# ultralights were compared and were flown on many remarkable long flights. Over time the Pterodactyl has become an aviation legend. The history of the Pterodactyl family of aircraft started off with the design of the Manta Fledge rigid wing hang glider. Designed by the famous designer of the Super Floater glider and later the Drifter ultralight, Klaus Hill, the Fledge hang glider was the high performance hang glider of its time, the mid 1970s. The design evolved through the Fledge I, II and finally the III, with several sub-models designated with letters after the roman numerals. The hang glider relied on its wing sweep for yaw stability and weight shift for pitch control. Unlike flex wing hang gliders, it used tip rudders for roll control, operated by control bar-mounted sliders. #
they fly and Pterodactyl and other Pterodons were flying reptiles.
Technically, no, dinosaurs did not fly because the term "dinosaurs" refers to just terrestrial (land-dwelling) reptiles. However, pterosaurs (or pterodactyls) did have the ability to fly.
No extant reptile is capable of flight. the Pterodactyls and Pterandons belond to prehistoric past.
Pterodactyls enemy was the amazing T-Rex.
A "Terror" of Pterodactyls sounds fitting :)
Easy! The best example is an Archaeopteryx. Pterodactyls and Pternadons are others but there is some debate that they actually glided instead of flying.
Pterodactyls were not dinosaurs. They were flying reptiles.
actually no dinosaurs ever flew. pterodactyls and the often called dinobird archaeopteryx were ancient flying creatures, but none of them are classified as dinos.
No. Pterodactyls lived and went extinct long before there were any humans around.
They are pterodactyls.
First, the colony takes a deep breath and bellows out their call all at once, resulting in a large echo. Then they wait appoximately 3.46 minutes before recieving a reply screech from the rare Zagöpenböpen pterodactyls. Once the pterodactyls reach them, they all grab a talon each and fly off to their destination.
Yes.