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The #BurgessShale Cambrian bivalved arthropods from my PhD at the at @ROMtoronto and @eebtoronto.
Clockwise
Tuzoia burgessensis. Art Brittany Cheung
Fibulacaris nereidis, Art @MesozoicMuse
Balhuticaris voltae, Art @metazoastudio
Pakucaris apatis, Art @MesozoicMuse
I've been getting a lot of Pokemon comments for #BurgessShaleWeek and guess what? There's already one! The Pokemon Anorith and its evolution is based on the Burgess Shale apex-predator Anomalocaris. Now if they would only do Hallucigenia...
#paleontology
stylized watercolour painting of an anomalocaris!!
Idk what colour they were so I gave it countershading and bright colouration bc i think it suits them and would probably work to their advantage
#paleoart #cambrianexplosion #anomalocaris #burgessshale
It is a #BurgessShale double-header! Another weird wonder from half a billion years ago, the largest bivalved arthropod Balhuticaris voltae! New research by @trichodes and @ROMtoronto's Dr. Jean-Bernard Caron 🌊
📖:https://t.co/f4B6GxQlSW
🖌️🎨: Hugo Salais
#Prehistoria y #manga: el caso de "Ataque a los Titanes". @Carlosdino88 explica qué papel tiene #Hallucigenia, una criatura del #Cámbrico, en la trama de esta serie japonesa
▶️ https://t.co/eYHX57DQrb
#Cambrian #BurgessShale #anime #comic
Only 10 days left until the newest #Cambrian #BurgessShale #fossil discovery takes flight. I promise it'll be out of this world... 🛸 Get in touch if you're interested in the story!
@Davidmquote
For #FossilFriday I give you Peronopsis, a 506 million year old agnostinid #arthropod from the #BurgessShale, complete with intricately-preserved branching tubes of its digestive tract!
https://t.co/dnMMULzvoy
For #TrilobiteTuesday I'm throwing back to our year-old paper on #BurgessShale agnostids...you decide whether or not they qualify as #trilobites😉https://t.co/LVRp8xRISl
Illustration by @MesozoicMuse, one of many colleagues deserving of celebration on #WomenInScienceDay!
Found these little #BurgessShale creatures at the Oxford University Museum of Natural History @morethanadodo - Wiwaxia (a bit squished after the transatlantic flight), Trilobite, Opabinia, and Marrella #FossilFriday
Presenting (belatedly) the backstroke swimmer of the Cambrian seas, the ~0.5 billion years old Fibulacaris nereidis - new #BurgessShale research by @trichodes & @ROMtoronto's Dr. Jean-Bernard Caron.
Reconstruction by @MesozoicMuse
Read more: https://t.co/2OI9TbMop2
For #FossilFriday here's Haplophrentis carinatus from Stanley Glacier (#BurgessShale) with feeding tentacles preserved. This was a key #fossil that provided a link between #hyoliths and #brachiopods, and it may have a cameo in my upcoming NPGS talk...
https://t.co/85Hb9E961N
More evolutionary insights from the #BurgessShale, a new species of Mollisonia described by Aria and @ROMtoronto curator J-B. Caron. I remember seeing some of these specimens before they'd been prepared, absolutely unreal levels of appendage details revealed! #DeepTime
Awesome new paper by Joe Moysiuk and JB Caron describing the "spaceship" radiodontan from the #BurgessShale. I particularly like the discussion of feeding ecology, supported by beautiful plates of the appendages/mouth: https://t.co/g7hQl8rqFX
#DeepTime @ROMtoronto @UofT_Palaeo
"#BurgessShale fossils shed light on the agnostid problem" - new research by Joseph Moysiuk and @ROMtoronto's Dr. Jean-Bernard Caron.
Illustration by @MesozoicMuse.
Read more: https://t.co/hYjLpZ5Uho
Gotta shout out to ace @ROMtoronto palaeoartist @MesozoicMuse on her latest #BurgessShale recon, #Kootenayscolex. Completely awesome!