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Boring Update
I’m busy.
Pictures pending...
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Just remembered where I saw this before
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Jurassic World (2015)
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Fantasia (1940)
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American flamingoes in the bathroom at Miami Zoo, before the arrival of Hurricane Georges in 1998.
Photo: Max Trujillo
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European robin (Erithacus rubecula) territorial display
Photo: Marti08
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Leucism in the common blackbird (Turdus merula)
Photo: Marti08
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Falconry (Wild Goose Caught by Shogun’s Falcon)
Umezawa Saiga, 19th century
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White Woods
Beaver Pond Trail
©twilightsolo-photography //  facebook - flickr - instagram
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Alaskacephale gangloffi
Extinct Late Cretaceous
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i asked the palaeoblr server for some animals to draw that get the short end of the stick when it comes to accurate, non-shrink wrapped reconstructions, and here are two of the three species i was suggested: sinornithosaurus and postosuchus
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sometimes it’s incredible to think that hummingbirds are the smallest dinosaurs ever
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The Lady Amherst’s pheasant is a species native to China and Myanmar, although there was a feral population in England until 2015, which is now believed to be extinct. The male is known for its brilliant plumage, the black and white “cape” of which can be spread in display (last three photos). The female of the species is a much more subdued brown (shown in photo 5). The Lady Amherst’s pheasant is closely related to the golden pheasant. (x x x x x x)
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Prince Creek
Watched by a foraging troodontid, a herd of Arctic hadrosaurs walk along a moonlit beach in Alaska, 69 mya. Inspired by trackways left in volcanic ash at Prince Creek. The species depicted have unclear status at this moment in time, so let's call them Troodon sp. and Ugrunaaluk kuukpikensis/Edmontosaurus regalis.
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It’s a Tanystropheus in a trenchcoat.
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Edmontosaurus doodles
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Little Jack Horner Sat in the corner, Eating a Christmas pie; He put in his thumb, And pulled out a plum, And said, “What a good boy am I!
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