イタチザメGaleocerdo cuvierを描いてみた。

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populator specimen discovered in the Cuvieri Cave in Brazil!

Artur Chahud

https://t.co/FQqUKJsxOL

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It's a joke, don't take it seriously.
Jenna refuse to use mask because she feels uncomfortable. Madame Cuvier lends a helping hand.

But anyway, wear mask when going outside, and stay healthy everyone.

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February 5, 1770, birthday of French naturalist & mineralogist Alexandre Brongniart. Together with Cuvier he published one of the 1st stratigraphic sections & geological maps in 1808, showing the stratigraphy of the basin of Paris
https://t.co/4SHUDIfYdF

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Who is the goodest boi?!🐶

A whole mess of puppers, doggos and woofers from 'The Animal kingdom of the Baron Cuvier' (1839)

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A sketch of Cuvieronius after a good thanksgiving day. After doing some habitat analysis, you’ll notice this guy’s a more mountainous grey than my other elephants.

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It's finally Halloween! 🦇🧛‍♂️🕷️

I'll be posting all things spooky from the

collection throughout today, starting with these bats from 'The Animal kingdom of the Baron Cuvier' (1835-40)

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My unplanned midterm hiatus is over! Check out another character: Cuvieronius hyodon, a gomphothere lacking those signature shovel tusks.
(New format too!)

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One of most successful publications during his lifetime was The Conchologist’s First Book, a popular version of Thomas Wyatt’s Manual of Conchology

Although he was hired mostly for his name, it was not hack work. Poe relied on new work by to propose a new taxonomy https://t.co/Gh9kdGvMM4

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One of most successful publications during his lifetime was The Conchologist’s First Book, a popular version of Thomas Wyatt’s Manual of Conchology

Although he was hired mostly for his name, it was not hack work. Poe relied on new work by to propose a new taxonomy

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A variety of shells from Georges Cuvier's "The Animal Kingdom", v. 3 (1834) — an English translation of Cuvier's famous "Le Règne Animal" (first published in French in four octavo volumes in 1817). Contributed in thanks to ➡️ https://t.co/nlC9RzoEwu 🐚

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"The observer listens to nature: the experimenter questions and forces her to reveal herself." Happy birthday to the great comparative anatomist Georges Cuvier. He was born in 1769.

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Morning warmup sketch. Gomphotheres of South America. Notiomastodon (left) and Cuvieronius (right). Both elephant relatives ived alongside the first human inhabitants in the Americas for thousands of years until they went extinct.

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Wishing you a fin-tastic "Histoire Naturelle des Poissons" (1828-1849) by Cuvier & Valenciennes attempted to catalog all known The 22 volumes treated over 4,500 species. Explore the work in thanks to ➡️ https://t.co/woPoIxmpWC 🐠🐡🐟

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Malayan tapirs were first described to Western science by Anselme Gaëtan Desmarest in 1819 - seven years after Georges Cuvier discounted the likelihood of “discovering new species of the larger quadrupeds” - and Baird's tapirs weren't described until 1865.

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More for . Here's the large Chalk pterosaur Cimoliopterus cuvieri, a species that inspired (at least in part) the larger CP pterosaur models. This image is an updated one from my 2013 book (actually drawn in 2011: it took time to get that book together).

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今週のカレンダー イタチザメ Galeocerdo cuvier https://t.co/NFVwYOAsJ8

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Monday, Here is the direct relationship between Georges-Frédéric Cuvier and Leopold Blaschka? you cna see the drawing and glass copy

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