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And for fun comparison, here’s a piece I did for @EDGEinthewild exactly one year ago.
“Gardenhead and Jointed Neck”.
Heterosteus asmussi, a 6 meter long freshwater placoderm fish from the Devonian. It may have been an ambush predator, spending most of its time close to the sediment.
I really liked painting this one.
#Paleoart #SciArt #Paleontology
#PortfolioDay :)
I do paleoart, mostly cambrian stuff like lobopods and radiodonts, but I also do a bit of horror art on the side. You can see a bit of that influence sleep through into the black/white/red Omnidens.
#Paleoart #SciArt
A Velociraptor mongoliensis portrait, inspired by @YDAWtheShow’s recent video. I don’t think I’ve actually drawn Velociraptor in several years...
#Paleoart #Paleontology #SciArt
Doing the thing.
If you see this, quote tweet it with your own art. https://t.co/ojJLjkSXJ3
A Hurdia finds itself stranded on a hot Cambrian beach after a storm, devoid of scavengers.
(I’ll post decent art once I get out of this occasional art-block. Maybe some bromacker stuff soon.)
#Paleoart #Paleontology #SciArt
Why not. Wiwaxia corrugata.
#StartToFinish #StartFinish #PaleoartProcess
@ni075 @IV757975026 If it is internal muscle, it should share some similarities with the frontal appendage muscles of related animals like Pambdelurion. I’m not sure if that’s the case; or perhaps Anomalocarids are significantly different. I need to look into it further, and I need your opinions.