Quenstedt[J].
[J] Ueber Pterodactylus Suevicus. Tubingen 1855.
In the long thigh, with the long neck, Quenstedt sees evidence that the animal was able to walk upright, being probably still more upright than birds, since the great disproportion between the neck on the one hand, and the thigh on the other, could not have allowed a more appropriate position. At the same time he makes a question, Did it go on four feet? But a little later, in his book, Sonst und Jetzt, 1856, he gives a sketch of the animal resting on its four legs; and remarks, "The position upon four feet is however hypothetical, but is probable. It had its wings folded back. The slightly curved and thin bones of the middle hand probably served to support the flying-membrane, and had therefore the same function as the spur-bone in the bats." Finally, he says in his book, der Jura, p. 813, "Perhaps this animal walked from time to time on four legs, being then supported by the fore-end of the metatarsal bone."
Burmeister[K].
[K] Beleuchtung uniger Pterodactylus arten. 1855.
entirely rejects Quenstedt's opinions with regard to their upright position. He makes the following remarks: 'The animal walked on the free fore-toes and bore the wings like a bat, though with the body not in an upright position like a bird, but four-footed. The hind-foot is much too small for such an upright position, and the fore-foot much too strongly developed. I therefore believe that the Pterodactyle could much better have walked four-footed than a bat, because it possessed so much better developed fore-feet.' In the length of the tibia Burmeister sees no reason for the upright position, but, as he says, only a means for the wide expansion of the flying-membrane;—and an endeavour in walking on four feet to bring the leg into the necessary harmony with the arm, which is so much elongated with the flat-hand.
Hermann von Meyer[L].
[L] Fauna der Vorwelt. Reptilien aus dem Lithographischen schiefer. Frankfurt am Main. 1859. pp. 15-23.
The skull of the Pterodactyle can only be compared with those of birds and lizards. The form is essentially Avian, and the sutures are indistinct or obliterated as in birds, while in reptiles they are persistent The temporal bone enters into the formation of the reservoir for the brain, which is eminently characteristic of birds and quite different from anything found in lizards. The snout resembles a bird in being chiefly formed by the intermaxillary bone, which bounds the front of the anterior nares; and, as in birds, the bone extends backward between the eye-cavities to the frontal bone. The corresponding intermaxillary ridge of the Monitor is of less extent.