This page is mainly for reviewing the accuracy of dinosaur life restorations (usually by the artists themselves, but anyone who wants an image scrutinized is welcome to post it for review). Any other image, such as size comparisons or photos of skeletal mounts, can also be posted here to review their accuracy.
If you want to submit dinosaur images for accuracy review, place them here as well as links to what you used as references. If you want to participate as reviewer, you can put the page on your watchlist. New images of any type can also be requested by including "Request:" in the section title; if submitted, such an image will thereafter be reviewed here. Sections are archived automatically after some time when a discussion stalls, to encourage speedy responses from both artists and reviewers. It is allowed to revive sections if they have been archived before being resolved, unlike regular talk page archives.
Modifications of previously uploaded amateur restorations to correct anatomical inaccuracies is encouraged (including by others than the original artists), but modifications of historical restorations are discouraged, as these should be used to show historical ideas. Modifications to restorations published in peer-reviewed journals should be uploaded as separate files, so that both versions are available.
Images that have been deemed inaccurate should be tagged with the Wikimedia Commons template "Inaccurate paleoart"
[5] (which automatically adds the "Inaccurate paleoart" category
[6]), so they can be prevented from being used and easily located for correction. User created images are not considered original research, per
WP:OI and
WP:PERTINENCE[a], but it is appreciated if sources used are listed in file descriptions (this is often requested during
WP:Featured Article reviews).
If an image is included for historical value, the image caption should explain that it is an outdated reconstruction. Images of historical interest should not be used in the taxobox or paleobox, but preferably in a section of the text discussing the history of a taxon.
Criteria for removing an image:
Images should not speculate unnecessarily beyond what has been indicated by reliable sources. Therefore, depicting overly speculative physical features, behaviors, and pathologies should be avoided, to prevent
WP:OR issues. Restorations that show serious pathologies known from fossil evidence are welcome, but should not be used as the main representation of a given taxon. These should instead show healthy, typical individuals, and not focus on unknown areas of their anatomy. Since Wikipedia is an encyclopaedia rather than an art gallery, it is not the place for artistic experimentation, and we cannot include every piece of available artwork.
Image differs appreciably from known skeletal elements.
Example: A Deinonychus reconstructed with four fingers.
Example: An oviraptorid known only from postcranial elements reconstructed with teeth, a feature made highly improbable by its phylogenetic position.
Image differs appreciably from known non-skeletal elements.
Example: An image of Microraptor lacking primary feathers.
Image differs appreciably from implied non-skeletal elements.
Example: A Nomingia depicted without feathers, since a skeletal feature (the pygostyle) and phylogenetic bracketing (more advanced than Caudipteryx) imply that it was feathered.
Example: A Ceratosaurus depicted with advanced feathers, since a skeletal feature (osteoderms) and its proximity to Carnotaurus (extensive scale impressions) imply that it lacked advanced feathers.
The discovery of Kulindadromeus and integument in exceptionally preserved
heterodontosaurids provides evidence for some form of filamentous integument being the plesiomorphic condition in Ornithischia. As loss of filamentous integument is well known in many dinosaur clades, skin impressions and thermodynamic considerations should be given priority over phylogenetic bracketing.
Image pose differs appreciably from known range of motion.
Example: Theropod dinosaurs reconstructed with overly flexed tails or pronated "bunny-style" hands.
Exception: If the range of motion is debated in the scientific literature, as is the case with sauropod neck position.
Image differs appreciably from known size estimates.
Example: An image of an adult Torvosaurus which shows it being as large as an adult Apatosaurus.
Exception: If the size of the animal is contested or the individual in question is a
gigantism-inflicted individual.
Image differs appreciably from known physiological constraints.
Example: An image of a dinosaur urinating, giving birth to live young, or making vocal sounds with its jaw, all made unlikely by phylogenetic position and physical constraints (archosaurs less basal then songbirds likely could not vocalize too much, if at all).
Image seems heavily inspired by another piece of media or directly copied from it.
Example: A image of Tyrannosaurus or Velociraptor depicting them as they appear in Jurassic Park being used in the articles on the genera, or an illustration of Deinonychus being a direct trace of another illustration of the same genus.
Image depicts a scene which is anachronistic or contradicts known geographic range.
Example: Megalosaurus bucklandii chasing an Nanosaurus agilis, two animals which did not live together.
Example: Dinosaurs from the Triassic or Jurassic depicted walking on grass, which did not exist at that time.
Exception: Photographs of life-sized models taken in parks. It should be made clear in the caption that these are models.
Approved images:
Images that have been approved by the
Wikipedia:WikiProject Dinosaurs team can now be found at
Category:Approved dinosaur images. Images that have been deemed inaccurate should be placed in the Wikimedia Commons category "Inaccurate dinosaur restorations"
[7], so they can be easily located for correction.
Err... are you sure that's not Nanshiungosaurus? ;) Nanyangosaurus is a hadrosaur, you seem to have drawn a (featherless) therizinosaur (which, aside from the lack of feathers, looks very good!).
Dinoguy215:50, 29 January 2007 (UTC)reply
looking confused for a while* i think i got it. this one is a Nanshiungosaurus. it just got the wrong name from the beggining becouse it comes out on the google search for nanyagosaurus. i do not think it is a Therizinosaur. but should this one have feathers too? i actually wanted to draw this one becouse of
this image where they look like pinguins. i also found
this otherskeletal reconstruction for the Nanayangosaurus. so i can do him too. should i also do a therizinosaur? the image on the article has copyright.-
LadyofHats20:20, 29 January 2007 (UTC)reply
You're right, a skeletal of Nanshiungosaurus comes up when you search for Nanyang--somebody must have mislabelled it. The photo of a skeleton you linked to is Nanyang, the hadrosaur. I like the way the therizinosaur images is coming along, I hope you'll finish that one as well if you decide to do Nanyang the hadrosaur. Dan Bensen painted the 'penguin' ones as very birdlike, which I think is fine--they're close relatives of oviraptorids, which were very birdlike, and one therizinosaur so far (Beipiaosaurus) has preserved feathers. I've always imagined therizinosaurs as similar to gigantic geese with big claws :) And no, Nanyangosaurus didn't have feathers--hadrosaur skin is very well documented, in specimens like "Leonardo"--they had very fine scales and leathery skin, and sometimes squared-off 'fringes' of skin down the back. Which image is copyrighted, by the way?
