Source: jurassicparkfilms
Source: dinodorks
Theropod Dinosaurs Could Open Their Jaws Up To 90 Degrees, UK Paleontologist Says
http://www.sci-news.com/paleontology/science-theropod-dinosaurs-jaws-03408.html
(via moreanimalia)
Source: scinewscom
Having a pet is a big responsibility and we all want to take care of our pets as well as we can. But it’s challenging to find guidance about caring for some of the more exotic pets, like dinosaurs, for example. Thankfully artist John Conway created The Dinosaur Pet Guide, a handsome and helpful chart of dino care dos and don'ts.
Click here to view a larger version. Prints are available for purchase here.
Check out more of John Conway’s artwork via his website and follow him here on Tumblr.
[via Geekologie]
(via unbadgr)
Source: archiemcphee
A Long-Necked Marine Reptile Is the First Known to Filter Feed Like a Whale
The bizarre Mortuneria used sieve-like teeth to strain tasty morsels from the muddy Cretaceous seafloor
by Brian Switek
If you’ve ever flipped through a book of prehistoric creatures or ambled through a major museum’s fossil halls, you’ve probably seen a plesiosaur.
These were the four-flippered marine reptiles that patrolled the seas for almost the entire Mesozoic era, some 250 to 66 million years ago. Some plesiosaurs were big-headed apex predators. Others had ludicrously long necks and snatched up fish and crustaceans with their little jaws.
Now, Marshall University paleontologist F. Robin O’Keefe has discovered that some of them filled their bellies in a way thought to be impossible for the aquatic reptiles: filter feeding.
The findings, presented last month at the annual Society of Vertebrate Paleontology meeting in Dallas, centered on a plesiosaur that has puzzled paleontologists for over 25 years. Named Mortuneria, this plesiosaur was found in the 66-million-year-old rock of Seymour Island, Antarctica…
(read more: Smithsonian Magazine)
photograph by John Harper/Corbis
(via moreanimalia)
Source: typhlonectes
Plesiosaurus (Cryptocleidus sp.) skeleton, 190 million years old, found in a Gloucestershire, England quarry.
(via moreanimalia)
Source: ufansius
(via oceank1ng)
Source: moarrrmagazine









