Toutes les images de la base — taxons, formations et intervalles géologiques.
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2,093 image(s)
Cetiosaurus oxoniensis, "Rutland Dinosaur". New Walk Museum, Leicester. Tuesday, 17 July, 2012
From left to right: Nothronychus graffami and Nothronychus mckinleyi. These files are already on Commons with their respective licenses. This montage was made for the article Therizinosauridae on Wikipedia. File:Therizinosaurus 1 salt lake city.jpg File:Nothronychus (1).jpg
From left to right: Nothronychus graffami and Nothronychus mckinleyi. These files are already on Commons with their respective licenses. This montage was made for the article Therizinosauridae on Wikipedia. File:Therizinosaurus 1 salt lake city.jpg File:Nothronychus (1).jpg
Pachycephalosaurus wyomingensis "Sandy" specimen, Royal Ontario Museum
Morphological variation in the Deltapodus ibericus holotype trackway from the CT-1 tracksite. (a) False-color depth maps and interpretative outline drawings of a selection of manus–pes sets within the trackway. Note the variation in manus (from crescent, kidney to semicircular shapes) and pes (reversed delta, semirectangular, and oval shapes) tracks depending on the manus–pes set. Note also that some manus are overprinted by the pes. (b) Mediotype of the pes impressions based on 4 specimens with a mean footprint length of 0.48 m. Note that the morphology of the posterior part of the print is slightly biased (more quadrangular) because this area in track 1CA17p is broken. (c) Mediotype of the manus impressions based on 2 specimens with a mean footprint width of 0.37 m. (d–f) Pictures of a selection of the best-preserved tracks (manus–pes set 1CA23, pes 1CA17p and manus 1CA3m). The false color depth maps were generated with the software CloudCompare (https://www.cloudcompare.org/) and the mediotypes with the software DigTrace (https://www.digtrace.co.uk/).
Plateosaurus engelhardti skeletons "Skelett 2" on exhibit at the museum of the Institute for Geosciences of the Eberhard-Karls-University Tübingen, Germany. "Skelett 2" is a composite from 2 individuals from Trossingen, Germany. Mounts created under the direction of Friedrich von Huene.
A cast of the pterosaur Dorygnathus banthensis at Göteborgs Naturhistoriska Museum, Gothenburg, Sweden.
A whole-body skeleton of Camptosaurus in Japan.
A whole-body skeleton of Camptosaurus in Japan.
A whole-body skeleton of Camptosaurus in Japan.
Deinonychus skeletal mount on display at the Field Museum of Natural History.
A pair of Macroolithus yaotunensis eggs. Specimen number NMNS CYN-2004 DINO-05, housed in the National Museum of Natural Sciences, Taichung, Taiwan.
Tetrapodosaurus borealis footprint from the Dunvegan Formation, Canada.
Partial skull of Shastasaurus pacificus (UCMP 9017) from the Late Triassic of California, USA, in (A) lateral, (B) dorsal, and (C) anterolateral view. Based on this skull, Shastasaurus has repeatedly been reconstructed with a long, tooth-bearing rostrum. However, note the slenderness of the lower jaw (B, C) and the strong anterior taper of the snout (B), both of which are more consistent with the abbreviated and toothless snout of Shastasaurus liangae comb. nov. than with the traditional long-snouted reconstruction of this skull (as, e.g., in references [22] and [23]).
Partial skull of Shastasaurus pacificus (UCMP 9017) from the Late Triassic of California, USA, in (A) lateral, (B) dorsal, and (C) anterolateral view. Based on this skull, Shastasaurus has repeatedly been reconstructed with a long, tooth-bearing rostrum. However, note the slenderness of the lower jaw (B, C) and the strong anterior taper of the snout (B), both of which are more consistent with the abbreviated and toothless snout of Shastasaurus liangae comb. nov. than with the traditional long-snouted reconstruction of this skull (as, e.g., in references [22] and [23]).
Partial skull of Shastasaurus pacificus (UCMP 9017) from the Late Triassic of California, USA, in (A) lateral, (B) dorsal, and (C) anterolateral view. Based on this skull, Shastasaurus has repeatedly been reconstructed with a long, tooth-bearing rostrum. However, note the slenderness of the lower jaw (B, C) and the strong anterior taper of the snout (B), both of which are more consistent with the abbreviated and toothless snout of Shastasaurus liangae comb. nov. than with the traditional long-snouted reconstruction of this skull (as, e.g., in references [22] and [23]).
Centrosaurus apertus specimen ROM 767. Exhibit in the Royal Ontario Museum, Toronto, Ontario, Canada. This exhibit is old enough so that it is in the public domain, and photography was permitted in the museum. I took this photograph and release it into the public domain.