact the distal portion of a pterosaur humerus. It shares with pterosaur humeri a deep pneumatic foramen above the distal condyles, only two distal condyles, trochlea with an intertrochlear sulcus, a medially displaced posterior groove, and an ulnar tubercle that separates two concavities on the distal surface of the bone. 

Agnolin and Varricchio noted that it seems to be most similar to azhdarchids as Palaeocursornis and azhdarchids share a D-shaped distal humerus, a capitulum with a very deep fossa, and a well-developed and deep trochlear groove. 

The fossil itself is extremely small, only about 2.5 cm (1 inch) long, although it would have been about twice as long when complete. Comparison to other azhdarchoids suggests that Palaeocursornis would have a wingspan of only about 75 cm (30 inches), about the same size as a mallard. 

Palaeocursornis lived at the very beginning of the Cretaceous Period, about 143 million years ago. At the time, Europe was made up of a number of small- to medium-sized subtropical islands surrounded by lagoons and shallow seas, similar to both Indonesia and the Bahamas. The Cornet locality itself was formed within an ancient limestone cave that was completely filled with sediments and numerous fossil bone fragments in the Early Cretaceous, buried under sediments, and then later exposed at the surface during the Quaternary. 

Nothing is known of the diet of Palaeocursornis, but most other azhdarchoids were terrestrial carnivores so it’s likely that it was too. If Palaeocursornis is indeed an azhdarchid, it is both the earliest and smallest known member of that family.

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
Pete Buchholz
Pete Buchholz
Author
Nick Garland
Nick Garland
Exhibit designer
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