Dinoguy223:26, 29 January 2007 (UTC)reply
ok from the Nanshiungosaurus. i took me a bit more freedom in coloring than usual. here is [
color1]. i actually just started and well couldnt stop myself :P. so i also did a less colorfull version
here.-
LadyofHats04:45, 30 January 2007 (UTC)reply
The link seems to be working now, the site might have just gone down for a while. I really love the color/patterning on the Nanshiungosaurus, and you did a good job, again, with using color grades so suggest the presence of scales... but, unfortunetly, this is what makes them innacurate. I couldn't support the approval any maniraptor depicted without feathers. There's just too much bracketing and evidence to the contrary. :/
Dinoguy214:46, 1 February 2007 (UTC)reply
i uploaded the version with feathers. is this enough or do you need more feathers? :) . for some strange reason i dont seem to get into the website with the skeleton of the Nanyangosaurus. please if someone can get it i would apreciate if they save the image -
LadyofHats11:29, 2 February 2007 (UTC)reply
The new version looks great, LoH! Amazing how adding a few subtle suggestions of feathers here and there affects the overall look. I uploaded the Nanyang photo to my server here
[8]Dinoguy217:37, 2 February 2007 (UTC)reply
One issue is that the description on DinoData described the claws as "hoof-shaped", so I'd expect it to have the typical iguanodont "mitten", where the middle 3 fingers are bound together in a single hoof. The back of the skull has a weird lumpy thing going on, which I can't see a bony correspondant for in the photo--the neck verts are higher than the (admittadly reconstructed) skull, which should lead to a pretty smooth head-neck transition. Other than that it's shaping up nicely!
Dinoguy216:39, 7 February 2007 (UTC)reply
Yes, that's about how the hands looked. I'm not sure why such little arms would retain hooves, but I suspect the arms may not have been used for much. Their ancestors had hooves, and were partially four-legged, so for whatever reason the arms got so small, there may not have been much pressure to lose the hoof. You'll notice the pinky is free of the hoof--I wonder if this was the part used to grab at branches, etc., to help with feeding, in which case there would not have been pressure to free up the 'main' fingers.
Dinoguy215:14, 8 February 2007 (UTC)reply
You know how bunnies and various small rodents are depicted with their palms facing backwards? That's bunny hands, which most (?all) dinosaurs could not do because their forearms and wrists would not turn that way. Thus, dinosaurs were anatomically incapable of such acts as: operating bike handlebars; playing a piano; using a doorknob; or dribbling a
basketball. Instead, their hands were oriented so that in a neutral stance, the palms faced each other. Think of it as going through life perpetually ready to shake hands.
J. Spencer18:51, 20 February 2007 (UTC)reply
Well, I agree except that a dinosaur would be able to open a doorknob - try turning a doorknow with your hand at it's 3 oclock - no worries!
Debivort21:09, 20 February 2007 (UTC)reply
Allosaurus scale diagram
Hi I'm Dropzink again. Check that scale diagram.
hi, i am not so sure your diagram is acurate, for must illustrations i saw from the allosaurus the proportion (between long and high) was between 2to1 (6 meter high) and 3to1 (4 meter high).so your human is a tic too big. i would said the head of the human should end more or less at the knee of the dinosaur. Also the image you chosed is from a dinosaur that is not seen fron the side, meaning even when you make a line below it has not 12 meters but much less.
here you can see what i mean. i would sugest you take a side view, like the one found i this
image-
LadyofHats08:19, 8 February 2007 (UTC)reply
Woah! If you're going with a 12 m length, you'd better label that Saurophaganax, not Allosaurus. You'll notice in LoH's link, that's an average sized Allosarus, and a human would come up well past the knee. I'd stick with 30ft, not 40.
Dinoguy215:18, 8 February 2007 (UTC)reply
Yes I had the idea that the human is too big compared to an Allosaurus of 12 meters. But the skull is also important, Allosaurus have a 90 cm skull, the half of the average human size 1,80 m. So I had to compare the human to the head too. Some comparisons like that of Tyrannosaurus have this problem that the head have the same or more length than the human. Although that "Big Al" is not seen from the side, showing it with an incomplete size. I have to fix that problem, tomorrow is ready. Eh... and Dinoguy, the Allosaurus full size is 12 meters, the same of Saurophaganax, or not? Dropzink.
Depends. Some people think Saurophaganax is simply a gigantic Allosaurus, but recent studies suggest it really is a different genus. Pretty much all other known Allosaurus were much smaller. The biggest Allosaurus fragilis remains are about 30 ft long, I think. Epantarias is a possible 12 m Allosaurus, but when doing a scale diagram I think it's best to go with definitive remains.
Dinoguy203:01, 10 February 2007 (UTC)reply
And there are definitive remains, "Big Al" was subadult and measured 10 meters long, indicating that a fully grown Allosaurus can reached up to 12 meters. Also several websites says that. Dropzink.
I don't think that's correct, as the largest non-EpanteriasAllosaurus is listed as 9.7m here
[9]. Big Al is the specimen illustrated in LoH's link, and it looks like it's about 7 or 8 m long, not 10. The Black Hills Institute site also says "The adult skeleton was nearly eight feet high at the hips, and 26 feet in length"
[10]. In fact, the only source I can find saying Big Al is 10 m is Wikipedia, and my guess is whoever wrote that based it on the WWD show, which might have extropolated an adult Allosaurus size. I'll ask around to get the scoop on this confusing situation...
Dinoguy203:24, 11 February 2007 (UTC)reply
Always I read that "Big Al" was 7 or 8 meters long, but when I read of "Big Al" that was 10 meters long here in Wikipedia I think that this was correct, also because you have contributions in that article, and if that length was incorrect you changed it. But I said "also several websites says that" in reference of Allosaurus total length, not "Big Al" length. And if the largest Allosaurus specimen is 9.7 meters long, first we have to verify is this specimen is an adult, fully grown. Dropzink
Allosaurus is one if, if not the, most common predatory dinosaurs in the world, with dozens of good specimens and probably hundreds of fragmentary ones... I'd find it hard to believe if we've never found an adult, and the largest one known was not full grown! It has been suggested that the existance of things like Epanterias means allosaurs never stopped growing, so really big specimens might be really old individuals. However, I think it's important for scale diagrams to reflect average known size, not maximum. Otherwise, shouldn't the human we use for comparison be a 7-ft tall man like
Shaquille O'Neal or
Robert Pershing Wadlow?
