All about dinosaurs, fossils and prehistoric animals by Everything Dinosaur team members.
5 04, 2008

Review of the New Pop-up Facts Dinosaurs

By |2024-04-12T08:30:22+01:00April 5th, 2008|Book Reviews, Main Page|0 Comments

Pop-up Facts Dinosaurs (Review)

Time to step back to the Mesozoic (Age of Reptiles) and meet some of the amazing animals the lived during the Triassic, Jurassic and the Cretaceous.

The Front Cover of Pop-Up Facts Dinosaurs

Picture credit: Everything Dinosaur

To view the range of toys, models, learning materials and games available: Visit Everything Dinosaur.

A hardback book that is beautifully illustrated contains lots and lots of facts and information about dinosaurs and other prehistoric animals.  Young readers can wonder at the huge plant-eating sauropods that pop out of the page at you, examine fossil evidence of the colossal meat-eating dinosaurs and study marine reptiles as well as pterosaurs.  Page after page of truly impressive pop-ups, packed with fascinating facts, tabs to pull, flaps to lift and wheels to turn.  Even the front cover which depicts a theropod dinosaur in 3-D relief has a dinosaur eye that looks straight back at the reader.

Recommended for young dinosaur fans aged 5+ a super, dinosaur book, crammed with facts and very educational, this is a great example of a book about dinosaurs for kids.

An Example of the Fact Filled Pop-up Pages

Picture credit: Everything Dinosaur

Visit Everything Dinosaur’s Homepage: Everything Dinosaur.

4 04, 2008

Mammoths in the Cinema

By |2022-11-14T07:35:39+00:00April 4th, 2008|Dinosaur and Prehistoric Animal News Stories, Main Page|0 Comments

Mammoths in the Cinema – 10,000 B.C. and all That

No prehistoric movie or television series seems complete without at least one Mammoth being included.  Now that CGI has come to the fore, depicting these large elephants with their long shaggy fur coats is not too much of a problem.  Although we have been told by technicians and CGI operators that getting the fur to look realistic on screen is quite a challenge, at least with dinosaurs (feathered ones excepted), the computer experts are not encumbered with these skin features and dinosaurs are to some extent a little easier to re-create.

Mammoths in the Cinema

From studies of the exceptionally well preserved Mammoths from Siberia, scientists have a fairly good understanding of how the hair on these creatures looked.  The coat consisted of two basic layers, a coarse outer layer of guard hairs and an undercoat that helped insulate these animals from the cold.  This is a typical adaptation to cold, harsh environments seen in many mammal species, both extinct and extant (around today).

The outer guard hairs were up to six times thicker than human hair and in large specimens some of these hairs grew to over a metre in length.  This outer coat provided effective water-proofing.  The inner coat was made up of thinner, softer and far shorter hairs this coat helped provide insulation and keep out the cold.  The coat colour in Mammoths varies with some dark brown whilst others appear almost reddish/orange in colour.  We have the frozen carcases of Siberian Mammoths to largely thank for providing us with a Mammoth colour chart.

Frozen Mammoth Carcases Provide a Guide to Mammoth Colouration

Mammoth coat colours.

Strawberry blonde Mammoth from Everything Dinosaur.

Picture credit: Everything Dinosaur

The picture (above) shows a model of a Papo juvenile Woolly Mammoth that has been altered digitally to show variation in colour. To view the Papo range: Papo Prehistoric Animal Models.

Many of the models Everything Dinosaur supplies are hand-painted.  Each model has tiny variations which is very appropriate given that the structure and format of every Mammoth’s coat would have been slightly different – just as the hair on our heads is different from person to person.

To see a model of Woolly Mammoth and other prehistoric animal figures: Prehistoric Animal Models.

The degree of hairiness varied with the Mammoth species, Columbian types (Mammuthus columbi) were less hairy than the Woolly types (M. primigenius), perhaps an adaptation to a slightly less harsh climate.  It is likely that Mammoths had a spring moult to produce a lighter summer coat.

