Fossil installation experts from Research Casting International prepare to lift the giant pterosaur model into its new perch at the Biological Sciences Building, the new home of the U-M Museum of Natural History. Pterosaurs are often called flying reptiles and were relatives of dinosaurs and crocodiles. This particular creature, Quetzalcoatlus northropi, lived about 67 million years ago and was 25 feet long from beak to toe. Photo by Roger Hart/Michigan Photography.
Home Dr. Michael Cherney Interview about Giant Pterosaur at U-M Museum of Natural History Fossil installation experts from Research Casting International prepare to lift the giant pterosaur model into its new perch at the Biological Sciences Building, the new home of the U-M Museum of Natural History. Pterosaurs are often called flying reptiles and were relatives of dinosaurs and crocodiles. This particular creature, Quetzalcoatlus northropi, lived about 67 million years ago and was 25 feet long from beak to toe. Photo by Roger Hart/Michigan Photography.
Fossil installation experts from Research Casting International prepare to lift the giant pterosaur model into its new perch at the Biological Sciences Building, the new home of the U-M Museum of Natural History. Pterosaurs are often called flying reptiles and were relatives of dinosaurs and crocodiles. This particular creature, Quetzalcoatlus northropi, lived about 67 million years ago and was 25 feet long from beak to toe. Photo by Roger Hart/Michigan Photography.







