Crétacé

Intervalle géologique

121 image(s) · 29 Actualités

Voir la fiche

Galerie d'images

Stratigraphy of the Upper Cretaceous Neuquén Group (after Garrido) indicating stratigraphic positions of definitive unenlagiine taxa (modified from Gianechini and Gianechini & Apesteguía). Skeletal reconstructions to approximate scale, redrawn and/or modified from works by Scott Hartman (Buitreraptor gonzalezorum, Austroraptor cabazai), Gabriel Lio (Unenlagia comahuensis, Neuquenraptor argentinus, Unenlagia paynemili), and Jaime Headden (Pamparaptor micros, Diuqin lechiguanae), used with permission
Taxons Unenlagiinae

Stratigraphy of the Upper Cretaceous Neuquén Group (after Garrido) indicating stratigraphic positions of definitive unenlagiine taxa (modified from Gianechini and Gianechini & Apesteguía). Skeletal reconstructions to approximate scale, redrawn and/or modified from works by Scott Hartman (Buitreraptor gonzalezorum, Austroraptor cabazai), Gabriel Lio (Unenlagia comahuensis, Neuquenraptor argentinus, Unenlagia paynemili), and Jaime Headden (Pamparaptor micros, Diuqin lechiguanae), used with permission

écaille Crétacé Austroraptor Buitreraptor +6
Leptocleidus capensis, a plesiosaur from the Early Cretaceous of South Africa, pencil drawing, digital coloring
Taxons Leptocleididae

Leptocleidus capensis, a plesiosaur from the Early Cretaceous of South Africa, pencil drawing, digital coloring

dessin Afrique du Sud Crétacé Crétacé inférieur +4
Amargasaurus lived in the  Cretaceous Period, about 100 million years ago.Photo taken in Museum of Victoria (Melbourne, Victoria, Australia)
Taxons Dicraeosauridae

Amargasaurus lived in the Cretaceous Period, about 100 million years ago.Photo taken in Museum of Victoria (Melbourne, Victoria, Australia)

musée Australie Crétacé Amargasaurus +2
Amargasaurus lived in the  Cretaceous Period, about 100 million years ago.Photo taken in Museum of Victoria (Melbourne, Victoria, Australia)
Taxons Dicraeosaurinae

Amargasaurus lived in the Cretaceous Period, about 100 million years ago.Photo taken in Museum of Victoria (Melbourne, Victoria, Australia)

musée Australie Crétacé Amargasaurus +2
The saltasaurine sauropod Neuquensaurus australis, from the Anacleto Formation (Upper Cretaceous), Patagonia, Argentina. Restoration of the skeleton mounted at the Museo de La Plata, Argentina.
Taxons Saltasauroidea

The saltasaurine sauropod Neuquensaurus australis, from the Anacleto Formation (Upper Cretaceous), Patagonia, Argentina. Restoration of the skeleton mounted at the Museo de La Plata, Argentina.

Argentine Anacleto Crétacé Lohuecosauria +4
The saltasaurine sauropod Neuquensaurus australis, from the Anacleto Formation (Upper Cretaceous), Patagonia, Argentina. Restoration of the skeleton mounted at the Museo de La Plata, Argentina.
Taxons Lohuecosauria

The saltasaurine sauropod Neuquensaurus australis, from the Anacleto Formation (Upper Cretaceous), Patagonia, Argentina. Restoration of the skeleton mounted at the Museo de La Plata, Argentina.

Argentine Anacleto Crétacé Lohuecosauria +4
Chasmosaurus belli ROM 843, Royal Tyrrell Museum of Paleontology. Late Cretaceous 75-74.5 millions years ago. Found at Dinosaur Provincial Park, Alberta, and prepared at the Royal Tyrrell Museum of Paleontology, Drumheller, Alberta.
Taxons Chasmosaurinae

Chasmosaurus belli ROM 843, Royal Tyrrell Museum of Paleontology. Late Cretaceous 75-74.5 millions years ago. Found at Dinosaur Provincial Park, Alberta, and prepared at the Royal Tyrrell Museum of Paleontology, Drumheller, Alberta.

musée Canada Crétacé Crétacé supérieur +5
Chasmosaurus belli ROM 843, Royal Tyrrell Museum of Paleontology. Late Cretaceous 75-74.5 millions years ago. Found at Dinosaur Provincial Park, Alberta, and prepared at the Royal Tyrrell Museum of Paleontology, Drumheller, Alberta.
Taxons Triceratopsini

Chasmosaurus belli ROM 843, Royal Tyrrell Museum of Paleontology. Late Cretaceous 75-74.5 millions years ago. Found at Dinosaur Provincial Park, Alberta, and prepared at the Royal Tyrrell Museum of Paleontology, Drumheller, Alberta.

