Watercolour painting of Triassic animals by Benjamin Waterhouse Hawkins, undated (c.1853)
Left to right: Dicynodon, Labyrinthodon, Rhynchosaurus, ammonite
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Watercolour painting of Triassic animals by Benjamin Waterhouse Hawkins, undated (c.1853)
Left to right: Dicynodon, Labyrinthodon, Rhynchosaurus, ammonite

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Crystal Palace Field Trip Part 1: Walking With Victorian Monsters
The Crystal Palace Dinosaurs take their name from the original Crystal Palace, a glass-paned exhibition building originally constructed for a World's Fair in Hyde Park in 1851.
In 1854 the structure was relocated 14km (~9 miles) south to the newly-created Crystal Palace Park, and a collection of over 30 life-sized statues of prehistoric animals were commissioned to accompany the reopening – creating a sort of Victorian dinosaur theme park – sculpted by Benjamin Waterhouse Hawkins with consultation from paleontologist Sir Richard Owen.
The Palace building itself burned down completely in 1936, and today only the ruins of its terraces remain in the northeast of the park grounds.
The Crystal Palace building then and now Left image circa 1854 (public domain) Right image circa 2011 by Mark Ahsmann (CC BY-SA 3.0)
Six sphinx statues based on the Great Sphinx of Tanis also survive up among the Palace ruins, flanking some of the terrace staircases. They fell into serious disrepair during the latter half of the 20th century, but in 2017 they all finally got some much-needed preservation work, repairing them and restoring their original Victorian red paint jobs.
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…But let's get to what we're really here for. Dinosaurs! (…And assorted other prehistoric beasties!)
Grzimek's Animal Life Encyclopedia. Volume 6: Reptiles. Written by Bernard Grzimek. 1984.
Since I tend to draw Dicynodon with some fuzzy proto-fur I thought it would be cute to draw three different reconstructions (fuzzy, scaly and “naked”) being friends
Permian post apocalypse.

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Two Synapsids and a Diapsid walk into a bar.... (and their fossilized skulls end up in the Melbourne Museum).
Despite frequently being dubbed “mammal-like reptiles”, early Synapsids (mammals and their ancestors) were not reptiles at all, but rather a different branch of Amniotes (a group including today’s mammals and reptiles) that split off separately from reptiles.
From left to right: Vivaxosarus trautscholdi (Early Synapsid, labelled in photo as synonymous Dicynodon trautscholdi), Lanthanosuchus watsoni (Diapsid reptile), Eotitanosuchus olsoni (Early Synapsid).
Photo by Joseph Warren Zambra of the Crystal Palace models of the Primary [Palaeozoic] Era, Dicynodon and Labyrinthodon, taken between 1855-1890
https://www.musee-orsay.fr/fr/oeuvres/prehistoric-animals-lower-lake-34888
View of Crystal Palace "Secondary Island" prehistoric animal sculptures made by Benjamin Waterhouse Hawkins from Guide to the Crystal Palace and its Park and Gardens by Samuel Phillips, 1854
1. Mosasaurus 2. & 3. Pterodactyles 4. & 5. Iguanodons 6. The Hylæosaurus 7. The Megalosaurus 8. & 9. The Teleosauri 10. The Ichthyosaurus Communis 11. The Ichthyosaurus Platyodon 12. Plesiosaurus Macrocephalus 13. The Labyrinthodon Salamandroides 14. & 15. Dycynodons 16. Labyrinthodon Pachygnathus
https://www.gutenberg.org/cache/epub/59843/pg59843-images.html