Dinoguy214:05, 11 February 2007 (UTC)reply
That's a difference, Shaquille O'Neal is a basketball player, normally basketball players are tall because practice, jumps, etc. And Robert Pershing Wadlow had a tumor in the pituitary gland, thats why he was giant and indeed the world tallest human. Normally a human reaches 1,8 meters tall, people call it average size because there are taller humans but they are exceptions because sports or diseases, really a normal human is 1,8 meters tall and don't grow more, this is the maximum normal size for humans. Allosaurus never made sports for reached 12 meters, diseases can had but are exceptions. If that specimen is not fully grown, we have to put the maximum length, that is average too, people call average size to his 9 meters because the longest specimen found have this length. For example the longest specimens of Mussaurus are hatchlings and juveniles, we don't compare creatures like this because they aren't adults, like the longest Allosaurus specimen. Dropzink
I also think we should go with the average size of Allosaurus rather than the somewhat dubious fossils which might be other genera. After all, this size diagram is supposed to be representative of the average size of the genus, rather than the largest (or smallest) specimen.
Firsfron of Ronchester20:18, 11 February 2007 (UTC)reply
Maybe something like the sclae diagram on
Rhinoceros could be done as a comprimise -- color-coded overlaping profiles of a sub-adult like Big Al, an average sized adult, and an Epanterias sized giant? This would illustrate a range of known fossils size, showing both average size and dubious larger sizes. I do think they sohuld be full lateral profile, not drawn at an angle like the current example, which obscures the true dimensions of the animal and may throw off the scaling.
Dinoguy200:32, 12 February 2007 (UTC)reply
Also, I asked Scott Hartman about the Big Al issue. Relevant parts of his reply:
"I got extensive access to the cast prior to publication; it's still one of the most precise reconstructions I've done, even though I first did it almost 10 years ago. Anyways, 8 meters tops, and closer to 7.5-7.6 meters."
"First of all, there is no evidence that "Big Al" is not full grown. All of the neural arches are completely fused, and the individual has many pathologies. Of course it may simply have had a difficult life. Until/unless someone sections some long bones, our best indirect indicators suggest it was full grown."
"BTW, excluding the classic Madsen casts that we see in museums everywhere, I've seen far more fossil allosaurs in Big Al's size range, so I suspect 10m is actually higher than the average allosaur size."
He also mentions that Big Al is getting placed in a seperate species from A. fragilis (A. jimmadseni?). It might be useful, again using the rhinoceros example, to illustrate different species of Allosaurus, which probably reached different sizes. A small Big Al sized, 7.5 m individual, a standard A fragilis at 9 m, and an Epanterias/Saurophaganax (A. maximus) at 12 m.
Dinoguy200:38, 12 February 2007 (UTC)reply
Excellent idea Dinoguy! Thanks for explain me the controversies you convinced me. I have ready the scale diagram today. Dropzink
Haven't heard back from Scott but I checked the theropod database an A. "jimmadseni" is not Big Al, though Chure is naming both new species. So if you're using a Big Al sized critter in the new diagram, if you're going to label it, use the MOR cat number or A. sp. nov. for now.
Dinoguy201:54, 12 February 2007 (UTC)reply
Allosaurids scale diagram
Ready the scale diagram of every allosaurid for no controversies! Dropzink
Was busy doing basal tetrapoda, Synapsida and other critters from the Devonian-Permian period (you can see them
here,
here, and
here, but will pop up from time to time with a dinosaur. Here is Othnielosaurus based on Scott Hartman's skeletal.
ArthurWeasley07:26, 12 February 2007 (UTC)reply
Grat work! Can't spot any antotomical problems, but it is one of those boring ornithischian things ;) The devonian critters are amazing.
Dinoguy222:40, 12 February 2007 (UTC)reply
The image looks very accurate to me, at least based on the skeletal you used. Good job. The image itself is very light; is there a way you can darken it? (I can help if you don't know how). Also, I see a few bluish smudges on the picture. These wouldn't be so noticable if the image wasn't so light.
Firsfron of Ronchester04:47, 14 February 2007 (UTC)reply
Not bad, but I'd suggest three tweaks: Iggy only had three toes, so no dewclaw; I'd move the thumb spike to the leading end of the left hand, because, like theropods, it couldn't turn its hands so that the palms were backwards; and I'd de-emphasize the line where the jaws meet. Otherwise, I think it'll work fine.
J. Spencer22:04, 18 February 2007 (UTC)reply
I don't know Cas, but I always thought of Iggy as a big bulky herbivore that eats a lot of food and therefore had a big combustion chamber to process it and big muscles in the limbs to sustain the weight ;) Would a slimmer version be better?
ArthurWeasley02:11, 20 February 2007 (UTC)reply
Yes Iguanodon is heavy and bulky, a slimmer version is unnecessary. And about the beak, I think that the one above covers to the one down, like a ceratopsian. The Iguanodon have the beak closed, and therefore it must have the "two" beaks united like this
[12].
Dropzink06:59, 20 February 2007 (UTC)reply
May be or may be not. How do you know? If you look at the skull for instance here:
Image:Iguanodon skull.JPG, the upper jaw is slightly longer than the lower jaw...beaks may do the same. Anyway, I've uploaded a new version with a more classical shape for the beak...
ArthurWeasley16:10, 20 February 2007 (UTC)reply
It's too bad that there aren't better images available of the Leonardo beak, which is quite complete. I do know that Edmontosaurus beaks (upper jaw) are pretty long, overhanging the bone end by at least a couple of inches (Senckenberg mummy).
J. Spencer17:49, 20 February 2007 (UTC)reply
Thanks! However, the black and white texture is simply paper-grain, and will likely show up invariably if I keep doing shading in this style. The blue vs tan texture comes from photoshop and I put in deliberately for the scaly look.
Debivort01:44, 24 February 2007 (UTC)reply
I know that it is not a needed picture but I couldn't resist drawing the most famous meat eater of all times (actually, I was asked by someone outside the wikipedia community to do it...).
ArthurWeasley07:19, 27 February 2007 (UTC)reply
Looks fine to me. The flexed tail gave me pause but there are sleeping/nesting specimens which show theropod tails are more flexible than you'd think. I like the very primitive, partial feathering--jibes well with its phylo position, I think.
Dinoguy206:17, 28 February 2007 (UTC)reply
Hmm, I don't think the size listed on
Huaxiagnathus is correct. DinoData gives details for two specimens--the holotype, a subadult, at 1.6 m and a referred specimen (not listed as subadult, so probably close to adult size) at 1.8 m. The Wiki length of 2.5 m is probably too big, and there's no cite with it to check.
Dinoguy209:28, 1 March 2007 (UTC)reply
A simplified cladogram of Titanosauria, drawn after Curry-Rogers (2005).
