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Another Oklahoma Pterosaur Sighting

Today, after receiving an email, I spoke on the phone with a truck driver who witnessed what seems to have been a ropen, in Oklahoma, just yesterday. Here is the first part of his email message:

I’m a truck driver and I was headed eastbound [on July 17, 2012] on I-40 about 30 to 40 miles west of Oklahoma city around 2:30 p.m. I was [on] the phone with my wife when I saw something I had never seen before flying southward in front of me . . .

The flying creature was only about the size of a crow and only about twenty feet above the ground: unlikely to be a Frigate bird lost in Oklahoma. When the man told me something that suggested the possibility of a very short neck, I thought of the Frigate-bird misidentification possibility, but the location and coloring (tan-leather) and flight pattern (full-flapping but very slow) made that sea-bird possibility appear remote: Oklahoma City is over 400 miles from the coast, and Frigate birds normally fly above oceans.

The truck driver also noticed something at the end of the tail, what he called a “blunt end.” He could not make out any detail, but acknowledged that it could have been what other eyewitnesses describe. In other words, he was sure that there was some kind of structure at the end of the tail.

He told me that he had found the sketch by the U.S. Marine [Eskin Kuhn] and that the wings on that image correlated well the wings of the creature that he had seen yesterday. Here is the 1971 sketch:

Perosaur Sketch by Eskin Kuhn
Kuhn saw two pterosaurs in Cuba, in 1971

“Pterodactyls” in Arkansas, Oklahoma, and Texas

About [1985] . . . in Woodward, Oklahoma, near a small river . . . a large animal took off into the air. At first I thought it was an eagle. Then I noticed it was a dinosaur. . . . I was afraid it would eat me. I stared at the back part of the head because it was exactly like the ones depicted in books.

How Absurd! A Frigate Bird!

. . . Frigate Birds . . . I’ve lost count of how many times I have responded to that video footage, explaining that it does not show any ropen but only a common ocean-going bird.

Let’s consider some photos of Frigate Birds.

Flying Frigate bird

Frigate Bird flying

Flying Frigate bird

“Pterodactyls” in Arkansas, Oklahoma, and Texas

Many eyewitnesses have called the flying creatures “pterodactyls,” although the correct name for the large non-bat featherless flyer is “pterosaur.” Let’s examine some of what has been reported on sightings in Arkansas, Oklahoma, and Texas.

Texarkana, Arkansa, Sighting, About 1982

I received an email from this eyewitness many years ago.

We saw the creature for approximately 20 seconds. We did not see any signs of feathers just sharp edged wings, the sharp pointed beak, and the sharp pointed crest on its head. We did not see any tail. I have looked at my dinosuar book and the picture of the pteranodon looked like what we saw.

Woodward, Oklahoma, Pterosaur Sighting

From page 33 of my book Live Pterosaurs in America (third edition):

About [1985] . . . in Woodward, Oklahoma, near a small river, at about noon, a fourteen-year-old became terrified at the sight of a pterosaur-like creature.

“I was walking to the small river where I usually caught carp fish. . . . a large animal took off into the air. At first I thought it was an eagle. Then I noticed it was a dinosaur. . . . I was afraid it would eat me. I stared at the back part of the head because it was exactly like the ones depicted in books. . . . had a long neck and wide wings just like in the movies or in books. It had no feathers and it was flying around and looking downwards into the fields.

“I was really afraid. . . . I never told anyone about this until now. People think you’re crazy when you tell them about something like this. The creature [looked] like it was dark brown. I was really close to it.”

“Pterodactyl” in Southern States

. . . a huge, featherless bird in Arkansas . . .  We were sitting on big rocks at a cliff about 300 foot above the river when it flew out just under us and we watched it all the way down toward the river till it passed the tree lines. It was an awesome experience, indeed.

Pterosaur in South Carolina

 “Susan Wooten was driving east on Highway 20 . . . on a clear mid-afternoon in the fall of about 1989 . . . [She] saw something flying from her left, then passing in front of her . . . ‘It swooped down over the highway and back up gracefully over the pines,’ . . . ‘It looked as big as any car . . . NO feathers, not like a huge crane or egret, but like a humongous bat.’”

 

Cover of third edition of Live Pterosaurs in America - with sketches 4-A