| Tiny pterosaur’s untimely end - Creation Magazine |
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Tiny pterosaur’s untimely endAlthough fossilized dinosaur embryos are found all over the world, no-one had ever reported finding a pterosaur embryo … until now. A recent report in Nature describes a fossil embryo that is ‘unambiguously a pterosaur … enjoying its last few days in the egg’.1 Unearthed in Liaoning, China, the fossil shows details of the ‘exquisitely preserved’ embryonic skeleton in its egg, thus confirming that pterosaurs were indeed egg-layers. Incredibly, wing membrane fibres and large patches of skin imprints are also preserved. ‘Preservation of such delicate tissues with the skeleton and eggshell probably indicates the embryo was killed and deposited quickly as a result of a natural disaster, such as a volcanic eruption’, say the researchers. But which disaster? Surely the global Flood of Noah’s time (Genesis 6–9) would explain why we find mass deposits of fossils, many ‘exquisitely preserved’, indicating rapid burial, right around the world. Reference
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