A team of paleontologists from Brazil, Argentina and the U.S., has found the fossilized remains of a creature they describe as a precursor to the pterosaur at a dig site in Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil. In their paper published in the journal Nature, the group describes features of the fossil, where it was found, its condition and where it fits with other ancient creatures.
Prior research has shown that during the late to middle Triassic, dinosaurs became the dominant form of life on land while pterosaurs dominated the skies. In this new effort, the researchers found a fossil from before that time, when land-bound pterosaur precursors roamed parts of what is now Brazil. The fossil has been dated back to approximately 230 million years ago.
The team describes the fossil as a well-preserved partial skeleton—it was found embedded in a layer of rock. They also note that it was a lagerpetid that had not been identified before. They named it Venetoraptor gassenae.
The fossil revealed a small, land-dwelling, four-legged, bipedal creature—likely standing no more than 0.3 meters at the hips and likely no more than a meter long. It also had a toothless beak reminiscent of those sported by modern raptors.
It also had big hands with scimitar-like claws. The researchers suggest that V. gassenae was likely a specialized creature. Its claws appear to have been used to climb trees or perhaps to capture prey. And it likely used its beak in much the same way modern raptors do—to feed, vocalize or even as part of sexual encounters.
2023-08-18 04:48:03
Original from phys.org rnrn