fossile

Nature du spécimen

223 image(s) · 128 Actualités

Galerie d'images

Fossil of Mei long (holotype), on temporary display at the Shanghai Natural History Museum as part of the exhibition "China's Dinosaur World". Shot on July 22, 2025.
Taxons Mei

Fossil of Mei long (holotype), on temporary display at the Shanghai Natural History Museum as part of the exhibition "China's Dinosaur World". Shot on July 22, 2025.

musée Chine fossile holotype +1
Sidersaura is a rebbachisaurid sauropod dinosaur from the Late Cretaceous of Argentina. Rebbachisaurids are the last known dipldocoids, and lived alongside the titanosaurs until fairly late in the Cretaceous before disappearing from the fossil record, presumably going extinct. They have long tails and relatively short necks, by sauropod standards. Sidersaura one of the most recent rebbachisaurids yet found, living in the Cenomanian–Turonian ages of the Late Cretaceous. It was large for a rebbachisaurid, growing to about 20 m in length.
Taxons Sidersaura

Sidersaura is a rebbachisaurid sauropod dinosaur from the Late Cretaceous of Argentina. Rebbachisaurids are the last known dipldocoids, and lived alongside the titanosaurs until fairly late in the Cretaceous before disappearing from the fossil record, presumably going extinct. They have long tails and relatively short necks, by sauropod standards. Sidersaura one of the most recent rebbachisaurids yet found, living in the Cenomanian–Turonian ages of the Late Cretaceous. It was large for a rebbachisaurid, growing to about 20 m in length.

Argentine Cénomanien Crétacé Crétacé supérieur +6
Fossil of Coloborhynchus, an extinct pterosaur- Took the photo at Naturalis museum, Leiden
Taxons Maaradactylus

Fossil of Coloborhynchus, an extinct pterosaur- Took the photo at Naturalis museum, Leiden

musée fossile Coloborhynchus Maaradactylus +1
Life restoration of the mosasaurine mosasaurid Eremiasaurus, with unknown portions and soft tissues based primarily on Prognathodon and supplemented with Mosasaurus where needed.
References
Leblanc, A.R.H.; Caldwell, M.W.; Bardet, N. (2012). "A new mosasaurine from the Maastrichtian (Upper Cretaceous) phosphates of Morocco and its implications for mosasaurine systematics". Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology 32 (1): 82–104.
Lindgren, J.; Kaddumi, H.; Polcyn, M. (2013). "Soft tissue preservation in a fossil marine lizard with a bilobed tail fin". Nature Communications 4: 2423. DOI:10.1038/ncomms3423.
Konishi, T.; Brinkman, D.; Massare, J.A.; Caldwell, M.W. (2011). "New exceptional specimens of Prognathodon overtoni (Squamata, Mosasauridae) from the upper Campanian of Alberta, Canada, and the systematics and ecology of the genus". Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology 31 (5): 1026–1046.
Russell, D.A. (1967). "Systematics and morphology of American mosasaurs". Bulletin of the Peabody Museum of Natural History 23: 1–241.
Taxons Eremiasaurus

Life restoration of the mosasaurine mosasaurid Eremiasaurus, with unknown portions and soft tissues based primarily on Prognathodon and supplemented with Mosasaurus where needed. References Leblanc, A.R.H.; Caldwell, M.W.; Bardet, N. (2012). "A new mosasaurine from the Maastrichtian (Upper Cretaceous) phosphates of Morocco and its implications for mosasaurine systematics". Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology 32 (1): 82–104. Lindgren, J.; Kaddumi, H.; Polcyn, M. (2013). "Soft tissue preservation in a fossil marine lizard with a bilobed tail fin". Nature Communications 4: 2423. DOI:10.1038/ncomms3423. Konishi, T.; Brinkman, D.; Massare, J.A.; Caldwell, M.W. (2011). "New exceptional specimens of Prognathodon overtoni (Squamata, Mosasauridae) from the upper Campanian of Alberta, Canada, and the systematics and ecology of the genus". Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology 31 (5): 1026–1046. Russell, D.A. (1967). "Systematics and morphology of American mosasaurs". Bulletin of the Peabody Museum of Natural History 23: 1–241.

tissus écologie musée Canada +11
Fossil samples – e.g. ‘primitive’ bony fish (1, 2), a skull of a temnospondyl ‘amphibian’ (probably a metoposauroid) in dorsal view (3), a skull of an archosaur of the crocodile lineage (probably a phytosaur) in palatal view (4), holotype of the “gliding reptile” Icarosaurus siefkeri [1] (5) and Atreipus-Grallator-type dinosaur tracks (bottom right) – from the Newark Supergroup, i.e. a series of mainly Late Triassic to Early Jurassic sedimentary rocks of eastern North America


