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Re: The fossil remains of the first flying vertebrates, the [#permalink]
OAs :AA
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Re: The fossil remains of the first flying vertebrates, the [#permalink]
goalsnr wrote:
Agree .The 1st one is kimd of tricky. But you got it right.

I think you have a copy paste issue with the explanation for the 2nd question ;)

I think I have copied correctly but I did not edit it and put verbatim. But what basically I wanted to point is that P lived near area where waves, that too high enough so that P can launch it from them, were present. That means they lived near water bodies. I guess only large water bodies can have such large waves (remember we cannot factor technological things because although it may be possible now to create high waves in small water bodies but when P lived at that time such technology was perhaps non-existent).

Is my answer correct or not? You did not confirm or reject it.
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Re: The fossil remains of the first flying vertebrates, the [#permalink]
abhijit_sen wrote:
goalsnr wrote:
Agree .The 1st one is kimd of tricky. But you got it right.

I think you have a copy paste issue with the explanation for the 2nd question ;)

I think I have copied correctly but I did not edit it and put verbatim. But what basically I wanted to point is that P lived near area where waves, that too high enough so that P can launch it from them, were present. That means they lived near water bodies. I guess only large water bodies can have such large waves (remember we cannot factor technological things because although it may be possible now to create high waves in small water bodies but when P lived at that time such technology was perhaps non-existent).

Is my answer correct or not? You did not confirm or reject it.


Yep,your answer is correct. The answer comes from the following para:
Efforts to explain how the pterosaurs became airborne have led to suggestions that they launched themselves by jumping from cliffs, by dropping from trees, or even by rising into light winds from the crests of waves. Each hypothesis has its difficulties. The first wrongly assumes that the pterosaurs’ hind feet resembled a bat’s and could serve as hooks by which the animal could hang in preparation for flight. The second hypothesis seems unlikely because large pterosaurs could not have landed in trees without damaging their wings. The third calls for high waves to channel updrafts. The wind that made such waves however, might have been too strong for the pterosaurs to control their flight once airborne.

But the tricky part of this para is it doesn't explicitly mention water. It mentions waves - waves produced by winds.



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