A new species of Pterosaur, a flying reptile, has been identified in the vast, dry terrain of Canada's badlands. On Tuesday, it was anointed as "Cryodrakon boreas," Greek for "Frozen dragon of the north wind."
The discovery may sound like something out of Westeros, but "Game of Thrones" fans shouldn't get too excited: According to researchers, Cryodrakon looked less like Daenerys Targaryen's fire-breathing dragons than it did a giraffe-size, reptilian stork.
The carnivorous animal lived in modern-day Alberta during the Cretaceous period about 77 million years ago, according to a new study in the Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology. It could grow to about 13 feet tall, with a wingspan of up to 30 feet, making it one of the largest flying animals ever. It had no chewing apparatus, so it would likely eat whatever was small enough to go down the gullet, including lizards, mammals and baby dinosaurs.
Like other pterosaurs, the Cryodrakon had awkward proportions with a long neck, huge wings and a head about 3 1/2 times the size of its body. As one expert said, imagine a "giant flying murder head." Alternatively: "a pair of wings that carry around a big head for guzzling things."
Researchers said that while the pterosaur's new name was more inspired by Alberta's frigid landscape than it was by "Game of Thrones," they were aware that it might elicit some comparisons.