↑ Edwin H. Colbert: A gliding reptile from the Triassic of New Jersey. American Museum Novitates, 2230. American Museum of Natural History, New York 1966, digitallibrary.amnh.org, cf. fig. 3 therein.
Taxons Atreipus

Fossil samples – e.g. ‘primitive’ bony fish (1, 2), a skull of a temnospondyl ‘amphibian’ (probably a metoposauroid) in dorsal view (3), a skull of an archosaur of the crocodile lineage (probably a phytosaur) in palatal view (4), holotype of the “gliding reptile” Icarosaurus siefkeri [1] (5) and Atreipus-Grallator-type dinosaur tracks (bottom right) – from the Newark Supergroup, i.e. a series of mainly Late Triassic to Early Jurassic sedimentary rocks of eastern North America ↑ Edwin H. Colbert: A gliding reptile from the Triassic of New Jersey. American Museum Novitates, 2230. American Museum of Natural History, New York 1966, digitallibrary.amnh.org, cf. fig. 3 therein.

musée Jurassique inférieur Jurassique Trias supérieur +8
Title: A descriptive catalogue of the marine reptiles of the Oxford clay. Based on the Leeds Collection in the British Museum (Natural History), London ..
Identifier: descriptivecatal02brit (find matches)
Year: 1910 (1910s)
Authors: British Museum (Natural History). Dept. of Geology; Andrews, Charles William, 1866-1924
Subjects: Reptiles, Fossil
Publisher: London, Printed by order of the Trustees
Contributing Library: Smithsonian Libraries
Digitizing Sponsor: Biodiversity Heritage Library

View Book Page: Book Viewer
About This Book: Catalog Entry
View All Images: All Images From Book
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Text Appearing Before Image: 
CATAL.MARINE KEPT. OXFORD CLAY. PART II. PLATE I. pmcc.
Text Appearing After Image: 
>p77ia:. G.M.Woodward del. etlibh. West, Newman imp. PLIOSAURUS FEROX.

Note About Images

Please note that these images are extracted from scanned page images that may have been digitally enhanced for readability - coloration and appearance of these illustrations may not perfectly resemble the original work.
Taxons Liopleurodon

Title: A descriptive catalogue of the marine reptiles of the Oxford clay. Based on the Leeds Collection in the British Museum (Natural History), London .. Identifier: descriptivecatal02brit (find matches) Year: 1910 (1910s) Authors: British Museum (Natural History). Dept. of Geology; Andrews, Charles William, 1866-1924 Subjects: Reptiles, Fossil Publisher: London, Printed by order of the Trustees Contributing Library: Smithsonian Libraries Digitizing Sponsor: Biodiversity Heritage Library View Book Page: Book Viewer About This Book: Catalog Entry View All Images: All Images From Book Click here to view book online to see this illustration in context in a browseable online version of this book. Text Appearing Before Image: CATAL.MARINE KEPT. OXFORD CLAY. PART II. PLATE I. pmcc. Text Appearing After Image: >p77ia:. G.M.Woodward del. etlibh. West, Newman imp. PLIOSAURUS FEROX. Note About Images Please note that these images are extracted from scanned page images that may have been digitally enhanced for readability - coloration and appearance of these illustrations may not perfectly resemble the original work.

musée Oxford Clay fossile Liopleurodon +2
Rhomaleosaurus cramptoni fossil, Natural History Museum, London
Taxons Rhomaleosaurus

Rhomaleosaurus cramptoni fossil, Natural History Museum, London

musée fossile Rhomaleosaurus
Figure 1. Evolution of macroecological traits in Dinosauria. Large scale event in dinosaur evolution (a); the origin of dinosaurs (star), hyperthermals (volcano), the earliest fossil Avialae (bird), the earliest fossil angiosperm (flower), the Cretaceous/Palaeogene mass extinction (asteroid). Phylogeny of dinosaurs (b) redrawn from Sereno and adapted to the current consensus and upon which an ancestral state reconstruction of temperature niche (mean annual temperature) after Chiarenza et al. is plotted; Mesozoic palaeogeographies (c) for Triassic (T), Jurassic (J) and Cretaceous (K). Silhouette colours symbolize body mass for each of the taxa represented; information on dietary habits are plotted after Barrett and Zanno & Makovicky; numbers represent clades discussed through this study: 1, Ornithischia; 2, Thyreophora; 3, Ornithopoda; 4, Hadrosauroidea; 5, Marginocephalia; 6, Ceratopsia; 7, Saurischia; 8, Sauropodomorpha; 9, Sauropoda; 10, Theropoda; 11, Ceratosauria; 12, Tetanurae; 13, Coelurosauria; 14, Maniraptoriformes; 15, Maniraptora; 16, Deinonychosauria; 17, Avialae; 18, Ornithothoraces. Palaeogeographies modified from original plots via R package ‘mapast’ using plate models by Scotese.

