Sometimes I wonder just how many pounds of leaves the brontosaurus had to eat a day........

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Sometimes I wonder just how many pounds of leaves the brontosaurus had to eat a day........
Another repost, but a drawing of mine that brought me back to the doodles of my elementary school days. This was drawn in a @sketchwallet . A pretty ingenious product if I say so myself. #giantdinosaur #trex #giantdino #dinodestruction #biglizard #thunderlizard #fighterjet #sketchwallet #zebrabrushpen #inkdrawing #robbmommaerts https://www.instagram.com/p/B9hBWySlv2R/?igshid=ga6t3d76pqgq
Further progress on Brontosaurus excelsus! Getting some details hammered out and I just noticed that I broke 1900 followers!!! Thanks so much everyone!
I designed this project solely around wanting to wear this on a Tshirt.
http://kck.st/2Nq6YLS
Color work in progress for Brontosaurus excelsus! Color and pattern inspiration is a combination for a White Throated Monitor, American Avocet, and an Indian Treepie.
Work in progress underpainting for Brontosaurus excelsus! First named in 1879 by O.C. Marsh, Brontosaurus (meaning "Thunder Lizard") was a mainstay of the public's vision of prehistoric life for more than 100 years, and is the archetype for what most people think of when they conjure up images of sauropod dinosaurs. The history of it's discovery and classification is somewhat complicated. The original remains were discovered at Como Bluff in Wyoming, in 1903 a paleontologist named Elmer Riggs posed an argument that Marsh's Brontosaurus was not significantly distinguishable from another sauropod described by Marsh just 2 years prior which had been dubbed Apatosaurus, this started a debate as to whether the two animals were really the same animal or not.
Despite the possibility that it wasn't a new animal the American Museum of Natural History chose to mount its skeleton and reveal it to the world as Brontosaurus in 1905. The initial mounted specimen was incomplete and was mounted with a sculpted skull based on Camarasaurus, giving it a head that was very large a thick compared to the much more slender, Diplodicocus-like skulls we now know they had, in 1909 a skull for Apatosaurus was discovered that showed the more slender skull to be more accurate for this type of animal, this did not spark change right away as most museum mountings still used the Camarasaurus skull for many decades.
In the 1970s John Stanton McIntosh and David Berman re-described the skulls for Diplodicus and Apatosaurus, though it had been suspected that Brontosaurus and its relatives had thin skulls since the early 20th century, it wasn't until 1979 when the first mounting of a more correct Apatosaurus skull was mounted, and it wasn't until the 1990s when most other museums followed suit. In 1995 it was the American Museum of Natural History that finally corrected it's original mistake and not only fixed the skull and other parts of the anatomy, but also renamed the mounting from Brontosaurus excelsus to Apatosaurus excelsus.
While noted paleontologist Robert T. Bakker did argue in the 1990s that A. ajax and the newly renamed A. excelus were different enough to be classified as different genera, it wasn't until 2015 when a new study changed Brontosaurus back from being one of paleontology's biggest mistakes and reclassified it as a separate genus, though there is still much debate and criticism of the way the press covered the study, with many scientists suggesting that saying Brontosaurus is back is premature. Whew, that was a weighty history, even though I did edit it down. Still, I chose to name this as a portrayal of Brontosaurus excelsus because I have always been a fan of the classics and because that seems to be where the most current science is leaning.
Since I saw lots of cool dinosaurs this past weekend, I’ll repost my avatar T-Rex. #tyrannosaurusrex #trex #dinosaur #thunderlizard #tyrantlizardking #kingofthedinosaurs #cartoonistsofinstagram #inkdrawing #dinosaurfan #dinosaurfanart #robbmommaerts https://www.instagram.com/p/CPqLHSaFmmW/?utm_medium=tumblr
Dinosaur 🦕 videos @ TheThrillSociety.com 🦕🦕🦕 #dinosaur #dinosaurs #dinosauro #dinosaursalive #dinosaursofinstagram #dinosaurlover #discoveryourworld #discoveryworld #discovery #mummy #mummfied #mummies #antropology #anthropology #thunderlizard