Tumgik
#baryonyx walkeri
joitiks · 11 months
Photo
Tumblr media
aro baryonyx !!
56 notes · View notes
confusedhadrosaur · 1 year
Photo
Tumblr media
Baryonyx walkeri
202 notes · View notes
ivyisdoinglotsofart · 4 months
Text
Tumblr media
I did some baryonyx practices, I like to give mine alligator tails just for funzies
4 notes · View notes
kateisodd · 1 year
Text
Tumblr media
Baryonyx
Mixed Media (Graphite Pencil and Adobe Photoshop CC23)
✵DO NOT REPOST WITHOUT PERMISSION✵
4 notes · View notes
ponakita · 1 year
Photo
Tumblr media
BARYONYX WALKERI
Who doesn’t need to see a bary mom fishing for her 2 adorables boopsi nosey babies ? 
71 notes · View notes
numenskog · 1 year
Photo
Tumblr media
I've been trying to learn other finishing styles these last few months, and I've decided to complicate things by trying to make a palaeoart at the same time. The whole package! It's not a scientifically accurate representation of this creature, just a 2D rendering exercise. It has been a CHANGE from inktober for sure :D #animal #animalart #baryonyx #cartoon #dino #dinosaur #illustration #jurassic #jurassicpark #palaeontology #paleo #paleoart #photoshop #scale #scaly #theropod #walkeri #warmcolours j#urassicworld #baryonyxwalkeri #styleexploration #clipstudiopaint #artistworkout #artistpractice #spinosaurid #spinosauridae https://www.instagram.com/p/CkeRrOcN97F/?igshid=NGJjMDIxMWI=
8 notes · View notes
kadalsaurus · 2 months
Text
Baryonyx walkeri sketch
Tumblr media
my attempt on baryonyx
Tumblr media
1K notes · View notes
alphynix · 1 year
Text
Tumblr media
Strange Symmetries #14: The Tooth About Baryonyx
Almost all toothed theropod dinosaurs had exactly four teeth on each of their premaxillary bones, the paired bones at the very tip of the upper snout.
Tumblr media
Spinosaurus skull by AS | Public domain
The semi-aquatic spinosaurids were an unusual exception to this with six or seven teeth per premaxilla – and one particular member of this lineage seems to have been just a little bit weirder.
Baryonyx walkeri lived during the early Cretaceous, around 130-125 million years ago, in what is now southeast England. About 9m long (~30'), it had distinctive enlarged curving claws on the first fingers of its hands, along with a long narrow snout with a "rosette" at the tip followed by a notch (a shape convergent with the jaws of modern pike conger eels).
And that premaxillary rosette had a strangely asymmetrical arrangement of teeth.
Tumblr media
The left side had six teeth, and the right side had seven.
Why? We don't know!
Baryonyx skull material is rare and fragmentary, so it's unclear if this was actually a characteristic feature of the species or if the known asymmetric rosette just represents an unusual individual.
———
NixIllustration.com | Tumblr | Twitter | Patreon
389 notes · View notes
justgoji · 9 months
Text
Baryonyx walkeri, one of the UK’s most famous dinosaurs, and one of my favorite spinosaurs.
Tumblr media
With Hatsune Miku for scale:
Tumblr media
48 notes · View notes
mesozoicmarket · 4 months
Text
Tumblr media
A dinosaur tooth of an indeterminate baryonychine spinosaurid, likely a Ceratosuchops inferodios or Riparovenator milnerae from the Wessex Formation in the Isle of Wight, England. The spinosaurids from the Wessex Formation were formerly assigned to Baryonyx walkeri which is only described from the Weald Clay Formation.
13 notes · View notes
sneksnack · 2 years
Text
Tumblr media
Baryonyx Walkeri, My favorite dinosaur of all time! ❤️🦖🐟
192 notes · View notes
spagbols-blog · 1 year
Text
Baryonyx walkeri
"Walkers Heavy Claw"
Tumblr media
Spent the better part of an hour on this. Think my anatomy is getting better :D
15 notes · View notes
zoologytopics · 1 year
Text
Baryonyx
The Baryonyx is the first ever fish-eating dinosaur to have been discovered, however do not be fooled, they likely ate other dinosaurs as well.
Paleontologists believed that they would sweep their claws back and forth in rivers before snatching a fish, similar to how a brown bear does. They likely didn’t stray far from lakes and rivers so as to remain near their likely main source of food.
They lived about 130 million years ago, either during the early or middle Cretaceous, which is odd for a theropod due to most of them having lived in the late Cretaceous.
The Baryonux was about 9 feet tall and 31 feet long and weighed approimately 2 tons. They had 2 undersized arms, a small crest on their snout and a crocodilian-like jaw with over 95 teeth. They have a largre claw on their first finger which was about 30 cm long.
Their name Baryonyx means “heavy claw”, and walkeri refers to the young fossil hunter William J. Waller who founded them.
They were discovered n 1983 by amateur paleontologist William Walker in the UK, however it wasn’t until 1986 that they were named and described by paleontologists Alan J. Charig and Angela C. Milner. It was one of the first carnivorous dinosaurs discovered in England.
They have been found in Spain, Portugal and the U.K.
They are a theropod, who is closely related to the Spinosaurus, Suchomimus, and Carcharodontosaurus. All 4 are known for their crocodilian-like snouts.
Tumblr media
4 notes · View notes
the-tigrou · 2 years
Photo
Tumblr media
Was I too lazy to make a brand new line ? Well, yep. 
 Neera is a Baryonyx walkeri 
 Neera © Me 
Adopted from StephAdopts
5 notes · View notes
lauras-happy-place · 2 years
Text
Baryonyx walkeri
('heavy claw, for William Walker')
Spinosauridae Baryonychinae
In 1983, William Walker, an amateur fossil-hound, found a huge 25 cm claw sticking out of the ground in a clay pit in Surrey, England. The spectacular claw was just the first fossil of the remains of a previously unknown theropod dinosaur, representing ~70% of the skeleton and skull. In 1986, Baryonyx was (re)introduced to the world as a 9.5 m spinosaurid, one of the few piscivorous (fish-eating) dinosaurs ever described, to that point.
Awesomely, just last year, TWO new genera of spinosaurid--Ceratosuchops and Riparovenator--were named from the Wessex Formation of southern England, which means there were at least THREE large spinosaurs competing for food, slinking around the riverbanks that became the Wessex. The Baryonyx found in the Weald Clay Formation had no such competition from other spinosaurs, at least none that we know of.
Upper Weald Clay and Wessex formations, England, UK; possibly Portugal and Spain.
Lower Cretaceous, ~130 -125 Ma.
~
Artwork by Robinson Kunz (Teratophoneus) and Rebecca Slater (Paleocolour).
Tumblr media
Daily Dino Fact #39
2 notes · View notes
cdreamie · 2 years
Text
im finally watching prehistoric planet ^_^ praying for some feathered dromaeosaurids ... u have jnooo idea how insane i was about dinosaurs i could name like 100+ from memory and recite every fact about my fave from the place itnwad sicovered to the date to the scientists. i dont really remember it now besides ummm? weald clay formation in the UK byyyyyy milner and charig baryonyx walkeri spinosauridae baryonychinae theropoda dinosauria ^_^ 1978? or something. anyways dinosaur
0 notes