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The Mothman - prophet of disasters and holder of supernatural wisdom.
Tags: creature, cryptid, cryptozoology, folklore, hermit
Mothman- The Prophet/The Hermit
Corythosaurus was a member of the hadrosaur family of dinosaurs, better known as duck-billed dinosaurs. The lived during the Late Cretaceous (77-75.7 mya) and could reach lengths of up to 30 feet and weighed in at just over 3 tons.
Tags: corythosaurus, cretaceous, digitalart, dino, dinosaurs
Corythosaurus casuarius
Edaphosaurus was an herbivorous synapsid that lived from the Late Carboniferous to the Early Permian eras (303.4 - 272.5 MYA), they were a close relative of Dimetrodon.
Tags: animal, digitalart, herbivore, illustrations, notadinosaur
Edaphosaurus pogonias
Meganeura lived during the Late Carboniferous period (300MYA) and was the apex aerial predator of it's day, dominating the skies before birds, pterosaurs, or mammals had evolved. Resembling modern day dragonflies but much much bigger, they had a maximum wingspan of roughly 28 inches.
Tags: natural history, meganeura, sciart, wings, science
Meganeura monyi
Struthiomimus was a Late Cretaceous theropod dinosaur measuring roughly 14 feet and length. Having very bird-like features and sharing superficial similarities to modern flightless theropods like Ostriches and Emus, it's no surprise that their name means "Ostrich Mimic."
Tags: cretaceous, paleo, prehistoric, natural history, struthiomimus
Struthiomimus altus
M.peeblesorum lived during the Late Cretaceous (76.7 million years ago) what would become Montana. In the late 1970s a site in the Two Medicine Formation became the first example of nurturing parental behavior in large dinosaurs; nicknamed "Egg Mountain."
Tags: paleoart, prehistoric creature, egg, paleo, prehistoric
Quetzelcoatlus was a Late Cretaceous Pterosaur and one of the largest animals to ever fly, with a wingspan of roughly 33ft and standing at a height similar to that of a Giraffe while on the ground.
Tags: educational, reptile, giant, notadinosaur, cretaceous
Quetzelcoatlus northropi
Estemmenosuchus mirabilis was a genus of therapsid that lived during the Middle Permian (267 million years ago). Found in what is now the Perm region of Russia in the 1960s, both of the currently recognized species: E. uralensis and E. mirabilis are most recognizable from their distinctive knobby, antler-like facial structures; these structures are in face where they get their name which means "crowned crocodile."
Tags: digitalillustration, digitalart, synapsid, permian, therapsid
Estemmenosuchus mirabilis
While being a member of the overall group that dinosaurs like Ankylosaurus was a part of, Sauropelta edwardsorum was a member of a different branch known as Nodosaurs. Unlike Ankylosaurs, Nodosaurs did not possess tail weapons, though they often displayed large shoulder spikes and still possesses a body covered in armor. Sauropelta could grow up to 17 feet in length and weighed around 2.2 tons, they lived during the Early Cretaceous period, around 108 million years ago.
Tags: sciart, science, educational, naturalhistory, dinoart
Sauropelta edwardsorum
Nothosaurus mirabilis was a species of early marine reptile that lived during the Triassic, 240 to 210 million years ago. It measured around 16 to 23 feet in length and possessed a set of distinctive interlocking teeth, most likely a means to catch fish and other soft bodied prey. It has been theorized that one of their descendants or that of a related species may have evolved into the giant Pliosaurs that would eventually come to be in the Jurassic period.
Tags: reptile, marinereptile, marine, triassic, naturalhistory
Nothosaurus mirabilis
Incisivosaurus was a small dinosaur that lived during the Early Cretaceous, 126 million years ago. It was discovered in Northern China in 2002. The nearly complete remains were found with feather preservation. Their most unique feature is a pair of pronounced front teeth that scientists think they used to break open hard nuts or fruit as it's likely they were primarily herbivores. They measured only 3.3 feet in length.
Tags: dinosaurart, dino, dinoart, paleoart, paleontology
Incisivosaurus gauthieri
Dallasaurus was an early member of the Mosasaur family that lived 92 million years ago during the Late Cretaceous period. It was discovered in Dallas, Texas construction site in 1993 and was later identified as one of the earliest known members of a group that contained some of the largest ocean-going predators of their day. Dallasaurus measured only around 4 feet in length.
