Here is Caelestiventus hanseni! One of the few #pterosaurs discovered from the #Triassic!

This definitely has one of the best names of any #pterosaur! Its generic name translates to “heavenly wind”, which is definitely up there with #Sordes and #Cryodrakon!

#cartoon #rubberhose #Caelestiventus #Dimorphodon #Rhamphorhynchus #science

Good Morning #Canada
Today is Appreciate A Dragon Day. Did you know that Canada had its very own dragon patrolling our western prairies. You likely didn't notice because it lived approximately 77 million years ago. Cryodrakon boreas, a previously unknown type of pterosaur, was one of the largest flying animals that ever lived. The name means “frozen dragon of the north wind” and it was discovered in Alberta's Dinosaur Park.

#CanadaIsAwesome #Cryodrakon #Dinosaur
https://www.independent.co.uk/news/science/dinosaur-flying-fossil-canada-pterosaur-dragon-cretaceous-a9106056.html

‘Frozen Dragon of the North’: New species of flying creature the size of small plane identified in Canada | The Independent

Imagine a ‘giant flying murder head’ about 3.5 times the length of its body, expert says

The Independent

Day four of Dinovember, a parasaurolophus colored like an okapi, startled by an albino cryodrakon.  I just wanted to try a different kind of pose than just having an animal standing there staring.

[ID: A color sketch of a brown and white striped parasaurolophus, startled by a white pterosaur flying in front of it.  The pterosaur has the tail of some prey animal hanging out of its beak. /ID]

#digitalart #art #sketch #tabletsketch #parasauolophus #cryodrakon #dinosaur #paleontology

Today’s #megafauna is the #cryodrakon! This large #pterosaur lived in Alberta, Canada between 74 and 77 million years ago. At the time, the land supported a temperate forest that would have provided the cryodrakon with plenty of mammals, lizards, and baby dinosaurs to snack on. Like #quetzelcoatlus, cryodrakon was a member of azhdarchidae: a family of late #cretaceous pterosaurs characterized by long legs and necks. Most members of this family are very large, and cryodrakon had a wingspan of 33 feet.

For a long time, cryodrakon fossils were confused for quetzelcoatlus fossils. This was exacerbated by the delayed publication of a full description of quetzelcoatlus. However, the discovery of several European azhdarchidae species allowed for additional differentiation. When the original quetzelcoatlus bones became available to view, it became clear that cryodrakon was species distinct from its Southern cousin. In fact, crydrakon was apparently more robust than quetzelcoatlus, making it perhaps the largest pterosaur ever.