So over winter winter break I played some D&D with friends, and had my players fight an ancient dino-dragon queen. When you're friends with a paleontology nerd, expect some science in your fantasy

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Line drawing of that most labyrinthian of ammonites, the Cretaceous Nipponites. I tried to go for a unique appearance for the soft tissue, and ended up with this vaguely octopus-looking, stalk-eyed form that's doing...something with its tentacles.

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R is for rhynchosaur.

Rhynchosaur was a reptilian parrot beaked pig from the Triassic that ate mainly tubers and roots. (not literally a pig, but a fat lizard none the less)Illustration for extinct series.

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Seems like every new find (or rumor of a new find) indicates a different skin type, so I bet they were very diverse and had structures and textures that don't directly match up to any living animals.

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Williamsonia! Aka the quintessential member of the Bennettitales, a group of cycad-like seed plants. I did this pretty quickly, so the lighting and detail could be a bit better.

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Finished reconstruction of Spinosaurus aegyptiacus!!! I don't do that often, so I tried to go all-out with this one

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Line drawing done for the giant Cenozoic bird Gastornis. I've wanted to reconstruct it for a long time, it's such a charismatic and remarkable animal. Look at that beak! (Also body outline is completely obscured by feathers, as it prolly should be)

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I just couldn't wait to unveil our new logo by Katrin Emery! Stay tuned for the website to officially launch on January 31st.

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to one of my 1st digital pieces, a (probably inaccurate) portrait of the giant Cenozoic turtle, Meiolania! I gave it more of a terrestrial, tortoise-y look, as I made this before recent research came out suggesting it was semiaquatic

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Celebrating the release of Thomas Jefferson and the Mammoth Hunt from Paula Wiseman and ! A romp through early America with Lewis & Clark, Daniel Boone, CW Peale and more! https://t.co/KvFgbaGylC

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2018 in Paleontology, a selection of fossil species described this year. Which one's your favorite? https://t.co/XrTHrPICLo

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These pictures are part of a concept I tried to explore related about the posibility of future paleontology, made by a new civilization that colonized earth in 215 million years in the future, which I called "Holocene Park" I still work on it...

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This is probably one of the most interesting publications concerning the world of sauropodomorphs this year. Welcome to itaquii we need to found one of like this
https://t.co/W2nMtbwTqc

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Nothing to see here, just another mossy branch... definitely not something a pterosaur would find tasty

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