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Anhanguera cuvieri

Time
100.5–106.3 million years ago
Period
Unknown
Known sites
3
Cimoliopterus
Taissa Rodrigues and Alexander Wilhelm Armin KellnerCC-BY-3.0File:Cimoliopterus.jpg

Summary

Cimoliopterus is a genus of pterosaur that lived during the Late Cretaceous in what is now England and the United States. The first known specimen, consisting of the front part of a snout including part of a crest, was discovered in the Grey Chalk Subgroup of Kent, England, and described as the new species Pterodactylus cuvieri in 1851. The specific name cuvieri honoured the palaeontologist George Cuvier, and the genus Pterodactylus was then used for many pterosaurs of species that are no longer thought to be closely related. It was among the first pterosaurs to be depicted as sculptures, in Crystal Palace Park in the 1850s. The species was subsequently assigned to various other genera, including Ornithocheirus and Anhanguera. In 2013, the species was moved to a new genus, as C. cuvieri; the generic name Cimoliopterus is derived from the Greek words for "chalk" and "wing". Other specimens and species have also been assigned to or synonymised with the species with various levels of certainty. In 2015, a snout discovered in the Britton Formation of Texas, US, was named as a new species in the genus, C. dunni. A species from the Cambridge Greensand of England originally assigned to Ornithocheirus was assigned to Cimoliopterus in 2025, as C. colorhinus.

Source: Wikipedia - Cimoliopterus

Known Sites

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