I really liked how the cladogram for Iguanodon turned out, so I thought I'd try making a few others. This is Titanosauria, from the most detailed study (Curry-Rogers '05, in her sauropod book). Any thoughts? I named one clade Nemegtosaurinae that she identified as the "Rapetosaurus clade", since that's where a Nemegto-clade would be (and since we use Nemegtosauridae, so I thought there should be something with the Nemegt- on it), and she used Saltasauridae instead of Titanosauridae. Making modifications is remarkably easy, though.
If people like these diagrams, I'll take requests: just suggest a clade and an article or articles, and I'll see about making a simplified version.
J. Spencer23:18, 4 March 2007 (UTC)reply
Excellent! My only beef is the erection of a new taxa--Nemegtosaurinae has never been published, at least it's not listed in Taxon Search, so even though that clade could realistically be called Nemegtosaurinae (since almost the same clade was the basis for the name Nemegtosauridae in the first place), coining a new name on Wikipedia isn't such a great idea.
And yeah, Titanosauridae doesn't look like it's used anywhere in the literature anymore, ICZN be damned. We should probably switch over. I don't have Curry-Roger's book, but it would probably be a good overall basis for titanosaur taxonomy here.
Dinoguy200:53, 5 March 2007 (UTC)reply
I took out Nemegtosaurinae; could have sworn somebody had used it somewhere, but I guess not. It's kind of odd that she didn't use that name, but that's her prerogative. I think some of the Argentine\Brazilian workers are still using Titanosauridae, but it's really hard to say what Titanosaurus indicus is anymore. I think in the future we'll run into the same thing with Ceratops and Ceratopsinae now that we have centrosaurines with long brow horns.
J. Spencer01:37, 5 March 2007 (UTC)reply
Hey guys, while I had my files open for Archaeopteryx, I took the liberty of whipping up a size chart for Compsognathus based on Headden's skeletals of the holotype and French specimen, and a modified version of my Juravenator profile. Let me know what you think.
I have the impression that the black 1 metre scale bar is a few pixels too low? Also, some gray lines are not straight: they shift a few pixels to the left on the top and to the right at the bottom. I guess a vector format to png problem due to resizing.
Tbc221:45, 5 March 2007 (UTC)reply
I re-did the grid and scale bar just using guides in Photoshop so there shouldn't be any distortion. I also repositioned the human so his heels are 'flat on the ground' and not standing on his toes for a more accurate sense of height. How's it look?
Dinoguy223:12, 5 March 2007 (UTC)reply
Looks good. Only the middle gray lines have a width of 2px while all the other ones have a width of 1px. I have the impression that this is not on purpose (brighter colours of the middle lines makes it likely that those 2px are interpolated versions of a more narrow line). Also why do you place quotation marks round C. corallestris and not round C. longipes? If you feel like I'm nitpicking ;-)
Tbc223:34, 5 March 2007 (UTC)reply
Huh. The persistant difference in line thickness has me stumped. Must be something with the PNG format or with the way photoshop does it's geometric shapes. If you know of any way to fix it let me know, though personally I struggle to notice the difference even in the largest version (could be my screen as well). And yeah. "C. corallestris" is no longer sonsidered a valid species, but I included it to indicate that the larger specimen was the one assigned to it (Headden also did that in the skeletal I used).
Dinoguy206:39, 6 March 2007 (UTC)reply
This is because the width of the image is not a multiple of the width of the lines so photoshop has to do some interpolating when converting the vector based image to a raster image like png. It's perfectly logic that you do not see gray lines near the borders but you do see them in the middle. If the grid was more fine, you'd see the lines gradually become thicker and grayer as they are more near to the center. It doesn't bother me that much, but it was something I noticed. The quotation marks: okay.
Tbc222:55, 7 March 2007 (UTC)reply
Looks fine, although 10 m is a little bit on the high side for Plateosaurus. Should be more like 7-9 m which seems incidentally to be the right proportion for your image.
ArthurWeasley07:28, 7 March 2007 (UTC)reply
The angle between the neck and the skull is way too much. There is almost no angle: the upper vertebrae are should be connected to the back (upper) side of the skull. The mandible of Plateosaurus also has a distinctive concavity, which I do not see here.
Tbc223:01, 7 March 2007 (UTC)reply
Agree, though this should be pretty easy to fix in an outline. You may also want to take into account a brand new study which shows prosauropods like Plateosaurus were just as incapable of hand pronation as theropods, and could not use their front limbs to walk, so not even faculative quadrupedality for these guys anymore.
Dinoguy200:53, 8 March 2007 (UTC)reply
Ok I understood how change the angle between the skull and neck. But how I change the strange position of the hands? P.S.: Why you Dinoguy2 didn't said me this anatomical problems when I published the picture of Plateosaurus which I use in this image as siluete :S
Dropzink04:14, 8 March 2007 (UTC)reply
I guess because the paper just came out now. Incidently, I will have to modify my own prosauropod illustration that I've drawn some time ago (Sellosaurus). Pity, I kind of like it :(. No worries. More fun for me...
ArthurWeasley05:55, 8 March 2007 (UTC)reply
Yeah, though I wonder exactly how/when quadrupedality evolved among sauropods, and what it might have to do with their bizarro, fingerless front feet.
Dinoguy203:24, 9 March 2007 (UTC)reply
Looks pretty good, though I'm not sure about how 'flexed' the body appears to be. I imagine it's only the tail being flexed extremely to the side, but this might imply an overly long tail in that perspective. Remember, the key with theropods, from carnosaurs to modern birds, is stiff, stiff, more stiff, and practically immobile ;)
Dinoguy200:49, 8 March 2007 (UTC)reply
yep, the tail is flexed to the side but didn't you say earlier that theropod tails were more flexible than you'd think ;) ? OK, I could shorten the tail a bit (or put it on the other side, whichever you prefer).
ArthurWeasley02:08, 8 March 2007 (UTC)reply
No no, I agree it's anatomically correct. It's a quirk of perspective that makes it appear to be incorrect :) I'd leave it as-is, personally.
Dinoguy202:22, 8 March 2007 (UTC)reply
OK, so no anatomical issues. It is a very nice image. Not as fierce-looking as I imagined it. Then again, I suppose blood dripping down its jaw would be a bad idea. It works for me. Thank you, Arthur.
Firsfron of Ronchester03:25, 9 March 2007 (UTC)reply
Tyrannosaurus rex
The best T-rex skeletal pic I have ever seen, compositionally. I snagged this from Flickr, where it is Creative-Commons licensed.
Killdevil20:30, 7 March 2007 (UTC)reply
It certainly is imposing! I'd hate to look at a live one from that angle. It's a very unusual perspective, although I'm not sure it illustrates the animal in an encyclopedic way. JMHO, as always.