Their heavy coats were not their only source of insulation, many Mammoth fossils have revealed a fat layer up to 10 cm thick just below the skin surface.  This would have provided exceptional insulation, an example of adaptation to colder climates and a food store inside the animal to help it overcome leaner times.

3 04, 2008

Man saves Wife from Crocodile

By |2023-02-25T08:14:41+00:00April 3rd, 2008|Animal News Stories, Main Page|0 Comments

Husband saves Wife from a Saltwater Crocodile Attack

A husband and wife had a lucky escape from a crocodile attack in a remote part of the Australian outback.  The couple were swimming in a small creek whilst holidaying in an area 100 miles southwest of Darwin in Australia’s Northern Territory.

Saltwater Crocodile Attack

The attack was from a Saltwater, otherwise known as an Estuarine crocodile (Crocodylus porosus).  These animals are the largest species of crocodile on the planet and the heaviest of all the reptiles around today.  Adult males can reach lengths in excess of 20 feet and weigh up to 1 Tonne.  The largest Estuarine recorded was shot in Sumatra, Indonesia in 1978, it was reputed to be over 28 feet long and weighed more than 1300 kilogrammes.

The woman suffered leg and hand injuries but things could have been much worse had it not been for the bravery of her partner, who jumped on the 8 foot crocodile’s back in the successful rescue.  Acting like a real-life “Crocodile Dundee” the man leaped onto the reptile and this forced the crocodile to let the woman go.

The wife was taken to the Royal Darwin Hospital to have her wounds treated, a spokesman for the hospital commented: “the husband’s very swift and diligent actions have saved the day”.

This is the fourth crocodile incident that has been reported in recent weeks from the Northern Territory.  A few days earlier police were forced to open fire on a crocodile as it closed in on a swimmer who had accepted a dare to swim to an offshore crocodile trap.  A crocodile attacked a boat of tourists in the same area and in January a man rescued his colleague from a crocodile but accidentally shot his unlucky co-worker in the process.  Well, if it is not your day, it’s not your day!

Many parts of the Northern Territories have seen an increase in the number of Saltwater crocodiles, now that hunting has been largely banned.  Unfortunately, these aggressive predators are very capable of attacking people and once above 8 foot in length they are officially classed as man-eaters.  There has been a call for a controlled cull in order to reduce the number of large crocodiles in the area.

To read more about the problems caused by the growing population of Estuarine crocodiles in the Northern Territory: Invasion of the Crocodiles.

2 04, 2008

The Tuatara has a Surprise in its Genes

By |2022-11-14T07:29:22+00:00April 2nd, 2008|Animal News Stories, Main Page|0 Comments

The Tuatara is the fastest-known Evolving Animal

A team of researchers have identified the rare New Zealand Tuatara as the fastest evolving animal yet to be fully studied, at least at the molecular level.

The Tuatara (Sphenodon punctatus) belongs to an otherwise extinct reptilian group called the Rhynchocephalians.  These reptiles are characterised by the presence of a beak-like upper jaw.  Although the origin of this particular group of reptiles can be traced back to the Early Triassic, just one genus (one species) remains today.   To estimate the rate of evolution taking place within a species the research team studied DNA samples taken from ancient Tuatara remains dating from approximately 8,000 years ago and compared them to samples taken from living Tuatara.

New Zealand Tuatara

The scientists found that although these little reptiles have remained largely unchanged physically over very long periods of evolution, they are evolving, at a molecular level faster than any other animal yet examined.

“What we found is that the Tuatara has the highest molecular evolutionary rate that anyone has measured,” commented researcher David Lambert from the Allan Wilson Centre for Molecular Ecology and Evolution in New Zealand.

Many scientists have hypothesised  that molecular evolution would be fastest in animals whose physical form, or morphology, also evolved swiftly.  The Tuatara findings dispute this, perhaps indicating that there is no relationship between the rate of molecular change and the rate of physical change in a species. This small reptile, now confined to a few small islands of the coast of New Zealand (but also recently introduced to the New Zealand mainland once again), closely resembles the extinct reptile Homoeosaurus which dates from the Early Jurassic (180 million years ago).

