The pteranodon is the best known of the many flying reptiles which filled the skies during the age of dinosaurs. Pteranodon had an immense wingspan.
We do not know how pteranodon and the other large featherless, flying reptiles were able able to take off and land, or even how they remained aloft. Perhaps they remained aloft for their entire life. Their lives are a mystery.
But we do know that from that from its aerial location, pteranodon had an unsurpassed view. The view and the mystery make petranodon a perfect icon for this project.
Paleontologist Adrian Desmond discussed pteranodon in his book The Hot Blooded Dinosaurs:
Desmond wrote his book in the 1970's. His suggestion that pteranodon was unable to flap its wings dates from an era when most paleontologists believed that pterosaurs were poorly adapted for active flight and mainly used gliding and the wind to fly. But more recent analyses of pterosaur skeletal features suggests that all but the largest pterosaurs could sustain powered flight. Pterosaurs had hollow bones, large brains with well-developed optic lobes, and crests on their bones to attach flight muscles.
This view of pteranodon as a flyer capable of flapping flight is also supported by fossil bones of giant terotorn birds discovered in Argentina during the 1970s. The terotorn was a 160 to 200 lb eagle with a 27' wingspan. Its design is similar to a modern bird and thus is capable of flapping its wings, and making aerial maneuvers. It can be argued that at least some some limited flying ability is necessary for any aerial creature. If pteranodoan had lived totally as a glider, the first contrary wind would carry it away from its nest.
For more information on current thinking on how pteranodon and other pterosaurs flew, jump to the pterosaurian flight portion of a University of California series of pages on the wonder of flight in vertebrates. This site also has further information on pteranodon.
Desmond suggests that pteranodon had a lifestyle similar to a pelican. It soared over the waves and snapping up fish without landing. Desmond notes that pteranodon had a throat pouch like a pelican, and has been found with fish fossils. The figate bird has a similar aerial life.
The pteranodon's way of life was impervious to practically all mishap, as it stayed aloft over floods and other catastrophes of a many millions of years. Hopefully, this project will soar as successfully.
Desmond wrote his book in the 1970's, shortly after paleontologists had found partial remains of even larger pterosaurs that may have lived as carrion eaters far from the water. The largest vertebrate ever known to fly, the late Cretaceous Quetzalcoatlus, may have had a carrion eating lifestyle. But, I prefer pteranodon's lifestyle. Big is big, but biggest isn't necessarily best.
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