Todos Los Tipos De PTEROSAURIOS Explicados

Quetzalcoatlus had a wingspan of 10 to 12 meters—about the size of a light fighter jet. Standing on the ground, it reached a height of 5 meters, comparable to a giraffe. And the oldest known pterosaur, Eudimorphodon, was already a fully adapted flier 215 million years ago—with no known ancestor in the fossil record. Pterosaurs aren't dinosaurs, but they are the largest vertebrates that ever flew, and each species represents a completely different evolutionary solution to the same problem: how to master the Mesozoic skies. In this video, TodoExplicado covers each pterosaur—what distinguishes them, how they flew, and why each one is unique in the history of flying animals. 00:00 Quetzalcoatlus 01:21 Pteranodon 02:45 Pterodactylus 04:12 Rhamphorhynchus 05:32 Dimorphodon 06:56 Anhanguera 08:16 Pterodaustro 09:33 Eudimorphodon If you want to know everything about dinosaurs and the most extraordinary creatures in Earth's history, subscribe to TodoExplicado and leave a like. #Pterosaurs #Quetzalcoatlus #Pteranodon #TodoExplicado #Dinosaurs #Paleontology #Pterodactyl #PrehistoricAnimals #ScienceInSpanish #MesozoicExplained