Pterodactylus from the Greek pterodaktulos, meaning "winged finger". It was the first to be named and identified as a flying reptile. Its fossil remains have been primarily been found in Bavaria, Germany but when we went there we found one of its eggs and we hatched here at the zoo and it has grown big and strong. It is very friendly unless provoked. The skulls of adult Pterodactylus were long and narrow with about 90 large, conical teeth. The teeth extended back from the tips of both jaws, and became smaller farther away from the jaw tips (unlike some relatives, where teeth were absent in the upper jaw tip and were relatively uniform in size). The teeth extended farther back into the jaw than in close relatives, as some were present below the front of the nasoantorbital fenestra, the largest opening in the skull. Unlike related species, the skull and jaws were straight, not curved upwards. They eat meat which means they can eat you.