archeaids, to random
@archeaids@mastodon.online avatar

Oligocene silicified wood with hematite stains from west-central Louisiana.

GeorgeTheGorilla, to random
@GeorgeTheGorilla@glammr.us avatar

Installation of our new 'Discovering Dinosaurs' gallery has begun, beginning with wall graphics that hint at what dinosaur specimens will be installed later. And we're constructing a base below our T. rex skeleton.

#FossilFriday #dinosaurs #Museum #NottNatHist #WollatonHall #Trex #Nottingham #Paleoart

A T rex skeleton with a mural wall graphic in the background.

punkpaleo, to Geology
@punkpaleo@sauropods.win avatar

Happy , check out this Allosaurus fossil with amethyst growing at its center! It's likely water rich with silica and a touch of iron leeched into the bone during the fossilization process, allowing the growth of crystals over time. (1/2)

MU_Peter, to random
@MU_Peter@mas.to avatar

#FossilFriday
The Vogelherd horse

World's 1st carved horse:
The 35,000-year-old ivory figurine from Vogelherd cave
https://www.livescience.com/archaeology/worlds-1st-carved-horse-the-35000-year-old-ivory-figurine-from-vogelherd-cave

Carved out of ivory, the figurine was created during the Upper Paleolithic.

Palaeojules, to Plants
@Palaeojules@sauropods.win avatar

Happy . Here's my illustration of Williamsoniella coronata, a bisexual bennettitalean cone from the Middle of Yorkshire, England. This plant had a cone with both male (bright yellow outer) and female (inner cone) sections.

TheDinosaurDave, to LEGO
@TheDinosaurDave@sauropods.win avatar

This weeks is

Ceratosaurus was originally found and excavated by farmer Marshall Parker Felch in 1883-1884

In 1884, Othniel Charles Marsh officially named it Ceratosaurus.

In 1898-99 it was sent, with Marshs other fossils, to the National Museum of Natural History in Washington, DC.

Between 1911-18 it was prepared and in 1920 was reexamined and redescribed by Charles Gilmore.

It was soon mounted on display. This display stood for almost 100 years.

Cast of Ceratosaurus from the Cleveland Lloyd Quarry, Utah, on display at the Natural History Museum of Utah, Salt Lake City.

TheDinosaurDave, to LEGO
@TheDinosaurDave@sauropods.win avatar

This week for we have another that .

This one I would rate as easy. This is theropod is one of the most well known from North America.

Reminder: hide your answer behind a content warning. This will allow others to guess without a hint. I will post the answer tomorrow (and to anyone who guesses correctly).

This was designed by me.

TheDinosaurDave, to LEGO
@TheDinosaurDave@sauropods.win avatar

This weeks #Lego #FossilFriday is #Turanoceratops

From the 1920s, Soviet scientists found fragmentary fossils in Dzharakuduk, Uzbekistan. All they could tell is it was some kind of ceratopsian.

In 1988, Lev Aleksandrovich Nesov published about these fragments naming them Turanoceratops tardabilis. But due to lack of description it was deemed a nomen nudum.

In 1989, Nesov et al formally named, with proper description, Turanoceratops. This was based on a partial, damaged, maxilla.

Jaw fragments of T. tardabilis from the Upper Cretaceous (Turonian) Bissekty Formation of Dzharakuduk, Uzbekistan. a – c CCMGE 251/ 12457 (holotype), incomplete left maxilla in medial ( a ), ventral ( b ), and posterior ( c ) views. d , e ZIN PH 303/16, fragment of right maxilla in lateral ( d ) and posterior ( e ) views. f – h CCMGE 255/12457, incomplete predentary in dorsal ( j ), lateral ( k ), and ventral ( l ) views. ect ectopterygoid facet, ft functional tooth, rt replacing tooth. Scale bars equal 10 mm

Arctomet, to random
@Arctomet@sciencemastodon.com avatar

#FossilFriday #FossilFridayAtoZ The Late Jurassic African stegosaur Kentrosaurus at the Museum für Naturkunde Berlin

TheDinosaurDave, to LEGO
@TheDinosaurDave@sauropods.win avatar

This week for #Fossilfriday we have another #Guess that #Lego #Fossil.

This one I would rate as medium. This is small sized ceratopsian.

Reminder: hide your answer behind a content warning. This will allow others to guess without a hint. I will post the answer tomorrow (and to anyone who guesses correctly).

