By Brian Vastag
Washington Post Staff Writer
Thursday, January 20, 2011; 2:47 PM
After a farmer in northeastern China picked a fossilized flying lizard out of the ground last year and sold it to a museum, paleontologists quickly noticed a broken wing - and an egg nestled next to the animal's tail. The scientists dubbed the spectacular specimen "Mrs. T" - a contraction of "Mrs. Pterodactyl" - and are now announcing her as the first prehistoric flier to be assigned a gender.
She provides vital clues to the mating habits of the creatures that ruled the skies for 150 million years before birds appeared.
David Unwin, a paleobiologist at the University of Leicester who studied the spectacularly preserved fossil, calls it a "once-in-10 lifetimes' discovery." Unwin and colleagues published the finding in the journal Science.
The scientists who studied Mrs. T surmised that 160 million years ago, an accident snapped her wing and dumped her into a lake or stream, where she drowned with a wrinkly, leathery egg at the ready. The egg then slipped into the mud that encased her.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2011/01/20/AR2011012003348.html