musée Canada Crétacé Crétacé supérieur +5
Holotype of the polycotylid[1] plesiosaur Edgarosaurus muddi DRUCKENMILLER, 2002, (MOR 751) comprising the skull, the neck, and the left front flipper, on display in the Museum of the Rockies in Bozeman, Montana. The specimen was collected in Edgar, Carbon County, Montana, from the Shell Creek member of the Thermopolis Shale Formation, Upper Albian, uppermost Lower Cretaceous.[2]
Taxons Edgarosaurus

Holotype of the polycotylid[1] plesiosaur Edgarosaurus muddi DRUCKENMILLER, 2002, (MOR 751) comprising the skull, the neck, and the left front flipper, on display in the Museum of the Rockies in Bozeman, Montana. The specimen was collected in Edgar, Carbon County, Montana, from the Shell Creek member of the Thermopolis Shale Formation, Upper Albian, uppermost Lower Cretaceous.[2]

musée États-Unis Albien Crétacé +7
A more complete specimen of Wapuskanectes betsynichollsae. TMP2012.50.1.

(A) Dorsal view of the originally upside down remains recovered from north of the town of Fort McMurray, Alberta. The head and most of the neck were lost when intercepted by a grader during road construction. The right flipper was lost sometime in the Early Cretaceous prior to the final burial of the body. (B) The pelvic and abdominal regions of TMP2012.50.1 showing gastroliths (black arrows) within the body cavity that settled between the ribs of the inverted carcass and hint at a more substantial collection that is hidden inside the body cavity. Scale bars on body regions are 10 cm. Source credit: Sue Sabrowski, Royal Tyrrell Museum of Palaeontology.
Taxons Wapuskanectes

A more complete specimen of Wapuskanectes betsynichollsae. TMP2012.50.1. (A) Dorsal view of the originally upside down remains recovered from north of the town of Fort McMurray, Alberta. The head and most of the neck were lost when intercepted by a grader during road construction. The right flipper was lost sometime in the Early Cretaceous prior to the final burial of the body. (B) The pelvic and abdominal regions of TMP2012.50.1 showing gastroliths (black arrows) within the body cavity that settled between the ribs of the inverted carcass and hint at a more substantial collection that is hidden inside the body cavity. Scale bars on body regions are 10 cm. Source credit: Sue Sabrowski, Royal Tyrrell Museum of Palaeontology.

écaille musée Crétacé Crétacé inférieur +2
Jeholopterus ningchengensus Wang, Zhou, Zhang, and Xu, 2002, IVPP V 12705, Lower Yixian Formation (Early Cretaceous), China.
Taxons Jeholopterus

Jeholopterus ningchengensus Wang, Zhou, Zhang, and Xu, 2002, IVPP V 12705, Lower Yixian Formation (Early Cretaceous), China.

Chine Yixian Crétacé Crétacé inférieur +2
New wing skeleton of Forfexopterus (SDUST-V1003) from Jiufotang Formation of Early Cretaceous Jehol Biota in Jianchang, western Liaoning, northeastern China. Abbreviations: ca, carpus; co, coracoid portion; hu, humerus; mc, metacarpals I–IV; mdI–III, manual digits I–III; pt, pteroid; ra, radius; sc, scapular portion; ul, ulna; wp1–4, wing phalanges 1–4.
Taxons Forfexopterus

New wing skeleton of Forfexopterus (SDUST-V1003) from Jiufotang Formation of Early Cretaceous Jehol Biota in Jianchang, western Liaoning, northeastern China. Abbreviations: ca, carpus; co, coracoid portion; hu, humerus; mc, metacarpals I–IV; mdI–III, manual digits I–III; pt, pteroid; ra, radius; sc, scapular portion; ul, ulna; wp1–4, wing phalanges 1–4.

humérus Chine Jiufotang Crétacé +4
Ningchengopterus liuae, early Cretaceous of China. digital.
Taxons Ningchengopterus

Ningchengopterus liuae, early Cretaceous of China. digital.

Chine Crétacé Crétacé inférieur Ningchengopterus +1
Bakonydraco galaczi gen. et sp. nov.MTMGyn/3, Iharkút, Bakony Mts., Hungary, Csehbánya Formation, Santonian (Upper Cretaceous). Mandible

in dorsal (A, B), ventral (C, D), and lateral (E, F) views.
Taxons Bakonydraco

Bakonydraco galaczi gen. et sp. nov.MTMGyn/3, Iharkút, Bakony Mts., Hungary, Csehbánya Formation, Santonian (Upper Cretaceous). Mandible in dorsal (A, B), ventral (C, D), and lateral (E, F) views.

