Write an article about
KUMAMOTO (Japan), May 14 (Bernama-Kyodo) — A fossil found nearly three decades ago in south-western Japan’s Kumamoto Prefecture has been identified as a previously unclassified genus and species of pterosaur, or prehistoric flying reptile, a local dinosaur museum said on Tuesday, Kyodo News Agency reported.
Nipponopterus mifunensis is the first pterosaur to be formally named as a distinct species based on the fossil. Because it is the first known member of a new genus group of closely related species, the fossil is expected to offer important clues for studying the evolutionary process of pterosaurs.
The research was the result of work between institutions including the Mifune Dinosaur Museum, Kumamoto University and Hokkaido University. The fossil, a cervical vertebra, was found in 1996 in a layer of rock dating to the Late Cretaceous Period, approximately 66 million to 100.5 million years ago.
The fossil was initially thought to be from a member of the broader Azhdarchidae family of pterosaurs. Further research enabled palaeontologists to compare specimens and confirm it differed from existing fossils.
Their findings were published in an international scientific journal in March.
Pterosaurs were flying reptiles distinct from dinosaurs.
BERNAMA provides up-to-date authentic and comprehensive news and information which are disseminated via BERNAMA Wires; www.bernama.com; BERNAMA TV on Astro 502, unifi TV 631 and MYTV 121 channels and BERNAMA Radio on FM93.9 (Klang Valley), FM107.5 (Johor Bahru), FM107.9 (Kota Kinabalu) and FM100.9 (Kuching) frequencies.
Follow us on social media :
Facebook : @bernamaofficial, @bernamatv, @bernamaradio
Twitter : @bernama.com, @BernamaTV, @bernamaradio
Instagram : @bernamaofficial, @bernamatvofficial, @bernamaradioofficial
TikTok : @bernamaofficial
in 1000-1500 words .Organize the content with appropriate headings and subheadings (h1, h2, h3, h4, h5, h6), Retain any existing tags from
KUMAMOTO (Japan), May 14 (Bernama-Kyodo) — A fossil found nearly three decades ago in south-western Japan’s Kumamoto Prefecture has been identified as a previously unclassified genus and species of pterosaur, or prehistoric flying reptile, a local dinosaur museum said on Tuesday, Kyodo News Agency reported.
Nipponopterus mifunensis is the first pterosaur to be formally named as a distinct species based on the fossil. Because it is the first known member of a new genus group of closely related species, the fossil is expected to offer important clues for studying the evolutionary process of pterosaurs.
The research was the result of work between institutions including the Mifune Dinosaur Museum, Kumamoto University and Hokkaido University. The fossil, a cervical vertebra, was found in 1996 in a layer of rock dating to the Late Cretaceous Period, approximately 66 million to 100.5 million years ago.
The fossil was initially thought to be from a member of the broader Azhdarchidae family of pterosaurs. Further research enabled palaeontologists to compare specimens and confirm it differed from existing fossils.
Their findings were published in an international scientific journal in March.
Pterosaurs were flying reptiles distinct from dinosaurs.
BERNAMA provides up-to-date authentic and comprehensive news and information which are disseminated via BERNAMA Wires; www.bernama.com; BERNAMA TV on Astro 502, unifi TV 631 and MYTV 121 channels and BERNAMA Radio on FM93.9 (Klang Valley), FM107.5 (Johor Bahru), FM107.9 (Kota Kinabalu) and FM100.9 (Kuching) frequencies.
Follow us on social media :
Facebook : @bernamaofficial, @bernamatv, @bernamaradio
Twitter : @bernama.com, @BernamaTV, @bernamaradio
Instagram : @bernamaofficial, @bernamatvofficial, @bernamaradioofficial
TikTok : @bernamaofficial
and integrate them seamlessly into the new content without adding new tags. Include conclusion section and FAQs section at the end. do not include the title. it must return only article i dont want any extra information or introductory text with article e.g: ” Here is rewritten article:” or “Here is the rewritten content:”