Pterosaurs / Uktenadactylus
Uktenadactylus

Uktenadactylus

Art: Joschua Knüppe

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Ornithocheiridae

Uktenadactylus

/uk-TEN-a-dak-til-us/

Found in the vicinity of Fort Worth, Texas, USA, Uktenadactylus was a large fishing pterosaur.

Pterosaur data

Age
Albian
113–100.5 Ma
Wingspan
4 m
/ 12 m
Fossil record
partial
Partial skeleton recovered
Diet
carnivore

Mesozoic era · 252–66 Ma

Albian
Triassic
Jurassic
Cretaceous
252 Ma 201 145 66 Ma

Wingspan

Uktenadactylus wingspan comparison
4 m (13.1 ft)

About this pterosaur

In 1994 Yuong Nam Lee named a new species of Coloborhynchus, C. wadeighi, based on a specimen found in the Lower Cretaceous Paw Paw Formation, north of Fort Worth, Texas. In 2008 Taissa Rodrigues and Alexander Kellner gave this species its own genus, Uktenadactylus, citing anatomical differences and the 30 million year gap between C. wadleighi and the type species of the genus, C. clavirostris. The genus is named for Uktena, a horned serpent of Cherokee myth, and the species honors Chris Wadleigh who discovered the specimen. 

Uktenadactylus is only known from a single snout fragment. It measures roughly 16 cm (6 inches) long, 5 cm (2 inches) wide, and 8 cm (3 inches) tall and represents the distal end of the upper jaw. The end of the jaw doesn’t end in a point, but instead has a blunt vertical surface with a triangular shape when seen from the front. There are eight pairs of teeth preserved on the fragment, with more teeth likely in the unpreserved part of the snout. The first pair of teeth emerges from the flat surface on the front of the snout and point forward, while the others point downward. The second and third pair of teeth are twice as thick as the others. The fragment shows the base of a curved crest on the upper surface of the snout. 

When complete, the skull would have been considerably longer, about 80 to 90 cm (31-35 inches) long. Comparison to other ornithocheirids suggests a wingspan of 4-4.5 m (13-15 feet). Ornithocheirids were aerial fishers, with short torsos and long narrow wings. When Uktenadactylus was alive, about 105 million years ago, the Dallas-Fort Worth area was underwater, near the northern shore of the Gulf of Mexico. It likely fished in the Gulf or large rivers flowing into the Gulf. 

Lee had initially considered Uktenadactylus as a species of Coloborhynchus because they shared blunt snout tips, and enlarged second and third teeth in the upper jaws. Subsequent phylogenetic analyses have found that they are indeed closely related, and form a lineage with Siroccopteryx within the ornithocheirids.

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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