David Lambert and his team have studied molecular change in a number of animals, extinct and extant populations, including Adelie penguins, foxes, lions, horses and the Cave Bear (Ursus spelaeus).  Of these animals, the Tuatara has a faster rate of DNA evolution.   The information will assist scientists as they try to conserve this endangered species and provide guidance as to future areas of study.  How helpful this rapid molecular evolution has been to the Tuatara genus has yet to be determined.  These animals are reputed to be extremely long lived with estimated life spans of between 100 and 300 years.

Living in Burrows

The reason why the Tuatara has survived at all is more down to luck than judgement.  These small lizard-like animals live in burrows and are relatively slow moving, their populations are soon overwhelmed if predatory mammals such as rats are introduced into their habitats.  The fact that New Zealand was isolated from other land masses before land mammals become abundant probably resulted in the survival of this species, the speedy DNA of the Tuatara had nothing to do with this species survival.

The Tuatara remains severely threatened, this representative of an ancient reptile order cannot compete against introduced animals such as rats and cats.  Indeed, even when these predators have been eliminated from the Tuataras few remaining strongholds, they may still face extinction.  As global temperatures rise this is affecting the balance of males and female Tuataras being hatched from eggs.  The warmer climate has meant that more eggs are hatching as males (temperature seems to be a determinant factor in deciding the sex of Tuatara offspring).  Fewer females in the population could lead to a critical decline in the breeding population.

To read more about attempts to re-introduce the Tuatara to the New Zealand mainland: Living Fossil helped back to New Zealand mainland.

1 04, 2008

Dinosaur Death Throes – Not what they Seem

By |2022-11-14T07:27:36+00:00April 1st, 2008|Dinosaur and Prehistoric Animal News Stories, Educational Activities, Main Page, Palaeontological articles|2 Comments

Dinosaur Death Throes – Not what they Seem

One of the questions we were asked recently was why do all meat-eating dinosaurs seem to fossilise in the same way?  A young dinosaur fan had pointed out that a picture in his dinosaur book showed two Coelophysis skeletons one of which had its neck and head curved backwards over the spine with the tail curling back on itself.  In the same book, there was a picture of a Compsognathus fossil with the head and neck also curved over the back.  How could these two dinosaurs have died in the same way?

Dinosaur Death Throes

We are familiar with these exhibits, the Coelophysis probably come from the famous Ghost Ranch deposits of New Mexico, where over 100 individual skeletons of this early Triassic theropod have been discovered.  The Compsognathus example probably relates to the nearly complete Solnhofen specimen from southern Germany.  This fossil was discovered in the lithographic limestone deposits in the same area as the first Archaeopteryx fossils.  Compsognathus was a resident of the Jurassic, Coelophysis the Triassic, how could these two animals separated by millions of years have died in virtually the same posture?  Indeed, when some of the Archaeopteryx fossils are studied, then they too show the head typically arched backwards over the spine.  The tail does not curve round to any real extent, perhaps the tails of these early birds were too ossified to permit such movement, or maybe it is to do with the conditions of fossilisation at the southern German sites.

This phenomenon is not restricted to just some dinosaurs, a large number of articulated theropod (meat-eaters) fossils show this trait.  Such postures are also seen in pterosaur fossils and birds.  As we have driven along on our travels in the USA and elsewhere we have observed birds that have hit car windscreens and been killed.  As the carcase dries out under the hot sun, the neck often adopts a curving posture.

An Exhibit of an Articulated Albertosaurus skeleton (Royal Tyrrell Museum)

Picture credit: Everything Dinosaur

The picture above shows a typical example of an articulated theropod fossil with the head and tail curving towards each other.

Most scientists believe that this common posture is caused by either one or a combination of two factors of post-mortem processes (after death).  The first of these processes involves muscle contractions causing the neck and tail to bend over.  Secondly, the posture could be caused by the the drying out of tendons and ligaments within the body as it remains exposed to the sun.  Whether it is due to rigor mortis or the desiccation of the body, both possibilities indicate that these bodies must have remained intact on the ground for sometime before finally being buried.