Hongrie Crétacé Santonien Bakonydraco +1
Aralazhdarcho bostobensis, ZIN PH 57/43, a proximal fragment of a left humerus in proximal (a), ventral (b), anterior (c), dorsal (d), and posterior (e) views. This specimen is from the Shakh Shakh II locality in the northeasten Aral Sea region of Kazakhstan; Bostobe Formation, Upper Cretaceous (Santonian – lower Campanian). Abbreviations: h, humeral head; pf, pneumatic foramen; uc, ulnar crest. Scale bar is 10 mm.
Taxons Aralazhdarcho

Aralazhdarcho bostobensis, ZIN PH 57/43, a proximal fragment of a left humerus in proximal (a), ventral (b), anterior (c), dorsal (d), and posterior (e) views. This specimen is from the Shakh Shakh II locality in the northeasten Aral Sea region of Kazakhstan; Bostobe Formation, Upper Cretaceous (Santonian – lower Campanian). Abbreviations: h, humeral head; pf, pneumatic foramen; uc, ulnar crest. Scale bar is 10 mm.

crête humérus écaille Kazakhstan +7
Azhdarchoid pterosaur Kariridraco dianae gen. et sp. nov. holotype (MPSC R 1056) from Lower Cretaceous of Northeastern Brazil. Skull in right lateral view. Photograph (A1), interpretative drawing (A2). Dark grey areas indicate remains of the carbonate matrix still attachaed to the skull.
Taxons Kariridraco

Azhdarchoid pterosaur Kariridraco dianae gen. et sp. nov. holotype (MPSC R 1056) from Lower Cretaceous of Northeastern Brazil. Skull in right lateral view. Photograph (A1), interpretative drawing (A2). Dark grey areas indicate remains of the carbonate matrix still attachaed to the skull.

dessin Brésil Crétacé holotype +3
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8

Actualités

Pentaceratops: Beast of the Week
Pentaceratops : la bête de la semaine
Mexique États-Unis Crétacé Crétacé supérieur Ceratopsia Dinosauria Pentaceratops
Cette semaine, nous allons découvrir encore un autre superbe dinosaure cératopsien.  Entrez Pentaceratops sternbergii ! Pentaceratops était un dinosaure herbivore qui mesurait environ vingt pieds de long du bec à la queue. En tant que cératopsien (cornes, becs et volants), il faisait partie du groupe des chasmosaurines et était étroitement apparenté au Chasmosaurus et au Coahuilaceratops pour n'en nommer que quelques-uns.  Il vivait dans ce qui est aujourd’hui le Nouveau-Mexique, aux États-Unis, à la fin du Crétacé, il y a entre 76 et 73 millions d’années.  Le nom du genre,
14/09/2025 prehistoricbeastoftheweek ⚙ Traduction automatique
Irritator: Beast of the Week
Irritateur : la bête de la semaine
reconstitution Brésil Crétacé Crétacé inférieur Dinosauria Irritator
La bête de cette semaine est un dinosaure spécial qui nous aide à mieux comprendre l'apparence et le mode de vie de sa famille.  Découvrez Irritator challengeri ! Reconstitution de la vie d'Irritator à l'aquarelle par Christopher DiPiazza. Irritator était un dinosaure carnivore qui vivait dans ce qui est aujourd'hui le Brésil au début du Crétacé, il y a entre 113 et 110 millions d'années. Du museau à la queue, il mesurait entre 6 et 8 mètres et était un mangeur de viande de son vivant.  Le nom du genre, Ir
24/08/2025 prehistoricbeastoftheweek ⚙ Traduction automatique
Critique du livre d'un paléontologue sur A Secret History of Sharks
Crétacé Permien
Depuis environ 450 millions d’années, les requins et leurs cousins ​​cartilagineux constituent une caractéristique majeure de la vie marine. Withstanding multiple cataclysmic events, most notably those at the end of the Permian and Cretaceous, and maintaining a great diversity in today’s oceans, the evolutionary history of sharks is a lengthy, gripping tale of one of the [&hellip
09/08/2025 palaeocast ⚙ Traduction automatique
Lepidotes: Beast of the Week
Lépidotes : la bête de la semaine
écaille reconstitution Crétacé Crétacé inférieur Jurassique inférieur Jurassique Dinosauria
 Cette fois-ci, nous examinerons une espèce unique de poissons préhistoriques qui nageaient dans les rivières et les lacs tandis que certains des plus grands dinosaures marchaient sur terre.  Découvrez Lepidotes ! Reconstitution à l'aquarelle de Lepidotes gigas par Christopher DiPiazza. Les Lepidotes étaient un genre de poissons osseux à fortes écailles qui vivaient dans ce qui est aujourd'hui l'Europe et l'Amérique du Nord au début du Jurassique, il y a entre 180 et 175 millions d'années.  Le genre a peut-être même persisté jusqu'au Crétacé inférieur, il y a seulement 115 millions d'années, mais
29/06/2025 prehistoricbeastoftheweek ⚙ Traduction automatique
1 2 3 4 5 6