Showing posts with label Zhenyuanopterus. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Zhenyuanopterus. Show all posts
Thursday, March 18, 2010
Lay Ho, Linheraptor
There's a new dromaeosaur from China, and its fossilized remains match the recently described pterosaur Zhenyuanopterus for sheer beauty. So perfect, it looks like something Hollywood might create. Its name is Linheraptor exquisitus, and it's announced in the print journal Zootaxa. There isn't a lot to say about it yet; it's superficially similar to Velociraptor, in terms of size and shape of the skull. Dave Hone promises more details to come. Head over to Archosaur Musings to see photos of fossil casts as well as a killer painting by Matt Van Rooijen. Van Rooijen also has a post about the creation of his reconstruction at his own blog, Optimistic Painting. I think it signals a welcome new voice into the paleoart world.
Wednesday, March 10, 2010
Zhenyuanopterus
Sinosauropteryx, a famous denizen of Yixian. From wikimedia commons.
It's too easy to dash down to the bakery when searching for a good geological metaphor. But I'll do it anyway. The perennially productive Yixian Formation in China can be thought of as a layer cake. Only instead of chocolate and vanilla, you get tasty alternating tiers of basalt and sandstone.
Sandstones are associated with places where rock is ground down to the coarse particles we call sand. Deserts do that, as does the erosive labor of water. The latter, in the form of lakes and streams, created the sandstones of Lower Cretaceous Yixian. Basalt, on the other hand, is a rock which comes in many forms with one shared source: volcanism. Combine the two, and you have a recipe for gorgeous fossils: adding to the day-to-day burial of bones handled by the bodies of water would be occasional volcanic eruptions which would bury the entire local environment. We have these natural cycles to thank for Sinosauropteryx, pictured above, and the other feathered dinosaurs. But feathered dinosaurs aren't the only animals the locale has to offer.
Zhenyuanopterus longirostris, a large pterosaur, is the latest beauty from Yixian. It is described by Chinese paleontologist Lu Jungchang in a new paper appearing in Acta Geologica Sinica. Bop on over to Archosaur Musings to get a nice look at one of the finest pterosaur fossils you'll ever see, remarkably complete, articulated, and sporting a set of teeth seemingly made to satisfy the universal human fascination with gnarly monsters.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)