Time for or maybe you prefer to eat another theropod, I have some recommendations.

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Dracovenator

A 7 meter long theropod possibly related to dilophosaurus, little of it is known as only skull fragments have been found

ALT: A fossil of what was believed to be syntarsus was reassigned to dracovenator as a juvenile specimen, the specimen is also a partial skull

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Well I did draw a mamenchi munching on some theropod chow not too long ago

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It's

Here's Zuul, who just wrecked a theropod's leg for getting in its way 💪

Really earning that name "Destroyer of Shins"

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O is for Onchopristis, the perpetual second fiddle to a theropod whose name I forget. My old drawing gets the rostrum morphology a little wrong, but you get the idea.

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(Ok on second thought completed this sooner than expected) a Mamenchisaurus decides to take a snack for the road after coming across the carcass of a theropod, though his diet largely consist of plants a little extra source calcium never hurt anyone

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Pastel Paleotober Day 25: Tyranosaurus 🦖

The late Cretaceous North American theropod Tyranosaurus is among the most recognizable dinosaurs. While its relatives and ancestors almost certainly had feathers, it may have become bald as it evolved its massive size, similar to rhinos

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Want a signed print AND to help save the UK's only gull sanctuary? Head to the FB page to bid on my prints: all proceeds go to charity. Starting bids are £5 for each print. Theropods, pterosaurs, plesiosaurs and more up for sale! https://t.co/6jEXZ4VwVM

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Sometimes you can't help but want to draw a big theropod. Every Paleoartist does at some point. This time I bring you a very speculative reconstruction of the enigmatic and very large North African theropod Bahariasaurus as a large basal Coelurosaurian.

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Pastel Paleotober Day 19: Spinosaurus 🍐

Spinosaurus hunted in the banks and rivers of what is now North Africa in the late Cretaceous. At 15-16 meters in length, it was the largest theropod and therefore the largest terrestrial carnivore ever.

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is upon us and I’m practicing theropods…this really is a changed world

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Yesterday’s morning warmup drawing with the skull of Guanlong (Dragon Crown), a small Jurassic theropod and ancestor to the much larger tyrannosaurs. I’m a little late for but there’s never a bad day to celebrate this beautifully crested carnivore.

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Ignoring my theropod bias, Spiclypeus and Magnapaulia always stuck out to me as being super aesthetic. Both are pretty complete too.
(Art by and )

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first paleo piece ive done in a whiiiilllleee. i used dromaeosaurus as a rough jumping off point, so this isnt really meant to be any species in particular :)

[tags: paleoart , dromaeosaur , dinosaur , theropod ]

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Day 10 of Ghoulish Dinosaurs. Norman Nodel’s take on the classic giant theropods Allosaurus and Tyrannosaurus are atmospheric and rather frightening, but their prey are the real stars of the show. Get a load of those faces! The Triceratops is the only semi-normal one here. https://t.co/LlM6MLOTFu

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Also extra notes:
When the siamosaurus and P. sattayarakki was discovered
Earlirers book in thailand have a reconstruction that's odd imo
I remember they using some lomg neck theropod as siamosaurus
(that's why i draw that in my siamo through ages)

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My latest challenge: learning theropods. Have a Dryptosaurus

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The blog post on the recently described Welsh theropod Pendraig milnerae: https://t.co/51bFfQ88JK

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Pastel Paleotober Day 8: Sinosauropteryx 💜

Sinosauropteryx was a small, carnivorous dinosaur from northeast China in the early Cretaceous. Fossilized traces of its fuzzy coat showed that feathers were not unique to birds and may have been common among theropods at the time.

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