Firsfron of Ronchester03:33, 9 March 2007 (UTC)reply
I agree, nice image. Considering the phylogenical position of the ornithomimosaurs within the theropods, it is very likely that they were indeed feathered. No feather impression of ornithomimosaurs sensu stricto are known, but at least one related genus, Shuvuuia (an alvarezaur) has been preserved with feathery teguments (although the classification of alvarezaurs as possible ornithomimosaurs is still unclear at least to me).
ArthurWeasley17:16, 9 March 2007 (UTC)reply
One other thing is that the shape of the skull is a little off. It's a bit longer and narrower, with more pronounced concavities in the snout and lower jaw (see
[13] )
Dinoguy202:31, 10 March 2007 (UTC)reply
The new version looks good! I don't know that I'd have given it fully developed, pennaceous feathers on the body, especially if it's not fully covered in them, as those are a feature of rather advanced, fully feathered dinos... but we don't have *any* evidence of ornithomime integument so pretty much anything goes for now ;)
Dinoguy208:47, 12 March 2007 (UTC)reply
Excellent job, as usual! One question--the skull and legs/feet look a lot more robust than the thin, gracile legs and relatively gracile snout of the skeletals I have. Is this way way it was in the skeletal you used? If so, I'd just chalk it up to different morphs or interpretation of the material. Anyway, really good job on the feathers, and I like the 'rings' on the tail--Sinosauropteryx style :)
Dinoguy208:51, 12 March 2007 (UTC)reply
Yeah, of course you are right Dinoguy. Here, I've uploaded a version with more gracile feet and slender snout. Looks cuter that way... ;) Thanks
ArthurWeasley04:06, 13 March 2007 (UTC)reply
This page is mainly for reviewing the accuracy of dinosaur life restorations (usually by the artists themselves, but anyone who wants an image scrutinized is welcome to post it for review). Any other image, such as size comparisons or photos of skeletal mounts, can also be posted here to review their accuracy.
If you want to submit dinosaur images for accuracy review, place them here as well as links to what you used as references. If you want to participate as reviewer, you can put the page on your watchlist. New images of any type can also be requested by including "Request:" in the section title; if submitted, such an image will thereafter be reviewed here. Sections are archived automatically after some time when a discussion stalls, to encourage speedy responses from both artists and reviewers. It is allowed to revive sections if they have been archived before being resolved, unlike regular talk page archives.
Modifications of previously uploaded amateur restorations to correct anatomical inaccuracies is encouraged (including by others than the original artists), but modifications of historical restorations are discouraged, as these should be used to show historical ideas. Modifications to restorations published in peer-reviewed journals should be uploaded as separate files, so that both versions are available.
Images that have been deemed inaccurate should be tagged with the Wikimedia Commons template "Inaccurate paleoart"
[5] (which automatically adds the "Inaccurate paleoart" category
[6]), so they can be prevented from being used and easily located for correction. User created images are not considered original research, per
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Image differs appreciably from known skeletal elements.
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Image differs appreciably from known non-skeletal elements.
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[7], so they can be easily located for correction.
Err... are you sure that's not Nanshiungosaurus? ;) Nanyangosaurus is a hadrosaur, you seem to have drawn a (featherless) therizinosaur (which, aside from the lack of feathers, looks very good!).
Dinoguy215:50, 29 January 2007 (UTC)reply
looking confused for a while* i think i got it. this one is a Nanshiungosaurus. it just got the wrong name from the beggining becouse it comes out on the google search for nanyagosaurus. i do not think it is a Therizinosaur. but should this one have feathers too? i actually wanted to draw this one becouse of
this image where they look like pinguins. i also found
this otherskeletal reconstruction for the Nanayangosaurus. so i can do him too. should i also do a therizinosaur? the image on the article has copyright.-
LadyofHats20:20, 29 January 2007 (UTC)reply
You're right, a skeletal of Nanshiungosaurus comes up when you search for Nanyang--somebody must have mislabelled it. The photo of a skeleton you linked to is Nanyang, the hadrosaur. I like the way the therizinosaur images is coming along, I hope you'll finish that one as well if you decide to do Nanyang the hadrosaur. Dan Bensen painted the 'penguin' ones as very birdlike, which I think is fine--they're close relatives of oviraptorids, which were very birdlike, and one therizinosaur so far (Beipiaosaurus) has preserved feathers. I've always imagined therizinosaurs as similar to gigantic geese with big claws :) And no, Nanyangosaurus didn't have feathers--hadrosaur skin is very well documented, in specimens like "Leonardo"--they had very fine scales and leathery skin, and sometimes squared-off 'fringes' of skin down the back. Which image is copyrighted, by the way?
Dinoguy223:26, 29 January 2007 (UTC)reply
ok from the Nanshiungosaurus. i took me a bit more freedom in coloring than usual. here is [
color1]. i actually just started and well couldnt stop myself :P. so i also did a less colorfull version
here.-
LadyofHats04:45, 30 January 2007 (UTC)reply
The link seems to be working now, the site might have just gone down for a while. I really love the color/patterning on the Nanshiungosaurus, and you did a good job, again, with using color grades so suggest the presence of scales... but, unfortunetly, this is what makes them innacurate. I couldn't support the approval any maniraptor depicted without feathers. There's just too much bracketing and evidence to the contrary. :/
Dinoguy214:46, 1 February 2007 (UTC)reply
i uploaded the version with feathers. is this enough or do you need more feathers? :) . for some strange reason i dont seem to get into the website with the skeleton of the Nanyangosaurus. please if someone can get it i would apreciate if they save the image -
LadyofHats11:29, 2 February 2007 (UTC)reply
The new version looks great, LoH! Amazing how adding a few subtle suggestions of feathers here and there affects the overall look. I uploaded the Nanyang photo to my server here
[8]Dinoguy217:37, 2 February 2007 (UTC)reply
One issue is that the description on DinoData described the claws as "hoof-shaped", so I'd expect it to have the typical iguanodont "mitten", where the middle 3 fingers are bound together in a single hoof. The back of the skull has a weird lumpy thing going on, which I can't see a bony correspondant for in the photo--the neck verts are higher than the (admittadly reconstructed) skull, which should lead to a pretty smooth head-neck transition. Other than that it's shaping up nicely!
Dinoguy216:39, 7 February 2007 (UTC)reply
Yes, that's about how the hands looked. I'm not sure why such little arms would retain hooves, but I suspect the arms may not have been used for much. Their ancestors had hooves, and were partially four-legged, so for whatever reason the arms got so small, there may not have been much pressure to lose the hoof. You'll notice the pinky is free of the hoof--I wonder if this was the part used to grab at branches, etc., to help with feeding, in which case there would not have been pressure to free up the 'main' fingers.
