#Shringasaurus
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railroadatrox · 8 months ago
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Shringasaurus indicus
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chameleocoonj · 6 months ago
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shringasaurus is extremely doodle-able
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wobblebog · 3 months ago
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Reblog to wish your followers a happy Shringasaurus Saturday
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cleverbunnycompany · 15 days ago
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New tote bag design: Shringasaurus! (The Horned Lizard), a large herbivorous reptile from the Middle Triassic.
You can get him here!
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impulseimpact · 5 months ago
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makairodonx · 10 months ago
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Sketch of Shringasaurus indicus, an unusual Archosauromorph which lived in the middle Triassic of India, 247-242 million years ago
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kingcheezits · 1 year ago
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pocoslip · 1 year ago
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Two Prehistoric, "Horny" Creatures
(i do love mattel's new hammond collection carnotaurus from jurassic world fallen kingom but i also do not like the elbows for their tiny arms either because they are fricking pointless)
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daikaiju-chaos · 1 year ago
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I could never really get into these art trends whenever they happen, I always am in the mood to do something else, like redrawing my OCs or something like that.
Anyway, here's a quickie six fanart that I am proud that I finished like a couple months back. Dinosaurs (and one other prehistoric lifeform) as chosen by some peeps over different discords. And ye, some of the dinos here have some design inspirations after their respective incarnations from Fossil Fighters and Dinosaur King.
I... have no idea why I decided to make Zino here part-chicken and turkey with the crest and waddles.
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azure-horizons · 2 months ago
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me when shringasaurus
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dianeramic · 2 years ago
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Coming very soon is my first card game: Dino Time! An Educational Card Game about Extinct Life
It's an all-ages game playable by 2-6 players, with games ranging from 5-15 minutes long in playtests. Players draw 4 cards each, then take turns guessing when those animals went extinct, placing them along a timeline built over the course of the game. The first one to get rid of all their cards in this way wins!
Here's the Kickstarter preview page for it, make sure to give it a follow to stay updated on when the official launch is!
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carvente · 2 years ago
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No dinosaurs #dinovember2022 day 30: Shringasaurus
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pleistocene-pride · 2 years ago
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Shringasaurus is an extinct genus of allokotosaurian archosauromorph reptile which lived throughout what is now India during the middle Triassic period some 247 to 237 mya. Shringasaurus is known from a single bone bed in the upper Denwa Formation, India. Said bone bed preserves the remains of 8 well preserved shringasaurus individuals of varying ages and sexes, giving a good picture of how the animal developed as it matured. These fossils were excavated and prepared by Professor Saswati Bandyopadhyay, Dhurjati Sengupta and Shiladri Das of the Indian Statistical Institute, where the fossils are also stored. It was Professor Bandyopadhyay alongside Sarandee Sengupta and Martin D. Ezcurra who described and named the genus Shringasaurus in August 2017, from the ancient Sanskrit word for horn: “shringa” combined with the Ancient Greek “sauros” for lizard. The species name indicus is Latin for "Indian", to refer to its country of discovery. Reaching around 9 to 13ft in length, and around 2000lbs in weight, Shringasaurus was a large quadrupedal animal which sported a small boxy head on a long muscular neck and a large, barrel-shaped body with deep shoulders and ribs, sprawled to semi-sprawled limbs and a short tail. The horns of Shringasaurus closely resemble those seen in ceratopsid dinosaurs, despite azendohsaurids and ceratopsids being totally unrelated to each other. The horns are attached to the frontal bones on the roof of the skull over the eyes, and sit across almost the entire breadth of the skull. They are pointed up and curve forwards from the skull, and would have been covered with a keratinous sheath of horn in life extending said horns considerably. In life shringasaurus would have lived in dry alpine areas and riverine forests where in lived in large mix sex herds as they fed upon leaves, branches, and fruit of various trees and shrubs.
Art used above can be found at these links, please support the artist who made them.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shringasaurus#/media/File:Shringasarus.jpg
https://twitter.com/AshleyPalaeo/status/919204226240151558?s=20&t=pCUhEL8vJt6lf6VWfp1jzg
https://www.deviantart.com/kepyle2055/art/Shringasaurus-847510106
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monstergili · 2 years ago
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I enjoyed the Prehistoric Park series when it aired, so it's nice to see something of a spiritual successor here. Seeing these ancient creatures acting like real animals is nice to see. I think that some people forget that despite their size and appearance, they were just animals. :)
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Some time ago we had the #PaleoZoo challenge on Discord, sponsored by Prehistoric Kingdom.
Goal was the creation of realistic zoo habitats that could hause extinct creatures. As examples I created a bunch of them over the course of a weekend.
Part three. A Shringasaurus temple, Archaeotherium getting brushed, Stegouros burrow, Plateosaurus hatchery, Wakaleo enclosure, Eryops colony, Lystrosaurus lookout, Giganthopithecus canopy walk, Australoraptor waterfalls, Numudotherium pond and the Erlikosaurus canyon.
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cleverbunnycompany · 5 days ago
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crystal-grotto · 9 months ago
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//did some thinking, and I've come to the conclusion what Alex's favourite dino/prehistoric creatures are
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