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Brazil and China scientists unearth pterosaur eggs with preserved embryos

These flying reptiles became extinct some 66 million years ago
Léo Rodrigues reports from Agência Brasil
Published on 03/12/2017 - 18:29
Rio de Janeiro
Rio de Janeiro - As réplicas dos fósseis e ovos de pterossauros descobertos por pesquisadores brasileiros e chineses ficarão expostas no Museu Nacional (Fernando Frazão/Agência Brasil)
© Fernando Frazão/Agência Brasil
Rio de Janeiro - As réplicas dos fósseis e ovos de pterossauros descobertos por pesquisadores brasileiros e chineses ficarão expostas no Museu Nacional (Fernando Frazão/Agência Brasil)

The discovery was made during in 2015 and 2016 expeditions in the Hami region, northwestern ChinaFernando Frazão/Agência Brasil

Brazil's National Museum, in Rio de Janeiro, unveiled Thursday (Nov. 30) the details surrounding the discovery of hundreds of remains of pterosaur bones and 300 eggs—some of them with preserved embryos—in China. Involved in the finding were Brazilian and Chinese scientists. A study on the subject can be found in one of the world's most renowned scientific publications, Science magazine, in an issue published Friday (Dec. 1).

According to Brazilian palaeontologist Alexander Kellner, the discovery was made during in 2015 and 2016 expeditions in the Hami region, northwestern China. This is the largest concentration of eggs of extinct vertebrates known thus far. They were stored in a block of slightly over three cubic meters.

Until then, only nine eggs had been found worldwide—in China and Argentina—three of which with embryos, but all of them crushed and compacted. In this new finding, in addition to the surprising discovery of over 300 eggs, an unprecedented 16 embryos with preserved eggs in three dimensions were unearthed. “This is the most important find on extinct vertebrates of the last ten years,” Kellner argued.

Pterosaurs are flying reptiles. They were the first vertebrate animals to develop the ability to fly, even before birds did. Closely related to dinosaurs, they disappeared some 66 million years ago, in the geologic period known as Cretaceous, and left no descendants.

Approximately 300 pterosaur species have been found across all continents. The species found in China was named Hamipterus tianshanensis. On its quadruped stance, an average specimen is believed to be 1.2 meters tall and its maximum height was likely to be reached two years after birth. Its wingspan varies from 1.5 to 3.5 meters. By the shape of its teeth, scientists believe they were carnivores and ate fish.

Significant lodes of pterosaur bones had been found in Argentina and Brazil, but the amount of eggs in these sites was not impressive. Juliana Sayão, Professor at the Federal University of Pernambuco (UFPE) and also a member of the team, mentions the discoveries in the Araripe basin, which encompasses three states in Brazil's Northeast: Ceará, Pernambuco, and Piauí. “Over twenty pterosaur species were unearthed there, the latest of which by our research group three years ago.”


Translated by Fabrício Ferreira


Fonte: Brazil and China scientists unearth pterosaur eggs with preserved embryos