#koreanosauru
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he-who-needs-to-be-silenced · 5 months ago
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Results from todays flocking paleostream
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We did
Pikaia
Torukjara, which I will redo
Koreanosaurus
Istiodactylus
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barghest-land · 5 months ago
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sketches from flocking!! torukjara, pikaia (kissing worms... ahh), koreanosaurus and istiodactylus
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ppaleoartistgallery · 5 months ago
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#Paleostream 15/06/2024
here's today's #Paleostream sketches!!! today we drew Pikaia (no longer upside down!), Torukjara, Koreanosaurus, and Istiodactylus
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silkwhim · 5 months ago
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Heck yeah flocking
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the-dragon-girl-27 · 5 months ago
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This weeks flocking doodles
Pikaia
Torukjara
Koreanosaurus
Istiodactylus
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veloci-raptor · 5 months ago
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Flocking Together
Pikaia
Torukjara
Koreanosaurus
Istiodactylus
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impulseimpact · 5 months ago
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paleostream flocking time, we have pikaia, torukjara, koreanosaurus and istiodactylus
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justgoji · 1 year ago
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Koreanosaurus boseongensis, a dinosaur that unfortunately hasn’t been covered in any Korean dinosaur documentaries.
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With Hatsune Miku for scale:
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knuppitalism-with-ue · 5 months ago
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Results from the Flocking #paleostream
Pikaia, Torukjara, Koreanosaurus and Istiodactylus.
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aberrantologist · 5 months ago
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Doodles from yesterday's paleostream featuring Pikaia, Torukjara, Koreanosaurus, and Istiodactylus.
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whitmerule · 1 year ago
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DO I HAVE TO PICK JUST ONE 😭 idk maybe something small and silly like hypsi or koreanosaurus. or bigger but still weird like concavenator or masiakasaurus or stegouros. and hadrosaurs are so friend-shaped. or if we're talking individuals, that one psittacosaurus who got itself preserved so well we can see everything about it including even details of its cloaca (and the poop just inside).
EVERYONE WHO SEES THIS HAS TO TELL ME WHAT THEIR FAVORITE DINOSAUR IS GO GO GO
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si-nequal-is · 2 years ago
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Koreanosaurus doesn't know about your favorite K-POP singers.
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usik-paleo-illust · 5 years ago
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Today is Korea's Liberation Day
Koreaceratops and Koreanosaurus
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a-dinosaur-a-day · 7 years ago
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“Koreanosaurus koreanensis”
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By Ashley Patch on @palaeoshley​
PLEASE SUPPORT US ON PATREON. EACH and EVERY DONATION helps to keep this blog running! Any amount, even ONE DOLLAR is APPRECIATED! IF YOU ENJOY THIS CONTENT, please CONSIDER DONATING!
Name: “Koreanosaurus koreanensis”
Name Meaning: Korean Reptile
First Mentioned: 1979
Mentioned By: Kim
Classification: Dinosauria, Theropoda, Neotheropoda, Averostra, Tetanurae, Orionides, Avetheropoda, Coelurosauria, Tyrannoraptora, Maniraptoriformes, Maniraptora, Pennaraptora, Paraves, Eumaniraptora, Dromaeosauridae, Eudromaeosauria, Velociraptorinae
“Koreanosaurus” is a not yet officially described genus of theropod from the Gugyedong Formation of South Korea, living from the Aptian to Albian ages of the Early Cretaceous, approximately 113 million years ago. It is known from a femur which shows similarities to such animals as Adasaurus and Velociraptor, which indicates it is possibly closely related to those dinosaurs. Sadly, the finders of this specimen didn’t describe the animal fast enough, and Koreanosaurus was given to an Ornithopod; so if it is ever named, “Koreanosaurus” will need a new genus name. 
Sources:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Koreanosaurus_(theropod)
http://theropoddatabase.com/Dromaeosaurs.htm#Koreanosauruskoreanensis
This is your friendly reminder that ADAD relies on reblogs up and until @staff gets it’s shit together. Please reblog this post.
Shout out goes to @theawkwarddinosaurs!
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justgoji · 2 years ago
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Koreanosaurus boseongensis. I think it looks a bit... off? Maybe because of the texture.
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a-dinosaur-a-day · 8 years ago
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TIME TO VOTE FOR YOUR FAVORITE ORNITHISCHIANS. Friendly reminder that SOME THINGS ARE INELIGIBLE DUE TO BEING IN LAST YEAR’S. Yes, I’m posting it early. Why not?
