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HARPACTOGNATHUS
(har-pac-tog-na-fus)
meaning: "Grasping Jaw"
Named By: Carpenter et al in 2003
Time Period: Late Jurassic
Location: USA, Wyoming - Morrison Formation
Size: Estimated 2.5 meter wingspacen
Diet: unavailable
Fossil(s): Partial skull
Classification: | Chordata | Reptilia | Pterosauria | Rhamphorhynchoidea | Rhamphorhynchidae |
About

Harpactognathus (meaning "seizing/grasping jaw") was a genus of pterosaur found in the Late Jurassic-age Morrison Formation of Albany County, Wyoming, United States. It is based on NAMAL 101, a partial skull consisting of the snout, recovered from near Bone Cabin Quarry in 1996. The species name honors the discoverer, Joe Gentry, a volunteer for the Western Paleontological Laboratories, in Lehi, Utah.

Its describers found it to be most similar to Scaphognathus among pterosaurs, albeit substantially larger (estimated skull length of 280-300 mm (11-12 in), estimated wingspan of at least 2.5 m (8.2 ft)). Because of the similarity, Harpactognathus was assigned to the subfamily Scaphognathinae of the family Rhamphorhynchidae. This genus is also notable for having a low bony crest running all the way to the tip of the beak (pterosaur bone crests usually do not reach the tip) and for being the oldest known Morrison Formation pterosaur, having been found in the Salt Wash Member (Kimmeridgian).

Read more about Harpactognathus at Wikipedia
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