Tags: prehistoric, notadinosaur, marine reptile, marine, lizard
Dallasaurus turneri
Megalosaurus lived 166 million years ago during the Middle Jurassic period, its remains were first described by science in 1699 but it were misattributed as being those of a fish, it would later become the first animal to be placed under the group, Dinosauria. It was about 30 feet in length and weighed between 2,200 and 6,600 lbs.
Tags: dinosaurart, middle jurassic, dinosaurs, natural history, dino
Megalosaurus bucklandii
Terror Birds, live up to their namesake in many ways as they took the place as top predators not long after their non-avian dinosaur cousins died out during the KT mass extinction around 62 million years ago and their reign lasted until around 1.8 million years ago, with some fossil findings having possibly been dated at as recent as 18,000 years. With such a long lineage, it's no surprise that the group included many different species with different predatory niches, ranging in size from 3 to 10 feet in height.
Tags: miocene, ancient, science, natural history, digitalillustration
Eodromaeus was a basal theropod that lived during the Late Triassic period (231.4 to 299 million years ago). It was discovered in 1996 in the Ischigualasto-Villa Unión Basin in northwestern Argentina.
Tags: eodromaeus, triassic, paleoart, paleontology, prehistoric creature
Eodromaeus murphi
Under a veil of moonlight, a giant pushes its way through the edge of an ancient forest, massive legs plow slowly through deep snow, crashing through the stillness of the night making sure not to tangle the even more massive antlers that adorn its head.
Tags: deer, irish elk, megaloceros, prehistoric, pleistocene
Echoes of an Ancient Winter
Sinosauropteryx was a small theropod dinosaur that lived in what is now Northeast China during the Early Cretaceous (124.6 to 122 million years ago). At only 3.5 ft in length and 1.2 lb in weight, it wasn't the most imposing of predators, being roughly the same size and weight as a modern pheasant. It mostly fed on small mammals and reptiles, with one fossil showing the nearly complete remains of a lizard swallowed whole some time before the little dinosaur died, being buried quickly in a layer of volcanic ash and silt. S. prima was the first dinosaur to have fossil pigment cells examined with new techniques, scientists have determined the color and pattern of it's feathers, including a banded ring tail, shown in this reconstruction.
Tags: science, cretaceous, paleontology, sciart, paleoart
Sinosauropteryx prima
Ursus spelaeus, otherwise known as the Cave Bear, was a species of bear that ranged throughout Europe and Asia during the Pleistocene in the last major Ice Age event, roughly 25,000 to 24,000 years ago. They were one of the largest species of Ice Age bears with big males standing upright at 11.5 feet and weighing in at a maximum estimated weight of around 2,200 pounds. Females were considerably smaller, the largest specimens being estimated at 550 pounds. Despite their immense size evidence shows that they most likely fed on an herbivorous diet. There is direct evidence of a possible predator prey relationship between Cave Bears and Neanderthals and other early hominid species, including cave paintings, and evidence of butchering.
Tags: cave, pleistocene, iceage, ice, age
Ursus spelaeus (Cave Bear)
Yutyrannus huali lived in what is now China during the Early Cretaceous (124.6 million years ago). An early relative to the famed T.rex, it is known from three nearly complete fossil skeletons that were found together and show a surprising amount of detail, including the presence of a feathered covering over most of their bodies. At adulthood Y. huali measured at around 29.5 feet in length and weighed in at about 1.2 tons, making it the largest dinosaur yet discovered with direct evidence of feathers.
Tags: paleontology, paleoart, science, sciart, digitalart
Beautiful Feathered Tyrant
Megalograptus welchi was a member of a now extinct group of marine arthropods called Eurypterids, it lived during the Late Ordovician period around 449.5 to 443.8 million years ago. Compared to modern ocean dwelling arthropods, M. welchi was rather large, measuring around 1.2 meters in length, not including the large spiny appendages on the front of it's body; speaking of those spines, while it's pretty likely it used them to hunt for prey, science has yet to determine just how they were used or what type of prey it might have been hunting.
