2015
DOI: 10.1206/3827.1
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A Medium-Sized Robust-Necked Azhdarchid Pterosaur (Pterodactyloidea: Azhdarchidae) from the Maastrichtian of Pui (Haţeg Basin, Transylvania, Romania)

Abstract: We describe a pterosaurian cervical vertebra collected from Maastrichtian sediments at the Pui locality in the Haţeg Basin, Romania. This specimen, a medium-sized, robust fourth cervical, is distinctive in morphology and represents a new, as yet unrecognized, azhdarchid pterosaur size class within the Haţeg Island fauna: it most likely belongs to a new taxon which we opt not to name here. The vertebra is referred to Azhdarchidae based on clearly preserved diagnostic features characteristic of this group and di… Show more

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Cited by 21 publications
(28 citation statements)
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“…Representing one of the smallest known pterosaurs from Campanian–Maastrichtian strata, it adds to a growing set of evidence that latest Cretaceous pterosaur faunas were not dominated by large or giant species, and that smaller pterosaurs may have been well represented in this interim (e.g. [72,101]). As with other evidence of smaller pterosaurs from the latest Cretaceous, RBCM.EH.2009.019.0001 is fragmentary and poorly preserved: researchers should check collections more carefully for misidentified or ignored pterosaur material which may enhance our picture of pterosaur diversity and disparity at this time.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Representing one of the smallest known pterosaurs from Campanian–Maastrichtian strata, it adds to a growing set of evidence that latest Cretaceous pterosaur faunas were not dominated by large or giant species, and that smaller pterosaurs may have been well represented in this interim (e.g. [72,101]). As with other evidence of smaller pterosaurs from the latest Cretaceous, RBCM.EH.2009.019.0001 is fragmentary and poorly preserved: researchers should check collections more carefully for misidentified or ignored pterosaur material which may enhance our picture of pterosaur diversity and disparity at this time.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…only. This referral of EME 315 to Hatzegopteryx is supported by the lack of firm evidence for a second giant azhdarchid in Romania, as well as the fact that, while multiple azhdarchid taxa are known to have been contemporaneous in several Late Cretaceous faunas (Vremir et al, 2013; Vremir et al, 2015), we have yet to discover evidence that more than one giant taxon inhabited a given fauna.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, recent discoveries of two proportionally short, isolated azhdarchid cervical vertebrae from the Maastrichtian Sebeş Formation (Transylvanian Basin) of western Romania have prompted suggestions that some azhdarchids may have been proportionally short necked (Vremir, 2010; Vremir et al, 2015). The first of these specimens, LPV (FGGUB) R.2395, was interpreted as a cervical IV from a small azhdarchid with an estimated 3 m wingspan (Vremir et al, 2015).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Thus far, some of the more important results of our collaboration have been the initial report (Csiki et al, 2010a) and monographic description (Brusatte et al, 2013a) of Balaur bondoc, an aberrant double-sickle-clawed dromaeosaurid that was discovered by Mátyás Vremir in 2009; studies on the origin of the unusual Romanian dwarfed dinosaur faunas (Vremir et al, 2014) and their relevance for understanding the end-Cretaceous extinction (Csiki-Sava et al, 2016); and descriptions of new infant dinosaur (Brusatte et al, 2013b) and midsized pterosaur (Vremir et al, 2015) material.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%