About: Arambourgiania   Sponge Permalink

An Entity of Type : owl:Thing, within Data Space : 134.155.108.49:8890 associated with source dataset(s)

Arambourgiania is a pterosaur from the Late Cretaceous (Maastrichtian) of Jordan. With a wingspan of 12 m (40 ft) it was one of the largest members of this group. A 61 cm (2 ft) long Arambourginia bone was found in Jordan in 1943 and sent to Paris in the 1950s, where it was examined by Camille Arambourg (after whom it was named). It was thought to have been a wing bone, but subsequently the bone was lost. In 1995, paleontologists David Martill and Dino Frey rediscovered it in a Jordanian storage. Shortly before that, study of the plaster cast of the bone revealed that it was actually a single neck vertebra that was originally 75 cm (2 ft 6 in) long. The total length of the neck was estimated at 2 m (6 ft 8 in).

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  • Arambourgiania
  • Arambourgiania
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  • Arambourgiania is a pterosaur from the Late Cretaceous (Maastrichtian) of Jordan. With a wingspan of 12 m (40 ft) it was one of the largest members of this group. A 61 cm (2 ft) long Arambourginia bone was found in Jordan in 1943 and sent to Paris in the 1950s, where it was examined by Camille Arambourg (after whom it was named). It was thought to have been a wing bone, but subsequently the bone was lost. In 1995, paleontologists David Martill and Dino Frey rediscovered it in a Jordanian storage. Shortly before that, study of the plaster cast of the bone revealed that it was actually a single neck vertebra that was originally 75 cm (2 ft 6 in) long. The total length of the neck was estimated at 2 m (6 ft 8 in).
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abstract
  • Arambourgiania is a pterosaur from the Late Cretaceous (Maastrichtian) of Jordan. With a wingspan of 12 m (40 ft) it was one of the largest members of this group. A 61 cm (2 ft) long Arambourginia bone was found in Jordan in 1943 and sent to Paris in the 1950s, where it was examined by Camille Arambourg (after whom it was named). It was thought to have been a wing bone, but subsequently the bone was lost. In 1995, paleontologists David Martill and Dino Frey rediscovered it in a Jordanian storage. Shortly before that, study of the plaster cast of the bone revealed that it was actually a single neck vertebra that was originally 75 cm (2 ft 6 in) long. The total length of the neck was estimated at 2 m (6 ft 8 in). The original name for the genus, Titanopteryx given by Arambourg was already used for an insect so it was reclassified as Arambourgiania by Nessov et al. in 1987.
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