Thursday 26 December 2013

Gnathosaurus subulatus

The first remains of Gnathosaurus (a jaw fragment) found in the Solnhofen limestones of Bavaria were mistaken with those of a crocodile. This small size pterosaur is characterized by a slender skull comparable to Ctenochasma but with a distinct sagittal crest on top of the snout. A series of vertebrae from the Purbeck Limestones in England, named Pterodactylus macrurus may belong to G. subulatus.

Name
Gnathosaurus subulatus
Authority
Meyer, 1834
Meaning of generic name
Jaw Lizard.
Meaning of specific name
"with an awl/awls" or "awled" (referring to teeth)
Size
Skull length: 28 cm, Wingspan: 1.7 m
Remains
Several skeletons.
Age and Distribution
Late Jurassic (Tithonian), Solnhofen limestones, Bavaria, Southern Germany.

Purbeck limestones, Wealden, Dorset, England, UK.
Classification
Pterosauria Pterodactyloidea Ctenochasmatoidea Ctenochasmatidae Gnatosaurinae
Further Reading
Seeley H. G., 1869, Note on the Pterodactylus macrurus (Seeley), a new species from the Purbeck Limestone, indicated by caudal vertebrae five inches long, (and) Note on the thinning away to the westward in the Isle of Purbeck of the Wealden and Lower Greensand strata. Proc. Cambridge philos. Soc. 7-10, 130.
Synonyms
Crocodilus multidens Munster, 1832; Gnathosaurus multidens (Munster, 1832); Gavialis priscus Quenstedt, 1855 (nomen dubium); Gnathosaurus macrurus (Seeley, 1869) Howse & Milner, 1995; Pterodactylus macrurus Seeley, 1869 (nomen dubium)

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