Seeing as Tumblr deleted my artblog, I'll be steadily including my palaeoart to the move as well. Here are and

9 23

Very rough first attempt at a size chart here, I pretty much eyeballed it based on skeletals, etc. Mostly wanted to see what they all looked like together!

73 222

Thalassodromeus sethi overhaul, thanks to It did not take as long as expected. This will star as the main Subject of my first Blog Post. It also is my favorite Pterosaur.

15 46

I'm so excited to announce that my blog will launch on January 31st! This project I've been wanting to do for years will feature and biographies of the authors and original artwork by Katrin Emery(https://t.co/gjhbB2mxau)

7 15

FUN FACT: Ocepechelon was just one of 2 GIANT, highly-specialized from the Late Cretaceous of Morocco. Meet Alienochelys, the "yin" to Ocepechelon's "yang"

27 67

There are few things as motivating (imo) for a paleoartist than an incredibly beautiful & obscure animal that you feel needs more/better representation. With that in mind, here's my reconstruction of the giant Cretaceous sea turtle Ocepechelon

45 141

Happy Enjoy this gorgeous piece by our featured paleoartist, Raven Amos. creates with vivid colors! Learn more about her and visit her digital art gallery here: https://t.co/943TiXuXTb

2 3

This is Mammut americanum, better known as the American It is the best-known species of the genus Mammut, and one of the best-known and most popular of Cenozoic animals.

14 48

To put that into perspective, the largest-recorded African ever was 13ft tall at the shoulder and weighed 11.5 short tons.

0 8

Loganellia, a jawless thelodont w/ a square body & distinctive covering of spiny scales (that I prolly made too large). Gave it a coloration befitting its likely habitat of shallow coastal waters or reefs.

1 18

It was about 21-23 feet long, and unlike its living counterpart had a pronounced snout rather than a gigantic battering ram head. Loved adding the scratches/scars, I think it really brings it to life.

1 2

I used the skeletal provided by the beautifully comprehensive paper by Asier Larramendi. It has such a tall skull and nearly-vertical forehead. I gave it green eyes, maybe as a recessive trait?

0 10

Late night thoughts: if the BatCave had space for a stem-elephant, Alfred might’ve spent his days shoveling this Gomphotherium’s dung 🤭🤧🐘💩👴🏻

9 25