Pterosaur fossils have been found on all continents with the possible exception of Antarctica, but that doesn't mean that pterosaurs didn't live in Antarctica. Because they could fly, were warm blooded, and existed for 145 million years, various species adapted to live in different parts of the world, and pterosaurs probably lived on all continents in all climates.
The Pteradactylus (pronounced tare a DACT il) was a genus of small pterosaurs that ate fish and other small prey. Their fossils have been found in Africa and Europe, and are about 150 million years old. The term "pteradactyl" is often used as a synonym of pterosaur. Pterosaurs are an extinct order flying reptiles whose fossils have been found on every continent except Antarctica.
There are over 135 known genera of pterosaurs, and their fossils have been found all over the world. Thus, depending on the species, pterosaurs lived in all sorts of climates, ranging from wet coastal floodplains to dry deserts.
Pterosaur fossils have been found on every continent except Antarctica, and it probably is only a matter of time before they are found there, too. They had a global distribution between 210 and 65.5 million years ago.
Fossils
Paleontologists have found fossils of Brachiosaurus in North America and Africa.
Fossils have been found nearly everywhere in the world because animals die everywhere in the world. Although most fossils that have been fond will have only been a part of it/.
china
Arizona
Amargasaurus fossils have been found in Patagonia, Argentina. This dinosaur species lived during the Early Cretaceous period, approximately 130 million years ago.
No skins have been found, but plenty of bones have been found.
None. Only dragon fossils are found in Wales.
No such thing has ever been found to exist. No fossils have been proven to have been found in meteorites. Some scientists claim that they have found tiny fossils in meteorites from Mars but they can not prove the formations in the rocks aren't naturally occurring.