Examples from the Natural World

These are valid explanations, borne out from our own observations of roadkill in hot climates, however, having visited Africa on numerous occasions we also note how rare it is for dead animals to lay undisturbed without attracting the attention of scavengers.  One of our colleagues remembers working in the Masai Mara of Kenya when they had the misfortune to come across the body of a mature hippopotamus that had died only a few metres away from a small oasis which was being studied so that local elephant movements could be plotted.

Over the next few days, the pungent aroma of the rotting beast attracted a number of scavengers including hyenas, lions, marabou storks as well as vultures and the resident Nile crocodile.  It was not long before the remains of the hippo and been well and truly taken to pieces.  There were plenty of scavengers around in the Mesozoic, why were many of the bodies of the theropods not disturbed by other animals looking for an easy meal and the remains scattered about?

Another intriguing explanation for this death pose has recently been put forward.  There are certain conditions, most closely associated with warm-blooded animals such as mammals and birds that can lead to this posture.  A posture that is adopted when the animal is very much alive.  One such condition is opisthotonos, this can lead to animals adopting a very rigid posture with the head and tail curving towards each other.  This severe arching is caused by irritation of the membranes surrounding the brain or the spinal cord.  In humans this condition is associated with meningitis in infants.  Opisthotonos can also occur if there is brain damage (most notably the cerebellum), or any form of brain impairment leading to disruption to the nervous system.

There is some evidence of face biting amongst tyrannosaurs (another theropod), could many meat-eaters have suffered brain injuries when competing with other dinosaurs, this might have resulted in the condition that led to the “death pose” posture.

A Model of A T. rex Carcass

Dinosaur death throes

T. rex corpse.  An example of dinosaur death throes.

The picture (above) shows a model of a T. rex carcase, with the figure in the typical “death” position.  This model is part of the CollectA Age of Dinosaurs Popular range: CollectA Age of Dinosaurs Popular Range.

As this disorder is most commonly associated with higher animals (mammals and birds), which are warm-blooded could this theory if true, also lend weight to the hypothesis that dinosaurs, at least the active, hunting, theropods were endothermic?

31 03, 2008

The New Young Explorers Kit – Dinosaurs

By |2024-04-12T08:46:08+01:00March 31st, 2008|Educational Activities, Everything Dinosaur News and Updates, Main Page|0 Comments

Start Exploring Dinosaurs Activity Pack

Uncover some of the secrets about dinosaurs and other prehistoric animals with this fun-filled and educational “Explore Dinosaurs Activity Pack”.   This new Dinosaur themed kit contains lots and lots of activities, there is a giant Tyrannosaurus rex poster, the chance to design your own dinosaur stickers, make dinosaur trading cards and even the opportunity to come up with your own new species of prehistoric animal.

Young Explorers Kit

The kit comes in a handy box and contains everything required to complete the tasks, including paint brush, watercolour pencils, pencil sharpener and even an eraser (to help make your mistakes extinct).  This American designed set even comes complete with a 16 page palaeontologist’s handbook with lots of information and facts about dinosaurs.

The Start Exploring – Discover Dinosaurs Activity Kits

Picture credit: Everything Dinosaur

In total there are 11 different posters featuring a variety of monsters from the Mesozoic, on test with our families and focus groups this kit has proved very popular.  Favourite items included the giant Tyrannosaurus rex poster to colour in – great for bedroom walls and the 3-D model of a meat-eater.  Art supplies are included in the kit, so it is a kind of self-contained activity centre of  young palaeontologists, there is even a little booklet that advises on different art techniques to try.  It is a great addition to the Everything Dinosaur toys and gifts range.

To see the kit and other craft items: Visit Everything Dinosaur.

