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Working from remains unearthed in northwest China, researchers Brian Andres, a USF paleontologist, James Clark of the George Washington University Columbian College of Arts and Sciences and Xu Xing of the Chinese Academy of Sciences, identified rather smallish creature with a wingspan of about 4.5 f
"His wings were only about four-and-a-half feet wide, so he had a smaller wingspan than I do," says University of South Florida paleontologist Brian Andres, leader of the team reporting the new find. "From what we can tell, he was a small, unimposing guy. But out of small things, big things sometime
Date: Apr 24, 2014
Category: Sci/Tech
Source: Google
Fossil in China Sheds Light on Origin of Flying Reptiles
"This guy is the very first pterodactyloid he has the last features that changed before the group radiated and took over the world," said paleontologist Brian Andres of the University of South Florida, a co-author of the study detailed today (April 24) in the journal Current Biology. [ Photos of P
Date: Apr 24, 2014
Category: Sci/Tech
Source: Google
Kryptodrakon, oldest pterodactyl unearthed in China
"The pterodactyloid is the earliest, oldest and most primitive member of a group that would become huge," Brian Andres, lead author of the study and paleontologist at the University of South Florida, told PBS. "It would take over the skies. It would become the largest flying organism of all time."