Other ideas & dinosaurs were drawn and proposed, but never made it to the final exhibit—but wouldn’t an animatronic Polacanthus have been sweet?

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Gargoyleosaurus

An early nodosaurid with a lenght of 4 meters, its known by 3 partial skeletons but only one is described currently

ALT: its believed to be closely related to polacanthus, earlier studies almost place it in ankylosauridae based on the skull material

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Commission of a speculative descendant of dinosaurs like Polacanthus, but with four facial horns and a bayonet-like spike on the tail.
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In its environment, Neovenator lived alongside dinosaurs such as Baryonyx, Iguanodon, and Polacanthus. Art by John Sibbick.

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Walking with Dinosaur Waifus. Last of episode 4
Giant of the skies: Euro-Iguanodon, Euro-Utahraptors, Euro-Polacanthus, Iberomesornis.
Last few animals shown to live in Europe in the episode, even the misplaced raptors.

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progress, plus a moved cyadiforme, so that Mr. Hypsilophodon won't eat it!

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Progress! Smoothed out the ground some, finished the left fern clump, and started on the broken eaten ferns by the painting.

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Polacanthus and Ankylosaurus by B. H. Robinson. I include both because the publishers switched the names in the captions and because the Ankylosaurus has that bonkers spikes-all-around tail that almost made me include it in the old school Scolosaurus thread.

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Progression of painting my for my Really had a successful evening tonight. Feet will get more tissue added, don’t worry.

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Polacanthus color study

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Progress on the Wessex formation painting! Refining the lines on the and started painting the

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Here’s the first of a series of new I’m creating for - this is Polacanthus, a spiked herbivore that lived in Europe 130 million years ago and was discovered on the in 1885.

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Mock-up of a for 2011. The final design had the popping out of the box. Unfortunately, I didn't win this commission but they did publish a design very similar to this, which was a bit of poke in my eye!

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Highlights from the Wessex
Sandownia, Polacanthus, Colabonrhychus and Wesserpeton

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The first Polacanthus? J.E. Lee described this section of ankylosaur sacral shield from Isle of Wight in 1843, but the story doesn’t end there. I blogged about the tale of the lost ankylosaur back in 2014: https://t.co/75bw4q66aE

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360 of a 3D mesh of a section of Polacanthus sacral shield found on the Isle Wight.

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