Dinoguy215:14, 8 February 2007 (UTC)reply
You know how bunnies and various small rodents are depicted with their palms facing backwards? That's bunny hands, which most (?all) dinosaurs could not do because their forearms and wrists would not turn that way. Thus, dinosaurs were anatomically incapable of such acts as: operating bike handlebars; playing a piano; using a doorknob; or dribbling a
basketball. Instead, their hands were oriented so that in a neutral stance, the palms faced each other. Think of it as going through life perpetually ready to shake hands.
J. Spencer18:51, 20 February 2007 (UTC)reply
Well, I agree except that a dinosaur would be able to open a doorknob - try turning a doorknow with your hand at it's 3 oclock - no worries!
Debivort21:09, 20 February 2007 (UTC)reply
Allosaurus scale diagram
Hi I'm Dropzink again. Check that scale diagram.
hi, i am not so sure your diagram is acurate, for must illustrations i saw from the allosaurus the proportion (between long and high) was between 2to1 (6 meter high) and 3to1 (4 meter high).so your human is a tic too big. i would said the head of the human should end more or less at the knee of the dinosaur. Also the image you chosed is from a dinosaur that is not seen fron the side, meaning even when you make a line below it has not 12 meters but much less.
here you can see what i mean. i would sugest you take a side view, like the one found i this
image-
LadyofHats08:19, 8 February 2007 (UTC)reply
Woah! If you're going with a 12 m length, you'd better label that Saurophaganax, not Allosaurus. You'll notice in LoH's link, that's an average sized Allosarus, and a human would come up well past the knee. I'd stick with 30ft, not 40.
Dinoguy215:18, 8 February 2007 (UTC)reply
Yes I had the idea that the human is too big compared to an Allosaurus of 12 meters. But the skull is also important, Allosaurus have a 90 cm skull, the half of the average human size 1,80 m. So I had to compare the human to the head too. Some comparisons like that of Tyrannosaurus have this problem that the head have the same or more length than the human. Although that "Big Al" is not seen from the side, showing it with an incomplete size. I have to fix that problem, tomorrow is ready. Eh... and Dinoguy, the Allosaurus full size is 12 meters, the same of Saurophaganax, or not? Dropzink.
Depends. Some people think Saurophaganax is simply a gigantic Allosaurus, but recent studies suggest it really is a different genus. Pretty much all other known Allosaurus were much smaller. The biggest Allosaurus fragilis remains are about 30 ft long, I think. Epantarias is a possible 12 m Allosaurus, but when doing a scale diagram I think it's best to go with definitive remains.
Dinoguy203:01, 10 February 2007 (UTC)reply
And there are definitive remains, "Big Al" was subadult and measured 10 meters long, indicating that a fully grown Allosaurus can reached up to 12 meters. Also several websites says that. Dropzink.
I don't think that's correct, as the largest non-EpanteriasAllosaurus is listed as 9.7m here
[9]. Big Al is the specimen illustrated in LoH's link, and it looks like it's about 7 or 8 m long, not 10. The Black Hills Institute site also says "The adult skeleton was nearly eight feet high at the hips, and 26 feet in length"
[10]. In fact, the only source I can find saying Big Al is 10 m is Wikipedia, and my guess is whoever wrote that based it on the WWD show, which might have extropolated an adult Allosaurus size. I'll ask around to get the scoop on this confusing situation...
Dinoguy203:24, 11 February 2007 (UTC)reply
Always I read that "Big Al" was 7 or 8 meters long, but when I read of "Big Al" that was 10 meters long here in Wikipedia I think that this was correct, also because you have contributions in that article, and if that length was incorrect you changed it. But I said "also several websites says that" in reference of Allosaurus total length, not "Big Al" length. And if the largest Allosaurus specimen is 9.7 meters long, first we have to verify is this specimen is an adult, fully grown. Dropzink
Allosaurus is one if, if not the, most common predatory dinosaurs in the world, with dozens of good specimens and probably hundreds of fragmentary ones... I'd find it hard to believe if we've never found an adult, and the largest one known was not full grown! It has been suggested that the existance of things like Epanterias means allosaurs never stopped growing, so really big specimens might be really old individuals. However, I think it's important for scale diagrams to reflect average known size, not maximum. Otherwise, shouldn't the human we use for comparison be a 7-ft tall man like
Shaquille O'Neal or
Robert Pershing Wadlow?
Dinoguy214:05, 11 February 2007 (UTC)reply
That's a difference, Shaquille O'Neal is a basketball player, normally basketball players are tall because practice, jumps, etc. And Robert Pershing Wadlow had a tumor in the pituitary gland, thats why he was giant and indeed the world tallest human. Normally a human reaches 1,8 meters tall, people call it average size because there are taller humans but they are exceptions because sports or diseases, really a normal human is 1,8 meters tall and don't grow more, this is the maximum normal size for humans. Allosaurus never made sports for reached 12 meters, diseases can had but are exceptions. If that specimen is not fully grown, we have to put the maximum length, that is average too, people call average size to his 9 meters because the longest specimen found have this length. For example the longest specimens of Mussaurus are hatchlings and juveniles, we don't compare creatures like this because they aren't adults, like the longest Allosaurus specimen. Dropzink
I also think we should go with the average size of Allosaurus rather than the somewhat dubious fossils which might be other genera. After all, this size diagram is supposed to be representative of the average size of the genus, rather than the largest (or smallest) specimen.
Firsfron of Ronchester20:18, 11 February 2007 (UTC)reply
Maybe something like the sclae diagram on
Rhinoceros could be done as a comprimise -- color-coded overlaping profiles of a sub-adult like Big Al, an average sized adult, and an Epanterias sized giant? This would illustrate a range of known fossils size, showing both average size and dubious larger sizes. I do think they sohuld be full lateral profile, not drawn at an angle like the current example, which obscures the true dimensions of the animal and may throw off the scaling.
Dinoguy200:32, 12 February 2007 (UTC)reply
Also, I asked Scott Hartman about the Big Al issue. Relevant parts of his reply:
"I got extensive access to the cast prior to publication; it's still one of the most precise reconstructions I've done, even though I first did it almost 10 years ago. Anyways, 8 meters tops, and closer to 7.5-7.6 meters."
"First of all, there is no evidence that "Big Al" is not full grown. All of the neural arches are completely fused, and the individual has many pathologies. Of course it may simply have had a difficult life. Until/unless someone sections some long bones, our best indirect indicators suggest it was full grown."
