Pterosaur_fossil,_Desert_Museum.jpg Type post Author David Coppedge Date January 28, 2025 CategoriesEvolutionPaleontology Tagged , bats, BBC News, birds, Boeing 747, Current Biology, fossils, gigantism, Günter Bechly, magic, mutations, Neil Thomas, Origin, paleontologists, pterosaurs, Scleromochlus, selection, The Conversation, University of Edinburgh, University of Leicester, University of Portsmouth Magical Thinking: Can Pterosaurs Be Darwinized? David Coppedge January 28, 2025 Evolution, Paleontology 8 Neil Thomas has written about “Evolutionary Theory as Magical Thinking” and there is no shortage of examples in the literature on fossils. Read More ›
Venetoraptor Type post Author Günter Bechly Date September 15, 2023 CategoriesAnatomyEvolutionPaleontology Tagged , Argentina, Bill Nye, Brazil, cladogram, common ancestry, Darwinian theory, Darwinists, David Attenborough, flying reptiles, Greenland, Popular Science, pterosaurs, Scleromochlus, Scotland, Triassic period, Wikipedia Fossil Friday: Venetoraptor Is Not the Archaeopteryx of Pterosaurs Günter Bechly September 15, 2023 Anatomy, Evolution, Paleontology 20 Forget all the pop science ballyhoo, and if you should not trust my word, just check the provided primary sources. Read More ›
Pterosaur Type post Author Günter Bechly Date October 28, 2022 CategoriesEvolutionIntelligent DesignPaleontology Tagged , Crato Formation, fish, Fossil Friday (series), fossil record, holotype, Late Triassic, Lower Cretaceous, Preondactylus, pterosaur, Scleromochlus, Upper Triassic Fossil Friday: Ludodactylus and the Origin of Pterosaurs Günter Bechly October 28, 2022 Evolution, Intelligent Design, Paleontology 4 Outside of Darwinian fantasy land, we lack any transitional fossils to document an assumed gradual evolutionary development of characteristic pterosaur wings. Read More ›