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how many skelaxin to get high This wouldn’t affect their ability to swim or dive, and certainly didn’t limit their forays out above major bodies of water, but it is hard to see pterosaurs hanging around on the surface for long periods. Unlike seabirds or waterfowl, they would not appear to be in a position to easily ride out a storm on the surface, or simply take a rest to interrupt a long flight. Any pterosaur that ended up in the sea (by accident or design) would have been advised to take off again shortly afterwards or risk more than a mouthful of brine. That may sound like pterosaurs were rather doomed as ocean-going animals, but actually some seabirds are rather limited when on the surface and struggle to take off again (frigate birds and shearwaters for example), and so do their best to avoid landing in the first place. Plenty more can cover huge distances between landing, and feed safely on the wing, so pterosaurs may simply have avoided coming down onto the surface. In short, it’s not impossible to be a successful open-ocean, flying animal that avoids the water, so such an issue for pterosaurs would not be fatal, and they at least could apparently take off from the surface easily.