A groundbreaking study by paleontologists at the University of Leicester has unraveled a long-standing mystery surrounding the death and exceptional preservation of tiny pterosaur hatchlings from the Late Jurassic period. These miniature flying reptiles, dating back some 150 million years, were victims of catastrophic tropical storms that not only sealed their fate but also created the perfect conditions for fossilization. Published in the renowned journal Current Biology, this research sheds light on the selective fossil record of the Solnhofen lagoon ecosystem, revealing the hidden vulnerabilities of these ancient creatures and offering fresh insights into paleoecology and taphonomy.
In popular imagination, the Mesozoic Era—the so-called Age of Reptiles—is dominated by colossal dinosaurs and giant marine reptiles, alongside vast-winged pterosaurs soaring through prehistoric skies. However, this iconic image obscures a critical truth: small, delicate animals comprised the majority of ancient ecosystems, much like modern ones. Fossil preservation, however, is heavily biased toward large, robust organisms with durable skeletons. Small-bodied and fragile animals like juvenile pterosaurs were rarely expected to survive the taphonomic processes that turn living creatures into fossils. Thus, the extraordinary abundance of exquisitely preserved tiny pterosaur specimens from the Solnhofen limestone deposits presents a formidable paradox.
The Solnhofen limestones of southern Germany are among the most celebrated fossil sites on the planet, known for their near-perfect conservation of fine anatomical details in a wide array of marine and terrestrial organisms. These lagoonal deposits flourished under peculiar environmental conditions that favored rapid burial and low oxygen levels, drastically reducing decomposition and scavenging. Despite the rarity of preserving delicate skeletal structures, this site has yielded hundreds of pterosaur fossils, predominantly comprising very young individuals with wingspans under 20 centimeters. But why the overwhelming predominance of fragile juveniles, while adult pterosaurs are seldom found aside from isolated bone fragments?
Lead author Rab Smyth and colleagues approached this question by meticulously examining two exceptional neonatal pterosaur specimens, nicknamed Lucky and Lucky II. Both belong to Pterodactylus, the first pterosaur genus ever scientifically described, and display complete, articulated skeletons virtually unaltered since death. Strikingly, each shows a stark but consistent pattern: a clean, oblique fracture on the humerus of one wing, indicating a twisting injury rather than blunt trauma. This peculiar pathology implies these hatchlings suffered violent mechanical forces consistent with extreme wind gusts during tropical storm events.
The proposed scenario unfolds with these fragile juveniles confronting violent tropical storms that struck the archipelago islands near the Solnhofen lagoon. Unable to withstand the ferocity of the twisting, turbulent winds, the hatchlings sustained wing fractures that rendered them flightless and doomed them to crash into the lagoon surface. Subsequently, powerful storm-driven waves rapidly buried their carcasses in finely suspended limy muds. This near-instantaneous sedimentation created reducing conditions favorable for fossilization, freezing the hatchlings in an almost lifelike state and preserving anatomical details down to fragile, thin-walled bones.
Crucially, these environmental cataclysms explain why so many small pterosaurs are found in pristine condition, as their death by storms led to rapid burial. In contrast, larger, more robust adult pterosaurs appear seldom because their stronger skeletons enabled them to survive such storms or, if they perished, their carcasses would have floated for extended periods. Over days or weeks, decomposition and scavenger activity would have fragmented these bodies before final deposition on the lagoon floor, resulting in a sparse and fragmentary adult fossil record. This differential mortality and preservation pattern engenders a profound sampling bias in the Solnhofen assemblage, skewing the paleobiological interpretation toward juvenile dominance.
The implications of these findings extend beyond explaining Solnhofen’s fossil particularities. They challenge long-held assumptions about pterosaur ecology, suggesting many of the small specimens were inexperienced hatchlings inhabiting nearby islands rather than lagoon residents. This discovery reshapes our understanding of how early pterosaurs managed developmental stages and how catastrophic environmental forces shaped their populations and fossil record. Additionally, this work highlights the intricate interplay between biological vulnerability and geological processes in shaping paleontological data.
Technically, the study exemplifies the power of combining detailed morphological analysis with taphonomic context, allowing researchers to reconstruct life histories and cause of death in specimens fossilized one and a half centuries ago. Utilizing ultraviolet light illumination, the researchers revealed fine details of injury and bone microstructure, bringing the fossilized hatchlings “back to life” in unprecedented clarity. Such integrative approaches hold great promise for future studies aiming to disentangle ancient life’s complexities buried within fossil assemblages worldwide.
Dr. David Unwin, co-author on the paper, recalls the moment when the fractured wings revealed themselves under UV lighting, a powerful demonstration of how technology illuminates hidden fossil features. The discovery of Lucky and Lucky II transforms them from static relics into dynamic narrators of their own dramatic demise, exemplifying how paleontology is uncovering stories of life, death, and environmental pressures from deep time. This emotional connection to the fossils resonates profoundly with scientists and the public alike, reinforcing the timeless fascination with Earth’s prehistoric past.
From an evolutionary perspective, these findings also emphasize the vulnerability of neonatal pterosaurs, whose delicate skeletal design, optimized for flight, rendered them extremely fragile. Their hollow, thin-walled bones—magnificent adaptations for aerial mastery—became liabilities in the face of physical trauma. Understanding these biomechanical constraints enriches our appreciation of pterosaur life histories and their developmental challenges.
In essence, this landmark research reveals how tropical storms operated as both agents of destruction and preservation, simultaneously ending the lives of these tiny flyers and immortalizing them in stone. The selective sampling uncovered by this study cautions paleontologists about interpreting fossil assemblages without accounting for mortality biases and environmental influences. It advances the broader narratives of biodiversity, extinction, and fossil preservation by illuminating the interplay between living organisms and their perilous worlds.
As future studies delve deeper into the paleobiology and paleoecology of Mesozoic reptiles, the case of Lucky and Lucky II stands as a testament to the intricate detective work needed to uncover life’s ancient dramas. This study not only enriches our understanding of pterosaurs but also underscores the delicate balance of life beneath the stormy skies of the Jurassic, where survival was as much a matter of weather as it was of biology.
Subject of Research:
Neonatal pterosaurs’ cause of death and the selective fossil preservation in Solnhofen limestones.
Article Title:
Fatal accidents in neonatal pterosaurs and selective sampling in the Solnhofen fossil assemblage
News Publication Date:
5-Sep-2025
Web References:
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cub.2025.08.006
Image Credits:
Artwork by Rudolf Hima
Keywords:
Pterosaurs, Reptiles, Paleontology, Animal fossils, Fossilization