Voorbeelden van het gebruik van Pterodactylus in het Engels en hun vertalingen in het Nederlands
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Today there's only one recognized species: the Pterodactylus antiquus.
The pterodactylus was a pterosaurian that supposedly lived during the late Jura.
Bennett concluded that Aerodactylus scolopaciceps is a junior synonym of Pterodactylus antiquus.
The type species remains Pterodactylus cuvieri, the resulting combinatio nova, new combination name, is Cimiliopterus cuvieri.
in 1812 he described Ornithocephalus antiquus now known as Pterodactylus.
The next year, Ostrom redescribed a specimen of Pterodactylus in the Dutch Teyler Museum as another skeleton of Archaeopteryx.
Pterodactylus sedgwickii had in 1859 been named by Richard Owen based on specimen CAMSM B54422,
a usual suffix in pterosaur names since Pterodactylus.
They renamed Pterodactylus sedgwickii Owen 1859 into Camposipterus(?)
In 1850 Hermann von Meyer described the specimen now known by its collection number BSP AS V 29 a/b as a new specimen of Pterodactylus longirostris.
In 1980 Peter Galton renamed Pterodactylus brancai(Reck 1931),
as a new species of Pterodactylus: Pterodactylus giganteus.
In 1845, Hermann von Meyer officially emended the original species"Ornithocephalus münsteri" to"Pterodactylus münsteri", since the name"Pterodactylus" had been by that point recognized as having priority over"Ornithocephalus.
daktylos,"finger", a usual suffix in pterosaur names since Pterodactylus.
In 1870 Richard Owen named"Pterodactylus validus" based on holotype BMNH 40653, a thirty centimetres long partial wing finger phalanx from the Purbeck Limestone(Britain), identified as that of a pterosaur.
have been particularly large, renamed it into Pterodactylus conirostris,"the cone-snouted", based on a conical snout, today part of specimen NHMUK PV 39412.
as a new species of Pterodactylus: Pterodactylus cuvieri.
Alexander Wilhelm Armin Kellner concluded firstly that Pterodactylus fittoni Owen 1859 was not a part of the genus Anhanguera
who identified the specimen as Pterodactylus raptor, a name from an unpublished manuscript by Richard Owen.
a common element in the names of pterosaurs since Pterodactylus, referring to their typical wing finger.