Psudeopterosaur

Psudeopterosauria, known more commonly as Psudeopterosaurs or Finray Lizards, are an extinct group of reptiles that were a sister group related to the more famous Pterosaurs, evolving from the same ancestor. Unlike Pterosaurs, Psudeopterosaurs lived exclusively in the Triassic Era, first evolving in the late part of the Mid-Triassic and then finally going extinct at the end the Late Triassic, possibly due to the mass extinction event relating to volcanic activities during that time. Psudeopterosaurs had specialized ankles, very similar to dinosaurs that, unlike pterosaurs, they could walk bipedally and moved in a manner similar to birds and non-avian theropod dinosaurs when walking and running. Psudeopterosaurs came in wide variety of forms, ranging from small bipedal feathery Longisquama-like forms, to medium-sized bipdal long-tailed piscivorous Rhamphorhynchus-like forms, and large eagle-sized bipedal Pterodactylus-like forms, with Altuscristatupteryx being the biggest of any known Psudeopterosaurs, growing up to about the size of a golden eagle, it had the tall feathery-looking crest on its head as fossil impressions confirmed. Just like Pterosaurs, which ruled the skies the Jurassic and Cretaceous, Psudeopterosaurs also ruled the skies during the Triassic Era.