Tags: megalograptus, science, ordovician, eurypterid, marine life
Megalograptus welchi
Baryonyx walkeri was theropod dinosaur that lived during the Early Cretaceous period in what is now Surrey, England. At nearly 30 feet in length and weighing in at around 1.9 tons it was a big animal, but despite its size fossil evidence of fish scales in its abdominal cavity suggest that rather than going after large prey items on land it most likely relied on fish for the bulk of its diet. This and other anatomical evidence actually made it the first theropod dinosaur ever known to have relied on a primarily ichthyophagous diet.
Tags: mesozoic, fossil, dino, fish eater, heavy claw
Baryonyx walkeri
Late in the Devonian, some 382 to 358 million years ago, around the same time when the first vertebrates were crawling their way onto land, a massive predator called the ocean it’s home. The size of a modern day Orca, Dunkleosteus was a fish unlike any alive today. It belonged to a group of fish called placoderms, all of which possessed heavily armored bodies, to combat this Dunkleosteus had a brutal adaptation, instead of teeth, the plate like parts of it’s armored skull extended down into cleaver like blades that self-sharpened every time it shut it’s mouth.
Tags: sea life, notadinosaur, sciart, science, paleoart
Swimming Beartrap
Weighing in at around 7.9 tons and measuing up to around 40 feet in length, Tyrannosaurus rex was a carnivorous powerhouse. With teeth the size of your average banana and a jaw wrapped in powerful muscle, recent studies have estimated it was capable of exerting a bit force of around 12,000 pounds, making it easily capable of ripping the flesh and absolutely pulverizing the bones of any Cretaceous animal unlucky enough to cross it’s path.
Tags: science, teeth, educational, naturalhistory, dinosaurs
Tyrant King
Dilophosaurus wetherelli was well known thanks to it’s notable appearance in a certain blockbuster movie, but was not as well known to science until very recently. A new study has been published that revealed that the animal, once thought to possess a bite not suitable for holding onto large prey, not only reached sizes larger than previously thought, but it also possessed a very strong might with it’s jaw being revealed to be much more robust than previous studies had concluded. It also has been shown to have a much larger crest and that it’s crest and skeletal system had honeycombed airsacs that helped it regulate weight as well as air flow.
Tags: science, educational, naturalhistory, paleontology, jurassic
Two-Crested Lizard
Zuul was discovered on a dig in the Montana Badlands in 2014, during the excavation of what was thought to be Gorgosaurus, an early relative of Tyrannosaurus rex that stalked North America roughly 76.6 to 75.1 million years ago. While it was initially thought to be a specimen of another ankylosaur called Euplocephalus that had been known to science since 1897 known to live in the same area at the same time, research done at the Royal Ontario Museum in Canada would later identify the specimen as belonging to an as yet unknown genus of armored dinosaur. The specimen was given the genus name of Zuul, after the horned monster dog from the classic 1984 film, Ghostbusters, and the species name of crurivastator meaning “Destroyer of Shins.”
Tags: club, ankylosaur, zuul, dino, cretaceous
Zuul crurivastator
Storm clouds roll in over a beach on the coast of Jurassic (152 million years ago) Tanzania. A single Kentrosaur wanders alone in search of food, it grows apprehensive as the thunder rolls over the horizon. Kentrosaurus weighed in at around 1.7 tons, reaching about 18 feet in length. Though it wasn’t the biggest member of the Stegosauridae family it made up for it by having an exaggerated set of weaponry, including spikes measuring almost 2.5 feet in length running from the tip of its tale to just behind its pelvis; couple that with a tale capable of an almost 90 mile per hour swing and it would have surely been an intimidating prospect for any predator to take on.
Tags: prehistoric, jurassic period, stegosaur, educational, ancient
Kentrosaurus aethiopicus
'Tis the season for little woolly mammoths to experience their first snowfall.
Tags: notadinosaur, scarf, winter, holiday, seasonal
A reconstruction of everyone’s favorite Six Foot Turkey, Velociraptor, in the style of the harvest season.
Tags: paleoart, cretaceous, fall, autumn, bird
In the 1920s Captain Marshall Field funded two expeditions to South America which were undertaken by the Field Museum of Natural History in Chicago, Illinois; these expeditions were launched under the hopes of finding fossils of mammals and other animals from the Cenozoic Era. In 1926, during the second expedition, a team was searching the Ituzaingo Formation in northern Argentina when they came across the remains of three animals thought to be never before discovered species of ancient marsupial. It was roughly 4.9 feet in length and weighed around 330 pounds and it lived during the Late Miocene to Pliocene, roughly 9 to 3 million years ago.
