Look around any wetland today and you're likely to see 3-foot-tall egrets or 4-foot-tall herons wading in the shallows in stealthy search of fish, insects or crustaceans. But 70 million years ago, ...
Quetzalcoatlus is often described as a flying dinosaur, though it belonged to a separate group of ancient reptiles known as pterosaurs With a wingspan comparable to a small aircraft, it remains one of ...
In Jurassic World Rebirth, the largest pterosaur to soar over Earth's skies, the majestic Quetzalcoatlus, makes its debut. Boasting a wingspan of nearly 40 feet, this massive flying reptile is central ...
A sketch of the bones of Quetzalcoatlus northropi. When walking, the animal had a unique gait unlike any other, and distinctly different from that of the vampire bat. Disclaimer: AAAS and EurekAlert!
Of all the prehistoric creatures that once filled the skies, you don’t get much bigger — or weirder — than the Quetzalcoatlus. “You’re talking an animal that stands up like a giraffe, the size of a ...