Pterosaurs / Araripesaurus
Araripesaurus

Araripesaurus

Art: Julio Lacerda

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Ornithocheiridae

Araripesaurus

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The first pterosaur named from Brazil’s famous Santana Formation is only known from a partial wing.

Pterosaur data

Age
Aptian
125–113 Ma
Wingspan
2 m
/ 12 m
Fossil record
fragmentary
Known from isolated fragments
Diet
piscivore

Mesozoic era · 252–66 Ma

Aptian
Triassic
Jurassic
Cretaceous
252 Ma 201 145 66 Ma

Wingspan

Araripesaurus wingspan comparison
2 m (6.6 ft)

About this pterosaur

The Lower Cretaceous rocks of the Araripe Plateau in northeastern Brazil are famous for huge numbers of three-dimensionally preserved and articulated pterosaur specimens including the famous Anhanguera and Tapejara. The first pterosaur named from the region, Araripesaurus castilhoi, was described by Llewellyn Ivor Price in 1971. Unlike most other Santana Formation pterosaurs, Araripesaurus is not based on much material, only a single partial wing. Despite decades of further research, no additional specimens referable to Araripesaurus have been discovered. The specimen was found in a calcareous nodule and is made up of the distal portions of the radius and ulna, the wrist, pteroid bone, most of the hand and first three fingers, as well as the proximal part of the wing finger. Nothing else can be said of the anatomy of Araripesaurus, but its wingspan can be estimated to be about 2-2.5 meters (6.5-8 feet). The internal anatomy of the bones themselves suggest the specimen is nearly fully grown. Although incomplete, details of the bones and their articular surfaces show that Araripesaurus is different from other Santana pterosaurs, although probably most similar to ornithocheirids like Anhaunguera. Like many other ornithocheiroids, Araripesaurus may have had twin crests near the tips of its jaws as shown in our illustration. Araripesaurus was likely an aerial fisher, soaring over the waves of the young Atlantic Ocean.

Across the network

Credits

Julio Lacerda
Julio Lacerda

Both illustrator and graphic designer, Julio Lacerda got into paleoart at the age of 17. Wishing to bridge the creativity of reconstructing prehistoric animals and the essence of wildlife documentaries, he seeks to represent dinosaurs and other prehistoric animals as complex and realistic living beings in both appearance and behavior, being protagonists of casual scenes. His work has been published and shown at several countries like Japan (Pterosaurs exhibition, Fukui Prefectural Dinosaur Museum), United Kingdom (All Your Yesterdays by Irregular Books), USA (official publication of Siats meekerorum, North Carolina Museum of Natural Sciences) as well as his home country, Brazil.

Illustrator
Julio Lacerda
Julio Lacerda

Both illustrator and graphic designer, Julio Lacerda got into paleoart at the age of 17. Wishing to bridge the creativity of reconstructing prehistoric animals and the essence of wildlife documentaries, he seeks to represent dinosaurs and other prehistoric animals as complex and realistic living beings in both appearance and behavior, being protagonists of casual scenes. His work has been published and shown at several countries like Japan (Pterosaurs exhibition, Fukui Prefectural Dinosaur Museum), United Kingdom (All Your Yesterdays by Irregular Books), USA (official publication of Siats meekerorum, North Carolina Museum of Natural Sciences) as well as his home country, Brazil.

Author
Nick Garland
Nick Garland
Exhibit designer
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