Kentrosaurus aethiopicus
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Kentrosaurus aethiopicus

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Here is another commission for Gaming Beaver that I made around the same time as the Ceratosaurus. This time it's an image of a foraging kentrosaurus pausing to take a drink.
Results from the #paleostream!
Asmodochelys, "Angustungui"*, Medusaceratops (full of guano) and Sinclairomeryx
*the animal is currently only known from a pre-print and not officially published.
Gigantspinosaurus sichuanensis was an early stegosaur that lived during the mid-Jurassic, about 166 million years ago, in what is now southwestern China.
Around 4.5m long (~14'9"), it had relatively small back plates and a pair of enormous shoulder spikes. It's unclear exactly how the shoulder spines were positioned in life, but based on how they were found articulated in a fairly complete skeleton they seem to have swept sideways and backwards, protecting Gigantspinosaurus' flanks.
Skin impressions show a mosaic of polygonal scales with scattered "rosettes" made up of larger scales surrounded by a ring of smaller scales, with a rough ridged surface texture that may have reduced light glare – suggesting an overall more matte appearance rather than glossy.
The thigh bones of one specimen are pathological, showing evidence that these dinosaurs sometimes suffered from bone tumors.
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halfway through the jurassic and welp...here's my chance to really start drawing dinosaurs! check out more on my #perspectives tag!
"Kalligrammatid Effect" Tuojiangosaurus/Meioneurites Jurassic, 160 million years ago, Shaximiao Formation Tuojiangosaurus is a stegosaur known from multiple rather-complete skeletons, making it fairly well-known from a paleontological perspective. Some people portray it with big spikes on its shoulder, but a lot of skeletals and basically every museum mount don't seem to, so I went with spikeless for this guy. Like most stegosaurs, it ate low-lying vegetation - and this is just speculation on my part, but given the decline of stegosaurs with cycads, it might have preferred these types of plants. Like any good stegosaur, it had a thagomizer which it used to thagomize the hell out of its predators. The plates themselves were brittle and not effective defensively, despite the pain a human might feel when a dorito decides to stab the inside of their mouth at a poor angle. Meioneurites was a Jurassic kalligrammatid - not a butterfly, but a lacewing that looked and behaved much like a butterfly before butterflies existed. Many kalligrammatids have fossilized wings with preserved scales and pigmentation, and this lets us tell that Meioneurites's wings were opaque, much like a modern butterfly's. As lacewings, their resting position was likely different from a butterfly's - hence these guys are more spread-winged or sort of tented, like a moth, instead of folding up vertically.

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
Free to watch • No registration required • HD streaming
cave art and thyreophora
Allosaurus jimmadseni facing off Stegosaurus stenops - finished version
#Paleostream 24/05/2025
here's today's #Paleostream flocking sketches!!!
today we sketched Amargasaurus, Bajadasaurus, Stegosaurus, and Acrocanthosaurus (very spine-heavy stream lol)