From the vault: my double life-size Morganucodon model (2017), for the University of Bristol Palaeobiology Research Group and National Museum of Wales, Cardiff. There was a lot of fun debate about what size and shape the ear pinna should be!
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From the vault: my double life-size Morganucodon model (2017), for the University of Bristol Palaeobiology Research Group and National Museum of Wales, Cardiff. There was a lot of fun debate about what size and shape the ear pinna should be!

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#Paleostream 4/04/2026
here's what we sketched during this week's #Paleostream flocking!!!
this week we sketched Xiphodracon, Ectoconcus, Morganucodon, and Atlascystis
M is for...?
All of the M names in my Paleo Party! Are there any I'm missing? I had so many in this category, I had to make the Cenozoic it's own post! Come back tomorrow to see the mega-group of the Miocene and onwards!
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Flocking Together #113
Xiphodracon/Ectoconus
Morganucodon/Atlascystis
"The advanced paramammals, the theraspids, evolved some 50 million years after the early flesh eaters. Giant lumbering plant eaters such as Moschops were forerunners of dicynodonts such as Lystrosaurus and Dinodontosaurus. Fierce flesh eaters such as Titanosuchus were ancestors of both the cynodonts (Thrinaxodon and Cynognathus) and the bauriamorphs (Bauria). Furry, warm-blooded flesh eaters, these were only a step away from being mammals. Morganucodon, the first true mammal, evolved around 200 million years ago."
From "The Evolution of the Mammals" (1978), by L.B. Halstead. This illustration by Enzo Carretti.

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01/03/2025 Morganucodon
DAY 1 - MORGANUCODON
Morganucodon oehleri scampering along the early Jurassic landscape of the Yunnan Province in China (~201-183 Mya)
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MARCH OF THE MAMMALS HAS BEGUN
The World of Dinosaurs. Written by L. B. Halstead. 1979.
Internet Archive