Harpactognathus (meaning "seizing/grasping jaw") is a genus of pterosaur, a group of extinct flying reptiles, that lived during the Kimmeridgian stage of the Late Jurassic period in what is now Wyoming, United States. Harpactognathus is confidently known from a single, incomplete rostrum (front of the skull) found in 1996 at the Bone Cabin Quarry, though an incomplete mandible (lower jaw bone) and humerus (upper arm bone) from the quarry have tentatively been referred to the genus. The rostrum was described by paleontologist Kenneth Carpenter and colleagues in 2003, who named the type and only
Harpactognathus (meaning "seizing/grasping jaw") is a genus of pterosaur, a group of extinct flying reptiles, that lived during the Kimmeridgian stage of the Late Jurassic period in what is now Wyoming, United States. Harpactognathus is confidently known from a single, incomplete rostrum (front of the skull) found in 1996 at the Bone Cabin Quarry, though an incomplete mandible (lower jaw bone) and humerus (upper arm bone) from the quarry have tentatively been referred to the genus. The rostrum was described by paleontologist Kenneth Carpenter and colleagues in 2003, who named the type and only known species, H. gentryii, after Joe Gentry, a volunteer for the Western Paleontological Laboratories in Lehi, Utah.
Harpactognathus is a large-sized pterosaur, with an estimated wingspan of and estimated complete skull length of , making it among the largest known non-pterodactyloid pterosaurs. The rostrum of Harpactognathus is robust, broad, and wider than tall. On the midline of the skull is a premaxillary (front upper jaw bone) crest that may have been extended by soft tissues and used for sexual display or been sexually dimorphic. Due to a lack of remains, much of its anatomy is unknown and can only be inferred from related taxa.
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