Some abelisaurs I’ve done: Llukalkan (sketch), Pycnonemosaurus (sketch), Carnotaurus and Majungasaurus (zone of the reconstructions I did for Nat Geo Magazine Oct 2020 issue)

184 791

Not a lot of love for graphical abstracts and conceptual figures on twitter sometimes... but obviously these are my favorite parts of a paper

6 14

I’m a senior at the Cleveland Institute of Art, majoring in Biomedical art. I focus a lot on natural science and vector work! :)

2 15

Getting in on the last day of to post some of my work that is currently on display at the Beaty Biodiversity Museum as part of the ReCollections Exhibit. Ink drawings with digital colour created between 2017 and 2020. All these species are red listed by the IUCN

2 9

Tools of the trade before we come to an end with this amazing

Good to know the name of *that-thing* if you need to ask for it in the middle of a digging field day. 😉

5 21

Aaaaand here's a random set of infographics for the last day of the We got some physiology, popgen, community ecology, and ecological chemistry!

2 7

Some underwater Mesozoic scenes to continue with the last day of Nothosaurus, Keichousaurus, Rhomaleosaurus and Hauffiosaurus

110 429

Although my main focus is on birds and bird-like dinosaurs, I also have a soft spot for rodents, of all things. 🐭🐹 Here's a rodent phylogenetic tree I drew to help myself (and others) understand rodent diversity: https://t.co/Q1OxoVBIqd

55 179

I don't do porper scientific illustration, but usually depict extinct animals, mostly birds, island fauna and Cenozoic creatures

0 4

There are so many amazing artists out there - I love everyone's work. I am so glad I found out about this. Thanks to our great president Emily S. Damstra for encouraging us to participate in

1 3

Anyway, lots more could be said about Hooke (he discovered plant cells and coined the term "cell" itself!) but he's so cool I snuck a Micrographia illustration of a louse into my comic series Hocus Pocus: https://t.co/SvhVpv3Xap

0 3

Phylogeny is one of my favorite subjects. Well of course, I study it. But it also connects you to every species that has ever lived on Earth! I drew this vertebrate phylogeny in 2015 as an undergrad. It needs many updates... https://t.co/JW7e8Z1RRb

51 221

I think is still going? Here is the illustration I did for an upcoming
project, featuring species from the Klamath National Forest! California Sister, Spotted Towhee, and Yellow-faced Bumble Bee.

24 84

Last day of - finding that can be rather useful. First up, some journal front covers I've done...

4 29

So ends tomorrow, so I am going to tweet a fe more things. Here are some sketches of extinct Cenozoic mammals I’ve done over the years: Daeodon, Remingtonocetus and Rodhocetus, Eremotherium, and Granastrapotherium

106 553

I've created a range of illustrations over the last few years as teaching resources for undergraduate anatomy & dentistry

3 13

And I will basically never get tired of making 'ankylosaur skull rainbowgrams' showing how the ornamentation differs between species, 1st in my 2013 Euoplocephalus paper & latest incarnation in the Zuul description: https://t.co/mUlArnpC03

9 72

I really love the I think folks are sometimes surprised when I say that I get to do a lot of art as a scientist, but it's true. I like coming up with interesting ways to visualize results in my papers. Here's a few favourites: https://t.co/xNowwyM1Qg

46 224