Tags: paleo, sciart, science, miocene, pliocene
Thylacosmilus atrox
Discovered in the Gobi desert, Velociraptor was roughly the size of a modern day Turkey, standing at just around 1.6 feet in height at the hip and measuring 6.8 feet in length, it likely only weighed around 33 pounds when fully grown. Like all members of the dromaeosauridae family it possessed a pair of specialized claws on the second inner toe of each foot. These claws were over-sized and were held off the ground by tendons that allowed them to retract when not in use, it’s thought they deployed this menacing weaponry as a means to pin struggling prey, much like modern day eagles and hawks do.
Tags: digitalart, naturalhistory, velociraptor, science, sciart
Velociraptor mongoliensis
During the Late Triassic period (214 to 204 million years ago), in what would eventually become Heroldsberg, Germany, a group of long-necked giants worked their way across an ancient floodplain; due to their great weight, up to 4.4 tons, they began to sink into the mud, their panicked struggles to free themselves from this predicament only serving to pull them further down until exhaustion eventually set in and they passed away, trapped by their own massive bulk.
Tags: dino, dinoart, paleontology, paleo, sciart
Plateosaurus engelhardti
In the Late Cretaceous the world was filled with giant predators, both on land and in the sea. While T. rex was stalking the land looking for its next kill, the seas were brimming with millions of sharp, pointed, teeth, just looking for something to sink themselves into. Some of the largest of those teeth belonged to the Mosasauridae superfamily, a group of mostly huge marine reptiles who’s remains have been found around the world. This group contains some 38 separate genera spanning from 101 to 66 million years ago, all of which shared some overarching traits; for instance, all of them possessed long lizard-like forms with paddle shaped front and back limbs and crescent shaped tails like those of sharks.
Tags: drawing, oceans, illustrationart, prehistoric, peleoart
Mosasaurus hoffmanni
Are you a fan of horned dinosaurs? Can you not choose your favorite? Now you don’t have to with a nice group shot of 3 phenomenal members of this exquisite prehistoric family.
Tags: horned, prehistoric, paleontology, dinosaurart, paleoart
Ceratiopsian Triad
In 1922, Roy Chapman Andrews led an expedition to explore the inner reaches of the Gobi Desert in Mongolia. The expedition was taken on behalf of the American Museum of Natural History in the hopes of finding fossil evidence of the early origins of humans, while no early human remains were found on the trip they did find numerous new species of extinct mammals and many new species of dinosaur. Included in these specimens was a small relative of Triceratops (the famous horned dinosaur discovered in North America in 1887), it was only about the size of a small sheep, measuring around 5.9 feet in length and was only an estimated 182 pounds in weight.
Tags: ceratopsian, sciart, paleoart, science, paleontology
Protoceratops andrewsi
In the Late Cretaceous (83.5 to 78 million years ago) on the sun soaked shores of the Western Interior Seaway, a large body of water that ran along the interior of the North American Continent, a colony of large flightless birds bask on the rock strewn coastline of what humans would later call Kansas. Much like modern loons their legs are sufficiently powerful tools that allow them to not only paddle on the surface of the water but dive beneath its surface to catch fish in their tooth-filled beak, but also like loons their legs were likely not well adapted for land. It is thought that they likely pushed themselves around on on their bellies similar to modern pinnipeds like seals and walruses.
Tags: dinosaur, paleoart, cretaceous, paleontology, prehistoric
Hesperornis regalis
Identified in 1796 by naturalist Georges Cuvier, the Woolly Mammoth has become the symbol of what most people think of when they think of Ice Age animals. Its huge fur covered form feel strange and ancient, like some behemoth marching its way out of the frozen genetic memory of human kind to remind us of how far we have come. Mammuthus primigenius was big, with the largest recorded males measuring about 11.2 feet at the shoulder and weighing in at 6.6 tons. Females were smaller with shorter tusks, but both were relatively close to the size of modern African Elephants, though they were obviously much harrier and more robust in appearance.
Tags: paleoart, paleontology, elephant, paleo, artistsonteepublic