Thinking about whales again
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Thinking about whales again
Paleogene critters!
65 to 23 million years ago, when the mammals took over the globe!
Andrewsarchus - Indohyus - Entelodont / Hell Pig
Ambulocetus - Hyracodon - Basilosaurus
Hyaenodon - Uintatherium - Gastornis
Moeritherium - Titanoboa - Eohippus
Proailurus - Megacerops
Stickers || Phone Wallpapers Masterlist
Planned or in the works: Dinictis, Arsinoitherium, Vasuki indicus, Perucetus, Dorudon, Palaeolagus, Gomphos, Barinasuchus
Results from the Kuldana formation #paleostream! This formation, from the Eocene of Pakistan, is best known for it's fossil whales but as you can see here, THERE IS A LOT MORE from there!
This week I made the size chart, that's why this looks so messy, and I didn't manage to put everything on here...
however the research that came together was so much that a few friends were able to directly convert it into a brand new Wikipedia article
https://en.wikipedia.org/?title=Kuldana_Formation&redirect=no
Three stages of whale: mouse deer, hippo otter, and croco-seal
(Indohyus, Pakicetus and Ambulocetus)
Time to revive this blog
I have a bunch of comic stories with extinct animals which I'll be posting and Muddy's story is one of them
Диноасковым привет
whales and dolphins and all cetaceans descending from little doglike mammals is so scary to me, i look at their smooth hairless skin their flippers formed from legs and hands, their huge size, their great gaping maws or long spearing beaks.... like look at this little critters. look at pakicetus and indohyus the weird little dog pig mouse-deer beasties. theyre about to get mutated into lovecraftian beasts beyond their imagination. and the poor little things dont even know it theyre just happy to catch some fishies
some critters
It really is sad that we do not quite have anything like the ancient whales around today. I bet you dollars to donuts Pakicetus would have been domesticated.