This was designed by Kongzilla and modified to a new species by me

TheDinosaurDave, to LEGO
@TheDinosaurDave@sauropods.win avatar

This weeks #Lego #FossilFriday is #Yaguarasaurus

In 1994, Colombian paleontologist María Páramo, published the details of the, at the time, most complete mosasauridae from South America.

The original skull was 47cm in length, and it was estimated to be 5m long. Since then a far larger, 87cm skull has been found. This implies that it could grow far larger, comparable to other larger mosasaurids.

Skull and first cervical vertebrae of Yaguarasaurus. Geological Museum José Royo y Gómez, Bogotá

AdamStuartSmith, to random
@AdamStuartSmith@sauropods.win avatar

Our T. rex looks odd on stilts...

But we'll soon be installing a new base below the T. rex, plus a whole new gallery surrounding the skeleton.

#FossilFriday #NottNatHist #dinosaurs #museums #Trex

archeaids, to random
@archeaids@mastodon.online avatar

Oligocene-Miocene silicified palmwood (Palmoxylon sp.), east Texas. I once used it as a hammerstone. The dots in 2 photos represent sclerenchyma vascular bundles. It was found near crocodilian , so based on the rounded shape it could be a gastrolith.

TheDinosaurDave, to LEGO
@TheDinosaurDave@sauropods.win avatar

This week for #Fossilfriday we have another #Guess that #Lego #Fossil.

This one I would rate as hard. This mid sized marine reptile is known from Colombia, South America.

Reminder: hide your answer behind a content warning. This will allow others to guess without a hint. I will post the answer tomorrow (and to anyone who guesses correctly).

This was designed by Me

MesozoicMind, to random
@MesozoicMind@sauropods.win avatar

In honour of #FossilFriday, #MesozoicMindBlog presents a review of a Montreal museum I enjoyed heavily.
https://mesozoicmind.blogspot.com/2024/05/redpath-museum-review.html

image/jpeg

llewelly, to random
@llewelly@sauropods.win avatar

I was trying to take a nap, but I was awakened by a nightmare: in my dream, early-branching tetrapodomorphs like Acanthostega and Ichthyostega with 7+ fingers were denounced as forgeries of so-called "AI" and erased from natural history.

Like nearly all dreams, it didn't make any sense when examined in the cold light of reality. At least, I hope not.

#fossilFriday

archeaids, to random
@archeaids@mastodon.online avatar

Unknown fossil, possibly Carboniferous period plant portion. #FossilFriday #fossils

punkpaleo, to science
@punkpaleo@sauropods.win avatar

Happy , check out this skull from a juvenile Gryposaurus! These hadrosaurs called North America their home roughly 75 million years ago, and this particular individual would have enjoyed the lush jungle that makes up the Kaiparowits Formation. (1/2)

markwitton, to random
@markwitton@sauropods.win avatar

Sort-of new to the internet #paleoart for #FossilFriday: the complete version of the Egyptian sauropod Paralititan having a robust conversation with Spinosaurus. This was produced for the @PalaeoGames DnD book - check it out at https://palaeogames.com/. #sciart #dinosaurs

Palaeojules, to random
@Palaeojules@sauropods.win avatar

Here's my finished, coloured Procretevania exquisita drawing. This was a hatchet wasp from the Yixian Formation of China; hatchet wasps still exist today and specialise in parasitising cockroach ootheca.

TheDinosaurDave, to LEGO
@TheDinosaurDave@sauropods.win avatar
archeaids, to random
@archeaids@mastodon.online avatar

The obligatory crinoid stem from Citronelle gravel, west-central Louisiana. #FossilFriday #fossils

archeaids, to Archaeology
@archeaids@mastodon.online avatar

Modern flakes of the same Oligocene silicified wood from west-central Louisiana. Top views are a flintknapped perforator. This particular "petrified wood" (~50 lb. block) is extremely hard & mostly only suitable for tool production.

JSE, to Leaf
@JSE@mstdn.science avatar

It's #FossilFriday, here at #JSE so we're enjoying some amazing images and analysis from Manchester et al. with the first recognition of the #extinct #eudicot genus #Palibinia in North America!
https://doi.org/10.1111/jse.13011
@WileyEcolEvol
#PlantSci #paleobiology #fossil #leaf #fruit #botany

Arctomet, to random
@Arctomet@sciencemastodon.com avatar

#FossilFriday #FossilFridayAtoZ The Eocene bat Icaronycteris index at the Field Museum

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