30 03, 2008

Frog Blog – Week 3 – Our Little Black Commas

By |2022-11-11T22:20:01+00:00March 30th, 2008|Animal News Stories, Educational Activities, Everything Dinosaur News and Updates, Main Page|0 Comments

Frog Blog – Week 3 – Little Black Commas

Our frog spawn in the office pond is approximately 2 weeks old and despite the very bad weather we have experienced in the last few days there are signs that things are beginning to happen.  The weather has been quite cold, although it is hard to say that it has been unseasonal, with the early Easter it is easy to forget that we are still in March and on the whole the winter has been relatively mild.

Only one warm sunny day over the last week, we have had heavy rain and blustery showers but fortunately not too many bonfires from the construction workers nearby polluting the water with ash drifting into the pond.  The water temperature remains cold but a close examination of the frog spawn shows that the little black dots we started with inside their protective jelly are beginning to change.  The majority of them are showing some definition, we have a lot of “little black commas”, the eggs are showing signs of development and we can see the start of a defined head end and a tail.

A Close up of the Frog Spawn

Picture credit: Everything Dinosaur

Despite the cold weather the spawn is beginning to change, the picture shows that the embryos are developing, becoming more elongated and showing signs of progress.  We suspect that the water temperature will still be determining the rate of development, perhaps the warmer weather forecast for next week will help the spawn to hatch in the next 10 days or so.

Only one adult frog has been observed in the pond during office hours.  Ironically, it has taken to sitting next to the frog spawn using the surround pond week (Elodea) to support its weight.  We were a little concerned about this frog, normally frogs confine themselves to the margins of the pond, where there is more cover.  However, this frog, (we think it is a male), seemed quite happy to sit amongst the pond week in the centre of the pond.

Some of us started to speculate that this was the father, checking on his family to be, but this was probably a bit too fanciful for the more rational members of the team.  Amphibians do adopt many strategies when it comes to looking after and raising their young.  It is not just the so called higher forms of life, the mammals and birds that adopt a benevolent attitude to their offspring.

29 03, 2008

Helpfully Demonstrating Dinosaurs Growing up Using New Dinosaur Models

By |2024-04-12T08:40:49+01:00March 29th, 2008|Adobe CS5, Dinosaur Fans|0 Comments

Juvenile Dracorex Dinosaurs

One of the rewarding things that team members at Everything Dinosaur can do is to use dinosaur models to show young dinosaur fans what we think juvenile dinosaurs looked like.  As dinosaurs grew so they changed, developing characteristics such as horns and crests that are associated with mature adult animals.  To illustrate this point, we choose to use our photoshop skills to modify an image of the Wild Safari Dinos Dracorex dinosaur model.  In this way, we could demonstrate ontogeny in prehistoric animals.

Dracorex – A Mature Individual with a Juvenile

Dinosaur models show

Dinosaur models show different growth stages (Wild Safari Dinosaurs).

Picture credit: Everything Dinosaur

The adult in the foreground is larger, the scutes more pronounced and prominent.  The cheek colours are much brighter along with the yellow throat pouch, these are signs that this is mature adult ready to breed.  The much smaller juvenile lacks these features, the ornamentation on the head is very underdeveloped in comparison with the adult.  In this way, Dracorex dinosaur models can be used to illustrate aspects of the ontogeny of the Dinosauria.

To view Everything Dinosaur’s range of dinosaur models: Dinosaur and Prehistoric Animal Models.

28 03, 2008

Estimating the Size of Smilodon (Sabre-Tooth Cats)

By |2022-11-11T22:16:12+00:00March 28th, 2008|Dinosaur Fans, Everything Dinosaur News and Updates, Main Page|7 Comments

Estimating the Size of Sabre-Tooth Cats

With the Roland Emmerich directed film 10,000 B.C. proving popular with UK cinema audiences over the Easter holidays, staff at Everything Dinosaur have seen a resurgence in queries and questions related to prehistoric mammals.

Woolly mammoths and Sabre-tooth cats (Smilodon spp.) tend to be the most popular of all the now extinct mega fauna of the Cenozoic, the fact that these animals play a prominent role in this new film will no doubt add to their popularity.  Certainly both animals are very enigmatic, although the size of these prehistoric beasts tends to be taken a little bit out of proportion by the Hollywood special effects teams.

