Living Pterosaurs in Canada

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By investigative journalist Jonathan Whitcomb

Video #41 on my Youtube channel is “Big Pterodactyls in Canada”, a music video almost five minutes long. The following excerpts, brief quotations from two eyewitnesses, contain more than is in the video:

Sighting #3

I was standing 10 feet away from one on a country road in Quebec, Canada near Brownsburg-Chatam. [The animal] pierced a garbage bag and it was trying to get into its contents . . . it got spooked and fled away . . . wing span was at least the size of the street if not more . . .

It had . . . teeth in its beak . . . a horn protruding towards the back of its head . . . [The sighting was] in the summer of 1987 …

satellite photo of the Chatham-Brownsburg area of Quebec, Canada

The area where sighting #3 occurred in Canada

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Sighting #4 (in Quebec, Canada)

. . . at the dock, in my village . . . I believe it was spring . . . The year was 1998 or 99. . . . It was slow moving and nearly silent. I have NEVER forgotten it. They are really out there.

Here’s the video: pterosaur sightings in Canada

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Pterosaur Sightings in Canada

Hello, I am writing from Vancouver Island, British Columbia, Canada. In 2010, I saw a pterosaur fly over the field, while [I was] looking out my window at dawn. It was huge.

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Youtube Videos on Living Pterosaurs

As we approach the 15-year anniversary of my ropen expedition on Umboi Island, I’ll share my views on some Youtube videos and playlists: about these amazing flying creatures. You choose which ones to watch.

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Apparent pterosaur in Ontario, Canada

I was phoning around dawn on a hill on Eglington Ave. across from the Ontario Science Centre when I saw a very smooth brown flying creature about the size of a great blue heron, with an appendage on its tail’s tip, fly northeast from the dense vegetation around the power lines where there was a cliff.

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Top Ten Shocking Facts on Modern Pterosaurs

In Western cultures, we have three kinds of fear, including an occasional fear of one of these flying creatures, for some of them are large and may be dangerous; in some non-Western countries, the only fear an eyewitness is likely to have is that fear of the animal.

What are the other two kinds of fear? Western eyewitnesses often fear what other persons might think when told about the sighting . . .

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