"BTW, excluding the classic Madsen casts that we see in museums everywhere, I've seen far more fossil allosaurs in Big Al's size range, so I suspect 10m is actually higher than the average allosaur size."
He also mentions that Big Al is getting placed in a seperate species from A. fragilis (A. jimmadseni?). It might be useful, again using the rhinoceros example, to illustrate different species of Allosaurus, which probably reached different sizes. A small Big Al sized, 7.5 m individual, a standard A fragilis at 9 m, and an Epanterias/Saurophaganax (A. maximus) at 12 m.
Dinoguy200:38, 12 February 2007 (UTC)reply
Excellent idea Dinoguy! Thanks for explain me the controversies you convinced me. I have ready the scale diagram today. Dropzink
Haven't heard back from Scott but I checked the theropod database an A. "jimmadseni" is not Big Al, though Chure is naming both new species. So if you're using a Big Al sized critter in the new diagram, if you're going to label it, use the MOR cat number or A. sp. nov. for now.
Dinoguy201:54, 12 February 2007 (UTC)reply
Allosaurids scale diagram
Ready the scale diagram of every allosaurid for no controversies! Dropzink
Was busy doing basal tetrapoda, Synapsida and other critters from the Devonian-Permian period (you can see them
here,
here, and
here, but will pop up from time to time with a dinosaur. Here is Othnielosaurus based on Scott Hartman's skeletal.
ArthurWeasley07:26, 12 February 2007 (UTC)reply
Grat work! Can't spot any antotomical problems, but it is one of those boring ornithischian things ;) The devonian critters are amazing.
Dinoguy222:40, 12 February 2007 (UTC)reply
The image looks very accurate to me, at least based on the skeletal you used. Good job. The image itself is very light; is there a way you can darken it? (I can help if you don't know how). Also, I see a few bluish smudges on the picture. These wouldn't be so noticable if the image wasn't so light.
Firsfron of Ronchester04:47, 14 February 2007 (UTC)reply
Not bad, but I'd suggest three tweaks: Iggy only had three toes, so no dewclaw; I'd move the thumb spike to the leading end of the left hand, because, like theropods, it couldn't turn its hands so that the palms were backwards; and I'd de-emphasize the line where the jaws meet. Otherwise, I think it'll work fine.
J. Spencer22:04, 18 February 2007 (UTC)reply
I don't know Cas, but I always thought of Iggy as a big bulky herbivore that eats a lot of food and therefore had a big combustion chamber to process it and big muscles in the limbs to sustain the weight ;) Would a slimmer version be better?
ArthurWeasley02:11, 20 February 2007 (UTC)reply
Yes Iguanodon is heavy and bulky, a slimmer version is unnecessary. And about the beak, I think that the one above covers to the one down, like a ceratopsian. The Iguanodon have the beak closed, and therefore it must have the "two" beaks united like this
[12].
Dropzink06:59, 20 February 2007 (UTC)reply
May be or may be not. How do you know? If you look at the skull for instance here:
Image:Iguanodon skull.JPG, the upper jaw is slightly longer than the lower jaw...beaks may do the same. Anyway, I've uploaded a new version with a more classical shape for the beak...
ArthurWeasley16:10, 20 February 2007 (UTC)reply
It's too bad that there aren't better images available of the Leonardo beak, which is quite complete. I do know that Edmontosaurus beaks (upper jaw) are pretty long, overhanging the bone end by at least a couple of inches (Senckenberg mummy).
J. Spencer17:49, 20 February 2007 (UTC)reply
Thanks! However, the black and white texture is simply paper-grain, and will likely show up invariably if I keep doing shading in this style. The blue vs tan texture comes from photoshop and I put in deliberately for the scaly look.
Debivort01:44, 24 February 2007 (UTC)reply
I know that it is not a needed picture but I couldn't resist drawing the most famous meat eater of all times (actually, I was asked by someone outside the wikipedia community to do it...).
ArthurWeasley07:19, 27 February 2007 (UTC)reply
Looks fine to me. The flexed tail gave me pause but there are sleeping/nesting specimens which show theropod tails are more flexible than you'd think. I like the very primitive, partial feathering--jibes well with its phylo position, I think.
Dinoguy206:17, 28 February 2007 (UTC)reply
Hmm, I don't think the size listed on
Huaxiagnathus is correct. DinoData gives details for two specimens--the holotype, a subadult, at 1.6 m and a referred specimen (not listed as subadult, so probably close to adult size) at 1.8 m. The Wiki length of 2.5 m is probably too big, and there's no cite with it to check.
Dinoguy209:28, 1 March 2007 (UTC)reply
A simplified cladogram of Titanosauria, drawn after Curry-Rogers (2005).
I really liked how the cladogram for Iguanodon turned out, so I thought I'd try making a few others. This is Titanosauria, from the most detailed study (Curry-Rogers '05, in her sauropod book). Any thoughts? I named one clade Nemegtosaurinae that she identified as the "Rapetosaurus clade", since that's where a Nemegto-clade would be (and since we use Nemegtosauridae, so I thought there should be something with the Nemegt- on it), and she used Saltasauridae instead of Titanosauridae. Making modifications is remarkably easy, though.
If people like these diagrams, I'll take requests: just suggest a clade and an article or articles, and I'll see about making a simplified version.
J. Spencer23:18, 4 March 2007 (UTC)reply
Excellent! My only beef is the erection of a new taxa--Nemegtosaurinae has never been published, at least it's not listed in Taxon Search, so even though that clade could realistically be called Nemegtosaurinae (since almost the same clade was the basis for the name Nemegtosauridae in the first place), coining a new name on Wikipedia isn't such a great idea.
And yeah, Titanosauridae doesn't look like it's used anywhere in the literature anymore, ICZN be damned. We should probably switch over. I don't have Curry-Roger's book, but it would probably be a good overall basis for titanosaur taxonomy here.
Dinoguy200:53, 5 March 2007 (UTC)reply
I took out Nemegtosaurinae; could have sworn somebody had used it somewhere, but I guess not. It's kind of odd that she didn't use that name, but that's her prerogative. I think some of the Argentine\Brazilian workers are still using Titanosauridae, but it's really hard to say what Titanosaurus indicus is anymore. I think in the future we'll run into the same thing with Ceratops and Ceratopsinae now that we have centrosaurines with long brow horns.
J. Spencer01:37, 5 March 2007 (UTC)reply
Hey guys, while I had my files open for Archaeopteryx, I took the liberty of whipping up a size chart for Compsognathus based on Headden's skeletals of the holotype and French specimen, and a modified version of my Juravenator profile. Let me know what you think.
