Pterodactyl Found Alive!
In the winter of 1856, a crew of workmen, near Paris, France, were digging a railway tunnel through a layer of Jurassic limestone when they split a large boulder. They were startled to find a large bird-like creature stumbling out of it. It flapped what looked like wings and made a croaking sound. Then, in only a few moments after it emerged from its ancient tomb, it died.
A local paleontology student identified the creature as a pterodactyl, an extinct reptilian bird from Earth’s Jurassic period. The stone bore the imprint of the bird — forming an exact mold of the creature’s body.
It was said to be the most amazing case of a "living fossil" ever found. Once freed from its tomb, without air or food for thousands of years, it could not survive. This seems to be typical of many creatures who managed to survive centuries, only to die once they were set free.
In 1719, French lumbermen were astonished to find a living frog directly in the center of a solid elm trunk about four feet above the root, but could not survive.
In 1853, a live horned lizard was freed from a block of solid stone, and only lived two days after being freed.
In the late 1800s, a Hindu holy man, Situ Pema Wangyal Rinpoche, was making a journey to Lhasa with a crew of servants, when they came upon an enormous outcrop of rock. He struck the rock with one blow and shattered it, only to find a large repulsive creature encased inside. Described as a salamander-like animal, the creature was laid at his feet, and panted for breath. After a while, the creature died. Funeral rites were performed and the body was burned.
God said Dinosours lived with man a few thousand years ago, Man said they lived with Man millions of years ago. Now you have the record