The fossil was discovered by PhD student Amelia Penny during a field trip on the Isle of Skye in remote northwest Scotland, in 2017, when she spotted the pterosaurâs jaw protruding from rocks. It will now be added to the museumâs collection.
âPterosaurs preserved in such quality are exceedingly rare and are usually reserved to select rock formations in Brazil and China,â according to University of Edinburgh PhD student Natalia Jagielska, author of a new scientific paper describing the find.
âAnd yet, an enormous superbly preserved pterosaur emerged from a tidal platform in Scotland,â she said.
Steve Brusatte, a professor of palaeontology at Edinburgh University, said the discovery was the best one found in Britain since the early 1800s, when celebrated fossil hunter Mary Anning discovered many significant Jurassic fossils on the southern English coast.
He said the fossil had âfeather lightâ bones âas thin as sheets of paperâ and it took several days to cut it from rock.
The pterosaur, which has been given the Gaelic name Dearc sgiathanach, âtells us that pterosaurs got larger much earlier than we thought, long before the Cretaceous period when they were competing with birds, and thatâs hugely significant,â Brusatte said.
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