I have the impression that the black 1 metre scale bar is a few pixels too low? Also, some gray lines are not straight: they shift a few pixels to the left on the top and to the right at the bottom. I guess a vector format to png problem due to resizing.
Tbc221:45, 5 March 2007 (UTC)reply
I re-did the grid and scale bar just using guides in Photoshop so there shouldn't be any distortion. I also repositioned the human so his heels are 'flat on the ground' and not standing on his toes for a more accurate sense of height. How's it look?
Dinoguy223:12, 5 March 2007 (UTC)reply
Looks good. Only the middle gray lines have a width of 2px while all the other ones have a width of 1px. I have the impression that this is not on purpose (brighter colours of the middle lines makes it likely that those 2px are interpolated versions of a more narrow line). Also why do you place quotation marks round C. corallestris and not round C. longipes? If you feel like I'm nitpicking ;-)
Tbc223:34, 5 March 2007 (UTC)reply
Huh. The persistant difference in line thickness has me stumped. Must be something with the PNG format or with the way photoshop does it's geometric shapes. If you know of any way to fix it let me know, though personally I struggle to notice the difference even in the largest version (could be my screen as well). And yeah. "C. corallestris" is no longer sonsidered a valid species, but I included it to indicate that the larger specimen was the one assigned to it (Headden also did that in the skeletal I used).
Dinoguy206:39, 6 March 2007 (UTC)reply
This is because the width of the image is not a multiple of the width of the lines so photoshop has to do some interpolating when converting the vector based image to a raster image like png. It's perfectly logic that you do not see gray lines near the borders but you do see them in the middle. If the grid was more fine, you'd see the lines gradually become thicker and grayer as they are more near to the center. It doesn't bother me that much, but it was something I noticed. The quotation marks: okay.
Tbc222:55, 7 March 2007 (UTC)reply
Looks fine, although 10 m is a little bit on the high side for Plateosaurus. Should be more like 7-9 m which seems incidentally to be the right proportion for your image.
ArthurWeasley07:28, 7 March 2007 (UTC)reply
The angle between the neck and the skull is way too much. There is almost no angle: the upper vertebrae are should be connected to the back (upper) side of the skull. The mandible of Plateosaurus also has a distinctive concavity, which I do not see here.
Tbc223:01, 7 March 2007 (UTC)reply
Agree, though this should be pretty easy to fix in an outline. You may also want to take into account a brand new study which shows prosauropods like Plateosaurus were just as incapable of hand pronation as theropods, and could not use their front limbs to walk, so not even faculative quadrupedality for these guys anymore.
Dinoguy200:53, 8 March 2007 (UTC)reply
Ok I understood how change the angle between the skull and neck. But how I change the strange position of the hands? P.S.: Why you Dinoguy2 didn't said me this anatomical problems when I published the picture of Plateosaurus which I use in this image as siluete :S
Dropzink04:14, 8 March 2007 (UTC)reply
I guess because the paper just came out now. Incidently, I will have to modify my own prosauropod illustration that I've drawn some time ago (Sellosaurus). Pity, I kind of like it :(. No worries. More fun for me...
ArthurWeasley05:55, 8 March 2007 (UTC)reply
Yeah, though I wonder exactly how/when quadrupedality evolved among sauropods, and what it might have to do with their bizarro, fingerless front feet.
Dinoguy203:24, 9 March 2007 (UTC)reply
Looks pretty good, though I'm not sure about how 'flexed' the body appears to be. I imagine it's only the tail being flexed extremely to the side, but this might imply an overly long tail in that perspective. Remember, the key with theropods, from carnosaurs to modern birds, is stiff, stiff, more stiff, and practically immobile ;)
Dinoguy200:49, 8 March 2007 (UTC)reply
yep, the tail is flexed to the side but didn't you say earlier that theropod tails were more flexible than you'd think ;) ? OK, I could shorten the tail a bit (or put it on the other side, whichever you prefer).
ArthurWeasley02:08, 8 March 2007 (UTC)reply
No no, I agree it's anatomically correct. It's a quirk of perspective that makes it appear to be incorrect :) I'd leave it as-is, personally.
Dinoguy202:22, 8 March 2007 (UTC)reply
OK, so no anatomical issues. It is a very nice image. Not as fierce-looking as I imagined it. Then again, I suppose blood dripping down its jaw would be a bad idea. It works for me. Thank you, Arthur.
Firsfron of Ronchester03:25, 9 March 2007 (UTC)reply
Tyrannosaurus rex
The best T-rex skeletal pic I have ever seen, compositionally. I snagged this from Flickr, where it is Creative-Commons licensed.
Killdevil20:30, 7 March 2007 (UTC)reply
It certainly is imposing! I'd hate to look at a live one from that angle. It's a very unusual perspective, although I'm not sure it illustrates the animal in an encyclopedic way. JMHO, as always.
Firsfron of Ronchester03:33, 9 March 2007 (UTC)reply
I agree, nice image. Considering the phylogenical position of the ornithomimosaurs within the theropods, it is very likely that they were indeed feathered. No feather impression of ornithomimosaurs sensu stricto are known, but at least one related genus, Shuvuuia (an alvarezaur) has been preserved with feathery teguments (although the classification of alvarezaurs as possible ornithomimosaurs is still unclear at least to me).
ArthurWeasley17:16, 9 March 2007 (UTC)reply
One other thing is that the shape of the skull is a little off. It's a bit longer and narrower, with more pronounced concavities in the snout and lower jaw (see
[13] )
Dinoguy202:31, 10 March 2007 (UTC)reply
The new version looks good! I don't know that I'd have given it fully developed, pennaceous feathers on the body, especially if it's not fully covered in them, as those are a feature of rather advanced, fully feathered dinos... but we don't have *any* evidence of ornithomime integument so pretty much anything goes for now ;)
Dinoguy208:47, 12 March 2007 (UTC)reply
Excellent job, as usual! One question--the skull and legs/feet look a lot more robust than the thin, gracile legs and relatively gracile snout of the skeletals I have. Is this way way it was in the skeletal you used? If so, I'd just chalk it up to different morphs or interpretation of the material. Anyway, really good job on the feathers, and I like the 'rings' on the tail--Sinosauropteryx style :)
Dinoguy208:51, 12 March 2007 (UTC)reply
Yeah, of course you are right Dinoguy. Here, I've uploaded a version with more gracile feet and slender snout. Looks cuter that way... ;) Thanks
ArthurWeasley04:06, 13 March 2007 (UTC)reply