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Tyrannosaurus chases two Ornithomimus dinosaurs in Late Cretaceous North America.
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Illustration by Mohamad Haghani
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A pair of the giant marine turtle Archelon mate near the surface of a sea that cut through the American Great Plains during the Late Cretaceous.
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Illustration by @anthon5001
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Sinomegaceros, a deer from Early to Late Pleistocene of East Asia.
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Illustration by @HimaRudolf
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Kronosaurus was a giant pliosaurid found in rocks formed about 100-120 million years ago, in shallow marine water covering eastern Australia.
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Illustration by Sergey Krasovskiy
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Archaeocidaris was an echinoid echinoderm that lived from the Devonian to Permian periods.
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Illustration by @AndreyAtuchin
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Sharovipteryx was a bizarre reptile known from Triassic rocks in Kyrgyzstan. It had incredibly long legs that bore wing membranes that allowed Sharovipteryx to glide from branch to branch.
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Illustration by @CorbinRainbolt
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Cygnus falconeri was a giant swan native to the islands of Malta and Sicily. It was around 1/3 bigger than modern mute swans and lived alongside miniature elephants and hippos.
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Illustration by @joschuaknuppe
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The Ediacaran Period hosted many new wild and wonderful animals such as Yorgia, a disc-like organism from the extinct phylum Proarticulata, and Kimberella, a slug-like bilaterian.
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Illustration by @AndreyAtuchin
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Gorgosaurus was a tyrannosaurid theropod dinosaur from the Late Cretaceous of North America. It is known from dozens of specimens, making it the best-represented tyrannosaur.
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Illustration by Sergey Meleshin
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A nosy sauropod spies on pterosaurs as they investigate a dead sawfish in the Kem Kem of North Africa.
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Illustration by @tupandactylus
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