Figure 1. Evolution of macroecological traits in Dinosauria. Large scale event in dinosaur evolution (a); the origin of dinosaurs (star), hyperthermals (volcano), the earliest fossil Avialae (bird), the earliest fossil angiosperm (flower), the Cretaceous/Palaeogene mass extinction (asteroid). Phylogeny of dinosaurs (b) redrawn from Sereno and adapted to the current consensus and upon which an ancestral state reconstruction of temperature niche (mean annual temperature) after Chiarenza et al. is plotted; Mesozoic palaeogeographies (c) for Triassic (T), Jurassic (J) and Cretaceous (K). Silhouette colours symbolize body mass for each of the taxa represented; information on dietary habits are plotted after Barrett and Zanno & Makovicky; numbers represent clades discussed through this study: 1, Ornithischia; 2, Thyreophora; 3, Ornithopoda; 4, Hadrosauroidea; 5, Marginocephalia; 6, Ceratopsia; 7, Saurischia; 8, Sauropodomorpha; 9, Sauropoda; 10, Theropoda; 11, Ceratosauria; 12, Tetanurae; 13, Coelurosauria; 14, Maniraptoriformes; 15, Maniraptora; 16, Deinonychosauria; 17, Avialae; 18, Ornithothoraces. Palaeogeographies modified from original plots via R package ‘mapast’ using plate models by Scotese.

écaille Crétacé Jurassique Mésozoïque +23
Simplified cladogram of Dinosauria with the distribution of feathers according to the fossil record. Despite its more ancient origin, it
was only in maniraptoriformes that modern-type feathers (pennaceous feathers) have arisen (Based in Xu & Guo, 2009; Clarke,

2013; Godefroit et al., 2013; Han et al., 2014; Koshchowitz et al., 2014).

Simplified cladogram of Dinosauria with the distribution of feathers according to the fossil record. Despite its more ancient origin, it was only in maniraptoriformes that modern-type feathers (pennaceous feathers) have arisen (Based in Xu & Guo, 2009; Clarke, 2013; Godefroit et al., 2013; Han et al., 2014; Koshchowitz et al., 2014).

plume fossile Dinosauria Maniraptoriformes +1
Photographer: User:Ballista

Edited in Adobe PhotoShop: User:Firsfron
Photographed object is in fact a cast of a real fossil. It's part of a hands-on exhibit of the NHM in London.

Photographer: User:Ballista Edited in Adobe PhotoShop: User:Firsfron Photographed object is in fact a cast of a real fossil. It's part of a hands-on exhibit of the NHM in London.

moulage fossile Neotheropoda
The Chicago specimen of Archaeopteryx (PA 830), a well-preserved fossil highlighting the transitional features between non-avian dinosaurs and birds, housed at the Field Museum of Natural History.

The Chicago specimen of Archaeopteryx (PA 830), a well-preserved fossil highlighting the transitional features between non-avian dinosaurs and birds, housed at the Field Museum of Natural History.

musée fossile spécimen Archaeopteryx +2
Fossil of Anhanguera, an extinct reptile-- Took the photo at Natural History Museum, London

Fossil of Anhanguera, an extinct reptile-- Took the photo at Natural History Museum, London

musée fossile Anhanguera
Fossil of Balaur, an extinct theropod- Took the photo at Fossil Show, Munich
Taxons Balaur

Fossil of Balaur, an extinct theropod- Took the photo at Fossil Show, Munich

fossile Balaur
The Canadian Fossil Discovery Centre in Morden boasts the largest collection of marine invertebrate fossils in Canada. Visitors to the museum not only get to see this collection, but can join a dig in search for more fossils at a 109-acre escarpment property.

