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Old illustration that depicts Ophthalmosaurus in a shallow water
#FossilFriday #Paleoart #Ophthalmosaurus
Happy #FossilFriday from #BiologyLetters => A possible home for a bizarre Carboniferous animal: Is Typhloesus a pelagic gastropod? https://t.co/2fbiQckW5h | #palaeontology #mollusc
Iberospinus in an epic angle
Another one of my old drawing,
I drew this after i saw the new spinosaur species a few months ago this year.
#Paleoart #FossilFriday #Iberospinus
Spinosaur
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#JurassicWorld #dinosaur #paleontology #cartoon #FossilFriday #digitalart #digitaldrawing
#FossilFriday an old reconstruction of the Early Devonian placoderm fish Lunaspis. Named for how its spines resemble a crescent moon 🌙
For #FossilFriday here is Sue’s gnarly skull! @SUEtheTrex is a very dead absolute BEAST and hopefully this won’t reawaken their parasite trauma. Also included are emerald ash borer beetles, a parasitic wasp, and Trichomonsus gallinea. #dinosaur
More on the “alien goldfish” Typhloesus and its origins - from @ROMtoronto Invert. Palaeo. Collections, co-authored by Dr. Jean-Bernard Caron #FossilFriday 🌊🐚
Guardian: https://t.co/imf2Ar7XNC
Live Science: https://t.co/Xnrrl5bw9C
Smithsonian Magazine: https://t.co/685aofaA4w
@WinsorJohn2 @StephenKurant @skeptic_heretic @SkepticInThePew @TheresaLongo @sherylunderwood @3Nesa @1LetsRawk1 @Eleven_Films @SteveWoodsmall @Alex_Verbeek @CheyenneDhraga @MDFFest @atheist_vegan @AtheistIntelli2 @TxHopsfarmer @hiiamanatheist @BrianBrachiopod Have a fine fun fabulous #FuxianhuiaFriday my #FF friends. it's also #FossilFriday
@IrvingForbush2 @BrianBrachiopod @FloJoHorman @MoffittJill @Drstevenhobbs @ScientistMel @FossilLocator @gunsnrosesgirl3 @TTDerandere @Bolshoibabushka @NotLordByron @RachelOsiris @Rainbow_Ark @spikesbuddy @JMPeck69 @keithmehl Fuxianhuia protensa ... very early Cambrian. Maybe 525 million years ago or earlier.
This art comes from a quite different part of the human brain than the brachiopod's cartoons ... but both are valid interpretations of the rare fossil evidence.
#FuxianhuiaFriday
#FossilFriday
The enigmatic Pleistocene felid Panthera gombaszoegensis - not a jaguar after all? https://t.co/QuhY7QCZTo #FossilFriday @frsFNRS @ULiegeRecherche @Le_Museum @uppsalauni @africamuseumbe @MorphoSource @MorphoBank @wileyearthspace
Quick rough piece of one of my favorite fish from the WIS in a Sugimori-esque style for #FossilFriday.
I’d love to see a set of collectible WIS cards, but I feel like I’d have to be the one to do it. 😅
ICYMI: @KateTRINAJSTIC et al. describe the earliest known heart of a jawed vertebrate, giving us a clue about how our own heart evolved! https://t.co/9dd0EPWh7c #FossilFriday #ScieNews
Ayo #FossilFriday, here's that hot pink #Dilophosaurus for @ZionNPS yall ordered. I turnt the noggin up to full reef fish mode for the breeding season. Full view next tweet.
#paleoart #traditionalpainting
For #FossilFriday here's the newly described rhynchocephalian (#tuatara relative) #Opisthiamimus from the Jurassic of Wyoming, USA. Many thanks to @JCsotonyi (https://t.co/5Vx8iZS2bo) for the magnificent restoration. DeMar et al. 2022 @JournalSystPal:
https://t.co/0BHIPzURpr |
[#Palevol] Lutrinae Bonaparte, 1838 (#Carnivora, #Mustelidae) from the Plio-Pleistocene of the Lower Omo Valley, southwestern Ethiopia: systematics and new insights into...⬇️
🔗 https://t.co/4yBx8BoHln
✒️ @CamilleGrohe - @kevin_t_uno & Jean-Renaud BOISSERIE
#FossilFriday #Otters
Eggs of extinct dwarf island emus retained large size https://t.co/0Epg4eQ63W #palaeontology #extinction #dwarfism #FossilFriday #BiologyLetters
Subadult Eucentrasaur from the Upper 50 m of the Two Medicine fm (~75-74 Ma). Label says Achelosaurus but stratigraphic placement isn't pinpointed and could be Einosaurus. It shares many similarities with subadult Einosaurus MOR 456 8-8-87-1. #FossilFriday
#desmostyllian anatomy studies made for @VelezJuarbeJ and the LAU exhibit. Based on the specimen on display at the @NHMLA. #fossilfriday #sciart #paleoart #scicomm
In 1952, a vesicular disease outbreak among swine prevented their entry at the State Fair. The Museum’s own 𝘋𝘪𝘯𝘰𝘩𝘺𝘶𝘴 (19 MYO) measuring in at 6 ft at the shoulder and nearly 12 ft long was awarded the 1952 Grand Champion Purple ribbon! #FossilFriday
#MonteSanGiorgioWeek
One of the most iconic animals from the Triassic is the INCREDIBLY long necked, Tanystropheus. Found at Monte San Giorgio, one species captured its prey by ram-feeding.
https://t.co/KLU4TQ35OR
#FossilFriday