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Like many children, Daisy Morris loves to collect fossils.

Unlike other children, however, Daisys hobby has led to a pterosaur being named after her. A pterosaur is a type of flying reptile closely related to dinosaurs. The species Daisy discovered is now known as Vectidraco daisymorrisae, or Dragon from the Isle of Wight. Daisy, who lives in England, was five years old in 2008 when she and her mother were taking a walk along the beach. She noticed some black bonesabout 40 mm long sticking out of the mud and she dug them out. The family took the bones to a fossil expert at Southampton University in England. Paleontologists took several years to analyse them. Last week they announced that the bones were part of the pelvis of a pterosaur that no one had seen before. The bones may be up to 115 million years old; they are from the Cretaceous period. In recognition of her find and the generous donation of the fossil by the Morris family to Englands Natural History Museum, the species was named after Daisy, w ho is now nine years old. The Vectridraco daisymorrisae probably had a wingspan of about 75 cm and was about 35 cm from its snout to its tailabout the same size as a seagull. One of the palaeontologists, Martin Simpson, has written a childrens book, Dai sy and the isle of Wight Dragon about Daisy and her adventure. The story highlights the special relationship between amateurs, academics and curators, in bringing these important finds to the attention of the scientific world, said Simpson.

Questions
1) Write a headline for this article. 2) What is the main idea of this article? 3) Write a good orientation for this article. 4) Looking at the pictures, write a caption for each one. 5) Why this new dinosaur is named Vectridraco daisymorrisae?

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