Photo credit: Robyn Hanson
Taxons Tylosaurus

The Canadian Fossil Discovery Centre in Morden boasts the largest collection of marine invertebrate fossils in Canada. Visitors to the museum not only get to see this collection, but can join a dig in search for more fossils at a 109-acre escarpment property. Photo credit: Robyn Hanson

musée Canada fossile Tylosaurus +1
Fossil of Pinacosaurus, an ankylosaurian  dinosaur
Took the photo at Musee d'Histoire Naturelle, Brussels
Taxons Eopinacosaurus

Fossil of Pinacosaurus, an ankylosaurian dinosaur Took the photo at Musee d'Histoire Naturelle, Brussels

fossile Ankylosauria Dinosauria Eopinacosaurus +1
Duria Antiquior, célèbre aquarelle du géologue Henry de la Beche représentant la vie dans l'ancien Dorset d'après des fossiles trouvés par Mary Anning.

Duria Antiquior, célèbre aquarelle du géologue Henry de la Beche représentant la vie dans l'ancien Dorset d'après des fossiles trouvés par Mary Anning.

old school fossile Ichthyosaurus Plesiosaurus +1
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Actualités

Giant Tyrannosaur Fossil Found in New Mexico
Un fossile de tyrannosaure géant découvert au Nouveau-Mexique
musée Mexique fossile Dinosauria Tyrannosauridae Tyrannosaurus
Un grand dinosaure tyrannosauridé aurait pu rôder dans les plaines inondables de ce qui est aujourd'hui le Nouveau-Mexique il y a près de 74 millions d'années, selon une équipe de paléontologues de l'Université de Bath, de l'Université d'État du Montana et du Musée d'histoire naturelle et des sciences du Nouveau-Mexique. L'article Un fossile de tyrannosaure géant découvert au Nouveau-Mexique est apparu en premier sur Sci.News : Breaking Science News.
15/05/2026 sci-news ⚙ Traduction automatique
La paléontologie secouée par la découverte de molécules organiques dans des os de dinosaures vieux de 66 millions d'années
os collagène protéine fossile Dinosauria Edmontosaurus découverte
Les scientifiques ont découvert des preuves irréfutables selon lesquelles les fossiles de dinosaures peuvent encore contenir des traces de leurs protéines d'origine, renversant ainsi une croyance de longue date selon laquelle la fossilisation détruit toute matière organique. Dans un fossile d'Edmontosaurus remarquablement bien conservé du Dakota du Sud, les chercheurs ont détecté des restes de collagène – la principale protéine présente dans les os – à l'aide de techniques avancées, notamment la spectrométrie de masse et le séquençage des protéines.
14/05/2026 sciencedaily ⚙ Traduction automatique
Paleontologists Find Lost Ice Age World in Flooded Texas Cave
Des paléontologues découvrent un monde perdu de la période glaciaire dans une grotte inondée du Texas
dent fossile
Les fossiles d'une tortue géante, d'un paresseux terrestre, d'un tatou de la taille d'un lion appelé pampathere, de chats à dents de cimeterre, de chevaux, de chameaux et de mastodontes trouvés dans la grotte de Bender sur le plateau d'Edwards au Texas pourraient révéler une période chaude jusqu'alors inconnue dans la région il y a environ 100 000 ans. L'article Des paléontologues trouvent le monde perdu de la période glaciaire dans une grotte inondée du Texas apparaît en premier sur Sci.News : Breaking Science News.
14/05/2026 sci-news ⚙ Traduction automatique
Une nouvelle étude suggère que le jeune Maiasaura mangeait des aliments différents de ceux des adultes
dent alimentation fossile juvénile Hadrosauria Maiasaura étude
Un article scientifique récemment publié a fourni de nouvelles informations sur les habitudes alimentaires du célèbre hadrosaure Maiasaura peeblesorum. L'analyse de l'usure des dents chez les Maiasaura juvéniles par rapport aux hadrosaures adultes suggère que les jeunes Maiasaura se nourrissaient différemment des animaux adultes. Les chercheurs ont examiné l’usure dentaire associée aux dents fossiles de Maiasaura peeblesorum.  Des informations sur l'alimentation peuvent aider à
13/05/2026 everythingdinosaur ⚙ Traduction automatique
Repérer un magnifique fossile d'ammonite dans un carrelage
chasse fossile
Attendre un avion est fastidieux. Cependant, étant donné notre intérêt pour les fossiles, il est toujours possible de partir à la chasse aux fossiles de manière impromptue.  Par exemple, alors que nous étions à l'aéroport de Brandebourg de Berlin (Flughafen Berlin Brandenburg - BER), Sue et moi avons passé le temps à examiner les nombreuses ammonites et autres fossiles d'invertébrés conservés dans le sol ciré.
12/05/2026 everythingdinosaur ⚙ Traduction automatique
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