Basal Ornithischians
Featuring such lovelies as Pisanosaurus, the earliest known Ornithischian; Tianyulong, the MAXIMUM OVERPOOF; Scutellosaurus, the smolest Thyreophoran; and Scelidosaurus, which would pave the way for Thyreophorans to come. 
Stegosaurs
Featuring friends such as Gigantspinosaurus, the stegosaur with gigantic shoulder spikes; Tuojiangosaurus, which featured pointed plates; Miragaia, the stegosaur that thinks it’s a sauropod; and Stegosaurus, which for some reason didn’t make it in last year. 
Nodosaurids and Miscellaneous Ankylosaurs
Featuring dudes such as Hylaeosaurus, one of the three dinosaurs used to define the group back in the day; Nodosaurus, which was basically a large, birdie hedgehog; Sauropelta, which had impressive shoulder spikes; and Polacanthus, famous because of Walking with Dinosaurs. 
Ankylosaurids
Featuring familiar forms such as Gargoyleosaurus, which lived in the Morrison Formation of the Jurassic; Anodontosaurus, which had triangular points on its club rather than rounded ones; Scolosaurus, which was a staple in Campanian Alberta communities; and Gobisaurus, which had a stiffened rod instead of a tail club.
Basal Neornithischians
Featuring running dudes such as Lesothosaurus, one of the earliest known Neornithischians; Othnielosaurus, one of the only well characterized bipedal small herbivores from the Morrison; Koreanosaurus, which may have been a quadrupedal Thescelosaurid; and Thescelosaurus, which was thought to have a preserved heart and then found to, well, not. 
Ornithopods
Featuring beauties such as Tenontosaurus, which looks like what you would expect an intermediate between small bipedal runners and hadrosaurs to look like; Muttaburrasaurus, which didn’t actually have a thumb spike; Dryosaurus, one of the more famous dinosaurs from the Morrison; and Zalmoxes, which was actually smaller than one would expect due to island dwarfism.
Ankylopollexians
Featuring creatures such as Morelladon, which had a sail; Camptosaurus, which was a staple in the Morrison Formation; Draconyx, which was the Camptosaurus of the Lourinhã Formation of Portugal; and Iguanacolossus, which was quite large. 
Hadrosauriformes
Featuring famous dinosaurs such as Lurdusaurus, the Hadrosauriform that thinks it’s a sauropod (and what a handsome pair it makes with Brachytrachelopan); Ouranosaurus, one of the more famous members of this group due to its sail; Tethyshadros, which is known from Europe; and Eotrachodon, which lends credence to the idea that Hadrosaurids evolved in Appalachia. 
Saurolophines
Featuring some of the best dinosaurs such as Gryposaurus, which has an interestingly large and distinctive nose; Saurolophus, which has a cute little crest; Shantungosaurus, which is huge; and Maiasaura, the dinosaur which paved the way for a better understanding of dinosaurs as behaviorally complex creatures.
Lambeosaurines
Featuring some of the most musical nonavian dinosaurs such as Velafrons, one of the more well known Mexican dinosaurs; Charonosaurus, a close cousin of Parasaurolophus with a bent crest; Tsintaosaurus, which did not have a penis-crest; and Corythosaurus, which is one of the best known Lambeosaurines.
Pachycephalosaurs
Featuring lovely chunks such as Foraminacephale, a recently described genus which may demonstrate the existence of a Stegocerine group; Wannanosaurus, a Chinese taxon that was probably a juvenile due to its flat head; Prenocephale, which is known from the Nemegt Formation; and Stegoceras, one of the better known Pachycephalosaurs after Pachycephalosaurus (which is, sadly, ineligible). 
Basal Ceratopsians
Featuring pals such as Yinlong, an early form that shows the transition from basal Neornithischians to the Ceratopsians; Leptoceratops, a well known, bipedal, fast herbivore from Late Cretaceous North America; Gobiceratops, which has the funniest Wikipedia image I’ve ever seen; and Turanoceratops, which was the puppy-sized Ceratopsoid. 
Chasmosaurines
Featuring spikey lads such as Bravoceratops, which had the longest horns of any Ceratopsian; Titanoceratops, which may have had the longest skull of any known dinosaur; Spiclypeus, which had interesting folded-over osteoderms on its frill; and Chasmosaurus, which had an interestingly shaped skull and has juvenile remains which are just adorable. 
Centrosaurines
Featuring cuties such as Nasutoceratops, the bull-like Ceratopsian that thanks to the PSAT inspired a meme; Pachyrhinosaurus, the great Bird-Ox of nose-lump fluffiness (maybe); Diabloceratops, which was the Devil among Ceratopsians; and Einiosaurus, who swears he’s happy to see you.
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