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Meet “Dracula,” the Largest Pterosaur Found to Date

A reconstruction of the reptile, found in Transylvania, is on display in Germany

An artist's reconstruction of Dracula, the largest pterosaur found to date.

An artist’s reconstruction of Dracula, the largest pterosaur found to date.

Frederik Spindler, Altmühltal Dinosaur Museum

Between 240 and 66 million years ago, gigantic reptiles ruled the skies. Pterosaurs—close cousins of dinosaurs—may not have breathed fire, but with their strong limbs and light, hollow-boned skeletons, they were the first vertebrates to fly.

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Visitors can gauge the size of Dracula via a reconstruction at a new pterosaur exhibit at the Altmühltal Dinosaur Museum in Denkendorf, Germany. The scientists estimate the creature had a wingspan of 12 meters and stood 3.5 meters tall. Credit: Axel Schmidt, Altmühltal Dinosaur Museum

Unlike bats, which have three fingers embedded in their wings and one free digit for climbing, pterosaurs had one elongated finger that formed the front edge of each wing and three exposed digits for running and climbing. Some earlier species had tails that scientists believe were used to help maneuver, but these disappeared as the pterosaurs evolved into more graceful flyers. 


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The size of Dracula’s neck is comparable to the width of a full-grown man, according to the museum’s press release. Scientists think he must have weighed at least half a ton and was at the top of the food chain. Credit: Axel Schmidt, Altmühltal Dinosaur Museum

In 2009 Romanian scientists discovered the bones of a new pterosaur species among a fairy-tale landscape of hills and rock structures near a small town called Sebeș in Romania’s Transylvania region. They nicknamed their find “Dracula.” Using the fragments of bone as their guide, scientists reconstructed a model of the creature—which they say is the largest pterosaur found to date, reaching around 3.5 meters high with an estimated 12-meter wingspan. The reconstruction is now on display as part of a new pterosaur exhibit at the Altmühltal Dinosaur Museum in Denkendorf, Germany. The exhibit also separately showcases the original specimen’s excavated bones.

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The excavation site near Sebeș, Transylvania. Credit: Mátyás Vremir,Altmühltal Dinosaur Museum

Researchers are not sure whether pterosaurs this size could actually fly. According to the exhibit’s introductory information there is no conclusive evidence to the contrary, but Dracula has a wrist joint that differs greatly from that of other species that have been found, which could mean it was not meant for flight. But if it did fly, Dracula would have been quite a sight (and probably sound): a small-aircraft-sized animal circling the skies, throwing giant shadows over land-dwellers below.

Yasemin Saplakoglu is a staff writer at Live Science, covering health, neuroscience and biology. Her work has appeared in Scientific American, Science and the San Jose Mercury News. She has a bachelor's degree in biomedical engineering from the University of Connecticut and a graduate certificate in science communication from the University of California, Santa Cruz.

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