claimed belonged to the same specimen In 1859, Sir
Richard Owen named pterosaur material from the
Cambridge Greensand of England as
Pterodactylus sedgwickii. At the time,
Pterodactylus was a
wastebasket taxon; all sorts of unrelated pterosaurs were assigned to that genus. In 1870,
Harry Seeley reassigned it to
Ornithocheirus, another wastebasket taxon. Its specific name honors
Adam Sedgwick. It was in 1869 renamed by Seeley into a
Ptenodactylus sedgwickii, and in 1870 into a
Ornithocheirus sedgwickii (by then it has been placed within the now obsolete
Ornithosauria). In 1874, Owen again renamed it into
Coloborhynchus sedgwickii. Owen in 1859 also referred a front of the lower jaws, specimen CAMSM B54421. However, this piece is not of the same individual as the holotype and there is no proof for any connection with
Pterodactylus sedgwickii. Finally, in 2020, Holgado and Pêgas assigned it to its own genus,
Aerodraco; the genus name means "air dragon", in reference to the 1901 book
Dragons of the Air by
Harry Seeley. ==Description==