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@JuliotheArtist Two giants, somewhere around a year apart
@ni075 It is surprising, but understandable. I know that there’s a revision of amplectobeluid mouths in progress, and even looking at the pictures, it seems like the smooth and tuberculate plates almost come in rows, behind the mouth. Or something. I don’t know.
I’ll try and draw it
@AudreyLee22 The dark stain at the back is indeed decay fluids, but the head is still rounded (just not as much). It had a mouth at the end with teeth inside, annulations, and two eyes facing upwards to look for predators. Also, this is H. fortis, which had a more bulbous head than H. sparsa
Okay, okay. #AnimalArtistsUnit, I’m caving in. I draw a lot of very dead sea bugs and pterosaurs / dinosaurs and stuff. #Paleoart
@anatotitan Oh, you have a Tylosaur riding a rogue wave while a Nyctosaurus flies nearby? There’s a timespan of several million years for that to have occurred, and over that time, it probably happened almost exactly like you drew it at least once
The Essex Biota of the Mazon Creek Lagerstätten, during the Carboniferous period. Tullimonstrum gregarium, better known as the Tully Monster, preys upon the marine lobopodian Carbotubulus waloszeki, a close relative of Hallucigenia.
#Paleoart #Paleontology #SciArt
@benjiopteryx 17, just starting to enter the professional side of things.
@Steven90653615 Mans livin his best life totally unaware he bout to get smoked by an asteroid the size of Edinburgh