The Yucatan hardface is a fairly typical ceroprosopid metaceratopsian. These omnivores can grow up to 400 kg though average individuals are closer to 250. This species is particularly notable for its multiple horns and brightly coloured facial ceratin sheet.

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More entries days 11-14 Tropegnathus, Incivisaurus, Shringasaurus, Tupandactylus. Quick doodles in sharpie and soft tip markers.

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Day 16.
P is for Parasaurolophus.
So, skipped over O, I'll go back to that one.

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I just think hadrosaurs have the most beautiful lines and Shantungosaurus is no exception. The largest of the hadrosaurid dinosaurs it could reach a length around 50 feet and weigh 16 tonnes. Its jaws were packed with 1,500 tiny chewing teeth.

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Due to Google Chrome's inability to connect to you'll have to settle for this dinosaur.

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Day 13: Gargoyleosaurus parkpinorum

Living in the semi-arid, an nodosaurid Gargoyleosaurus is strolling through dry wasteland.

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Dinovember 2020, Alvarezsaurus, portrayed as a speculative blood-sucker (no evidence to back this up at all, btw).
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This male Megacerops is about to take a chunk out of a rival's Brontotheriidae buttocks. Brontotheriidae are a family of now extinct odd-toed hooded animals that lived in Eocene North America. They were built like rhinos, but are more closely related to horses.

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It's time to reveal the truth about what non-avian dinosaur evolution would have culminated in had they not gone extinct 66 million years ago.

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A Brachiosaurus for todays browsing the conifer tree tops in a prehistoric North America. It was a Late Jurassic sauropod that could reach lengths of 69 feet and weigh 58 metric tons.

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No proper content today, because the Speculative Evolution forum ambushed me with a cursed spec evo concept I couldn't say no to. This is what happens when you give Sharovipterygidae too much evolutionary leeway.

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i offer this mischievous microraptor as some paleoart. would you give him a friendly pat and compliment his plumage, pretty please? he is a little egotistical

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I probably won't be able to draw anything new today because of physical therapy, but here's this little thing from yesterday for

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Could dinosaurs experience joy? It's something we'll never know, but I'd like to think they did. For we have Silesaurus, a genus of silesaurid dinosauriform from the Late Triassic, approximately 230 million years ago.

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