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@Manigarm The funniest have got to be fossils that got stepped on by other animals. My two favorites are a Plesiochelys shell stepped on by a sauropod and a Tarbosaurus skull stepped on by a Saurolophus.
@ausar_the Did they say what museum it's at? It's reminiscent of Knight's La Brea mural at the AMNH, but is clearly a different piece/artist.
Another thing that's gotten overlooked in the wake of Spinosaurus is the Onchopristis in the press art. No offense to Bonadonna but it's pretty inaccurate. Sclerorhynchoids weren't just Pristis copy-pastes like they are almost always depicted as.
Other artists: Why don’t you ever draw dinosaurs from the front?
Paleoartists:
Artwork of Mourasuchus with baleen-like teeth by Sandro Castelli. While certainly inaccurate (the teeth of Mourasuchus aren't like this), I'm curious if this idea has been illustrated elsewhere.
https://t.co/zB0FUwuN6e
Turns out that most of the traffic to my blog is coming from @LyleZapato's Pacific Northwest tree octopus spoof site. Life is strange.
https://t.co/9LFQ75kVxl
I just found out that serial paleoart plagiarizer Will Toosey still has his own website. The audacity of some people, plastering their own name on someone else's artwork.
https://t.co/LF6RkPV0ym
@Stroopwafelman @FrostDragonLiz Giraffid ossicones are the closest thing I can think of to uintathere horns, so a skin and fur covering seems most likely. However early artworks advised by Cope portrayed them with full antlers and a trunk.
This has got to be one of the nuttiest websites in the paleosphere. Chock full of poor science, but great fodder for all the spec evo artists out there.
https://t.co/d32jGG1qim