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A bone-by-bone 3D rendering of the skull of a baby Lystrosaurus from the Triassic of South Africa #FossilFriday
Megalancosaurus was a chameleon-like reptile from the Late Triassic. It grew to 25cm.
(Credit deviantart/rolandi)
@Annaleen I will always admire Lystrosaurus, the burrowing-badass survivor of the Permian-Triassic. Thanks for inspiring my writing fanfic about it & this folk-art rendition my wife Ruth & I did for my 2017 book 'The Evolution Underground.'
How cute can dicynodonts be? Very cute! These are the dicynodonts from Early Triassic Antarctica
Some triassic critters
Staurikossaur and hyperodapedon
Two gondwanan eutheriodonts from the Early Triassic for my book (still in prepepration). The small therocephalian Ericiolacerta and the cynodont Thrinaxodon
For #FossilFriday, here is the small theropod dinosaur #Pendraig milnerae from the Late #Triassic of #Wales. Restoration by James Robbins. #NHMDino #PantyFfynnon | Spiekman et al. 2021 @RSocPublishing:
https://t.co/54gV8auop1 |
Sharovipteryx was a bizarre reptile known from Triassic rocks in Kyrgyzstan. It had incredibly long legs that bore wing membranes that allowed Sharovipteryx to glide from branch to branch.
https://t.co/nsfOSXf7nc
Illustration by @CorbinRainbolt
#paleontology #fossils
Would make sense with the rest of the island already being rich in Triassic and Permian fauna, especially with Pseudosuchians.
#Herrerasaurus was an early dinosaur from the Triassic in Argentina. It may have been a basal saurischian or a basal theropod.
Design by @GrecoWestermann
https://t.co/EviQ4SNBf6
For my buck, Caselli’s best pieces from that book are his yellow-drenched Triassic scenes.
His art work is very clean. It had the look of being done with ink pen, watercolors & gouache, with the occasional airbrush, though I am just guessing.
@thomasfano3 Ailsa, a freelance 6ft 2" wide, 8ft 6" tall Bagnall, Esme, a 2ft 3" Hunslet Waril with tram plates on the Harwick & Cregwir Tramway, and Silurian a 2ft 3" gauge Peckett based on Triassic
@WolfJoshie Hi do you have a thought of drawing a biological research facility and wildlife park called Triassic Land on a remote island in the Caribbean sea which is inspired by Jurassic Park?
Dino Fact!
Chindesaurus (Chinde Lizard) is a herrerasaurid(?) from Late Triassic North America! Its taxonomy is rather hard to pinpoint! It's mainly been considered a herrerasaurid, but some theorize that it was really a basal theropod, which - (1/2)
Art by @/Paleoartologist!
Another wonder from the Lower #Triassic, when the earth was still recovering from the great mortality. #Hupehsuchus was a marine reptile with an armor of osteoderms on the upper part of its back, something very rare in marine reptiles.
THANKUU TRIASSIC WOO
Literally all I have are these things but let's keep this shit ROLLING
@ThatFance @NooshStuff @Monky_Boyo @armagnea @nessiejoe @jackamule @Kiridaike @_theybuck_ @cricketkisses @Maggotosh @Der_Dergan @confit_ure @D3adRex @eqquidata @HJ_arts02 @unistorageunit https://t.co/JOlQko1WhI
Dino Fact!
Herrerasaurus (Herrera’s Lizard) is a herrerasaurid from Late Triassic Argentina! It's one of the earliest known dinosaurs to date! Its taxonomy has been a heavily debated topic for years; most at least agree that it's some kind - (1/2)
Art by @/jackthevulture!
@j_stocky Okay so. I CLEARLY like marine reptiles from the Triassic, like the moonlight Cymbospondylus youngorum...I also CLEARLY am a pliosaur fan...because Sachica and Rhom (LOVE early Jurassic marine demons heehee) OH YEAH MICROCLEIDUS. Creepy little shit.
@MischievousPuca @mutantmuseum @Microrapterr @Philoceratops There’s “Triassic Attack” a 2010 film where dinosaur skeletons come back to life. It’s also the source of my profile pic (The picture was so basic, I thought it was a stock photo) and also Emilia Clarkes first professional film role! Movie sucks btw.