For the last day of the my most famous illustration: the "new organ" called the The article this appeared in was picked up by the mainstream press, and my illustration was on TV in monologue!

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I've had some more messages asking if I have a website - it's on my long To Do list, hopefully later this year. For now, I'm on Artfinder or you can contact me directly on here or FB about my paintings.

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For the final day of these posters is how my way of presenting evolutionary trees started. It is something I really enjoy doing. In here you can see Centrosaurine Ceratopsids, Ornithomimosaurs and Alvarezsaurs, Dromaeosaurs and Wessex Fm

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To end my tweetstorm, here's an ebook I released last month.

In 2018, I asked 52 nerds to talk about the things they really, really, really care about. I created an illustration series to accompany their fun, delightful ramblings.

Free download: https://t.co/oCrBxZ6mAI

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final day. Today, Mixed dinosaur stuff: Entry 1 goes for extant Ardea alba

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Punaise Gendarmes Pyrrhocoris apterus
Dans mon carnet.

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Some of my favourite covers I did for ! This is the last day of the by It was a pleasure to join in for this 🤗😊😍

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A little series of sketches of some things with wings mostly done for fun but good practice 6/?

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I sincerely love taking "butterfly on flower" and changing it to "Pearl Crescent on Golden Alexander."


(Details of paintings from the archives)

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This shop has other plant diseases available as shirts, stickers, mugs, etc. The drawings are by Margaret Senior for Australia's Dept of Agriculture and they are most excellent

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Continuing my theme of marine reptiles for today’s here is Chaohusaurus, an early ichthyosauriform known to have been viviparous. A beautiful fossil of this sp is shows a female in the act of giving birth. These are also for my in-prep book

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Bryophytes continue! Bonfire moss with a sulfur tuft mushroom and boxelder bug.

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One of my favorite projects is the series of charts that I started doing as a fun experiment and turned into a big (and ongoing) collection. I show very roughly how some animal groups evolved over time by showcasing a few milestone species.

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Last but not least, another more basal member of the group: Barytherium. Rendered here basically as a realistic version of the Pokémon "Drowzee" https://t.co/TKQ0FPstoH

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My most detailed entry into the Proboscidea series was the American mastodon. I painted as much of the fur as possible. https://t.co/PhJrTVUk21

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Palaeoloxodon falconeri is a great example of the crazy size disparity that can occur within the same genus. I didn't know this extreme was possible for mammals https://t.co/x52Tj8s0aH

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Aaand the biggest proboscidean ever, the massive Palaeoloxodon namadicus. This one I can really hear the elephant-like rumble every time I look at it. https://t.co/rL3HgZ2cs0

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Some more storms for the "Heading West Now" 60×44″ 152×112 cm Oil on canvas 2018 based on a photo by from a chase we did on July 23, 2017 Chase blog > https://t.co/QjqoiILezZ

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