Take the fearsome Sabre-Tooth cat for example, the best known and most researched species would be S. fatalis and the two sub-species from North America.  The superbly preserved remains removed from the La Brea tar pits have provided a huge amount of fossil evidence.  This fierce predator was not the largest of the Smilodon species.  Smilodon populator of South America, is believed to have been a little larger, perhaps exceeding 1.2 metres at the shoulder.

The impression re-produced below gives a rough idea of the scale of  the largest Smilodon species when compared against a human (not that we would recommend anyone attempting to get too close to one of these creatures)!

A Sketch Illustrating the Size of the large Smilodon (S. populator) compared to a Person

Picture credit: Everything Dinosaur

Smilodon

The largest Smilodon would have been about the size of a male African lion (Panthero leo), but up to 300 kilogrammes in weight, making them much more heavy set than the largest of the big cats around today.

When it comes to the “top dogs” in the cat family the Panthero genus (lions) may have the last laugh, several extinct sub-species of Panthero leo may have been even larger than the biggest Smilodon.  It seems that those “big cats” such as S. populator, belonging to the sub-family of Machairodontinae, had some pretty strong competition from other members of the Felidae. Take for example the American lion (Panthero leo atrox), a contemporary of Smilodon fatalis, this fearsome beast is estimated to have been about the same height and weight of the largest of the Smilodon genus but less compact, perhaps reaching lengths in excess of 2.5 metres.

American Lion

Although the American lion is known from the La Brea fossil deposits, relatively few remains have been found when compared to other carnivores such as the Dire wolves (C. dirus) and Smilodon fatalis. Perhaps the lack of fossils indicates that there were relatively fewer lions within the ecosystems that the fossil record represents, or maybe the American lion had a different hunting strategy and preferred habitat that took it away from La Brea.  Perhaps the American lion was just a little too smart to get caught in the tar pits.

Ironically the largest carnivore from the La Brea deposits is not a member of the Felidae at all.  The Short-faced bear (Arctodus simus), was the largest carnivorous animal around the area of La Brea towards the end of the Pleistocene.  A massive animal 1.5 metres high at the shoulder, capable of raising itself to a height of 3 metres or more and weighing perhaps as much as 800 kilogrammes, if a member of the Felidae stumbled across one of these bears, it would be better off getting out of its way.  The Short-faced bear is reputed to have been the largest bear to have ever existed.  Compared to modern brown bears its limbs were much longer and it had a short, broad muzzle (hence its name).  The jaws were extremely powerful and this animal would have had an awesome bite.

Little is known about the behaviour and habits of the Short-faced bear.  Chemical analysis of fossilised bones indicate a predominately carnivorous diet, but whether this bear was an active hunter of a scavenger is unknown.  It was certainly capable of chasing off both Smilodon fatalis and the American Lion in order to take over a recent kill.

Everything Dinosaur stocks an extensive range of prehistoric mammal figures: Prehistoric Mammal Figures.

27 03, 2008

A Beautiful Sabre-Tooth Cat Up Close

By |2024-04-12T08:31:24+01:00March 27th, 2008|Adobe CS5, Everything Dinosaur Products|0 Comments

Capturing the Essence of a Sabre-Toothed Cat

Team members at Everything Dinosaur have tried to capture the essence of the Smilodon genus in a single picture.  It was obviously really, we had to focus on these huge upper canines that give these cats their name.  Remember these animals were not closely related to extant tigers.

Smilodon

A Close up of a Model of the Head of a Sabre-Toothed Cat

A Picture of a Sabre-Toothed Cat

Can’t call it a Sabre-Toothed Tiger.

Picture credit: Everything Dinosaur

Slowly but surely Everything Dinosaur team members are getting more confident when it comes to using Photoshop CS5 and other tools.  It really was an excellent Smilodon model to practice our skills on.

Everything Dinosaur stocks a wide range of Smilodon models and replicas, some of which are museum quality scale models.  To view a selection of prehistoric mammal models and figures available from Everything Dinosaur, including Smilodon replicas: Models of Prehistoric Mammals.

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