Happy I think it’s time I made more of these.

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Since it's Jurassic June, how come no-one has seen this Ankylosaurus render? , ya know what to do with it for future posters.



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It’s officially This month is a time for Jurassic fans everywhere to celebrate one of the biggest movie franchises of all time together. Stay tuned for more unique Jurassic June content soon!🦖🦕🌎

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Chasmosaurus was a medium-sized ceratopsid from the Cretaceous period. His name means ‘open reptile’ from the large openings in its angular neck frill. I know the little red lizard isn’t historically accurate, but he was fun to draw anyway ;-)

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Euoplocephalus was a 2 ton ankylosaurid from North America. Equipped with body armour, made from fused bone plates on its back and a foot-wide tail club that could be swung like a medieval flail.

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No set of cartoons would be Compy-lete without some of these guys! welcomes a trio of Procompsognathus, chicken-sized from the early Triassic period. Another memorable addition to the series, where we see whole packs of these!

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Cetiosaurus was a herbivorous sauropod that lived in Europe and Africa over 160 million years ago. Its name means ‘whale lizard’, due to the original remains being mistaken for a giant sea creature, initially thought to be an enormous crocodile!

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just wouldn't be complete without my favourite of all the Stegosaurus! A heavily-built herbivore from the period, with short forelimbs and a row of armoured plates along its back. At the end of its tail was a series of four, 3-foot long spikes!

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Meet Dilophosaurus, a carnivorous theropod from the early These lightly-built were around 6m in length, but only stood as tall as an adult human and sported two crests on their heads.

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Probably the most famous of all the and the jewel in my crown is the mighty Theropod, Tyrannosaurus Rex! One of the largest land carnivores of all time, reaching 13m in length and with a mouth filled with masses of 9 inch long teeth!

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Presently the latest known Chinese stegosaurian, the broad and sturdy Wuerhosaurus was described in 1973. Two armour plates found with the skeleton are thin, long, low, and somewhat semicircular, very from the tall, triangular plates of other stegosaurians

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Oviraptor is a small first discovered in 1924 in the Gobi Desert. The name it was given, Oviraptor (which means “egg thief”) was thought to be a correct moniker for this dinosaur because it was found atop a pile of dinosaur eggs.

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Zuniceratops was a small plant-eating that lived in North America during the late Cretaceous. It is the earliest known with eyebrow horns. It was first discovered in New Mexico in 1996 by 8 year old Christopher Wolfe.

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Meet a rather grumpy Styracosaurus, a medium-sized from the Cretaceous. He had an array of spikes around a neck frill and a single giant horn on his nose, which may have been up to 60cm in length!

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It's and Eva hits Netflix next week, so here's "Death and De-Extinction" and "You Are (Not) Extinct". Made last year using the JW photo embellishing site, for my (currently stalled) comedic crossover project, "Neon Jurassic Evangelion".

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My next entry is Lambeosaurus, a from the late Cretaceous period - best known for the very distinctive hatchet-shaped crest on its head. This travelled in herds across North America around 75 million years ago.

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