All about dinosaurs, fossils and prehistoric animals by Everything Dinosaur team members.
27 08, 2009

The Original King Kong – Gigantopithecus

By |2023-03-03T17:15:31+00:00August 27th, 2009|Animal News Stories, Dinosaur Fans, Main Page|0 Comments

Gigantopithecus blacki – The Original King Kong

The original King Kong film was released in 1933.  Merian C Cooper (who produced the film) along with Edgar Wallace (the writer of the screen play) wrote the story, a twist on “Beauty and the Beast” between them.  It was the pioneering special effects engineer Willis H. O’Brien that brought King Kong, the gigantic ape and the prehistoric animals that shared Skull Island to life.  The 1925 film “The Lost World” was a very big influence on the original King Kong movie.  In the novel, the Lost World, written by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, a team of daring explorers led by Professor Challenger venture up a remote plateau and encounter prehistoric creatures.

King Kong

Kong the great ape, is worshipped by the natives on Skull Island.  Kong falls for the beautiful actress that accompanies the explorers as they visit the island.  The actress is offered to Kong as a sacrifice, but the huge simian does not eat her but steals her away into the jungle.  Kong is eventually captured and taken to New York as the “Eighth Wonder of the World”.  However, the ape escapes from his shackles and meets his end on top of the Empire State Building in perhaps one of the most memorable scenes in the whole of cinema.

A Model of a Giant Gorilla – Rebor Gorilla Model

The albino gorilla model from Rebor.

A fearsome animal! The Rebor Alpha Male Mountain Gorilla replica in 1/11 the scale (Albino). Picture credit: Everything Dinosaur.

Picture credit: Everything Dinosaur

To view the range of Rebor replicas and figures including gorilla models (whilst stocks last): Rebor Replicas.

Giant apes the size of Kong, as far as we can tell from the fossil record did not exist, Kong was the figment of the script writer’s imagination.  The fossil record for primates and early human ancestors is actually very incomplete, although there is no credible evidence to suggest that giant gorillas roamed the Earth.  However, sometimes real life can reflect fiction.  Two years after the film King Kong was released a German palaeoanthropologist Ralph von Koenigswald purchased a very large molar from a Hong Kong pharmacy.  Animal teeth and bones are commonly used in Chinese medicine, even today.

Chinese doctors used “dragons teeth” found in remote caves in a number of traditional medicines.  Koenigswald correctly identified the tooth as a molar from an unknown, giant primate species.  He went onto name the animal Gigantopithecus blacki.

Gigantopithecus blacki

Gigantopithecus fossils are known from South east Asia (China and Vietnam), this animal lived during the Pliocene Epoch but survived into the Pleistocene, before finally becoming extinct approximately 200,000 years ago.  Like Orangutans and Gorillas extant species today, the males were much larger than females.  A mature male could weigh over 500 kilogrammes and stand 3.1 metres tall.

A Scale Drawing of Gigantopithecus

Picture credit: Everything Dinosaur

Although known from a few fragments of jawbone the rest of the animal has been deduced following studies of extant species of primate.  Fortunately, for our ancestors and other hominids such as Homo erectus, Gigantopithecus was a herbivore, feeding mainly on bamboo.

26 08, 2009

New Research on Prehistoric Mammals – Anyone for Tennis?

By |2024-04-17T13:41:40+01:00August 26th, 2009|Dinosaur and Prehistoric Animal News Stories, Main Page, Palaeontological articles|1 Comment

New Research Indicates the Glyptodonts were Classy Swingers

A Sabre-toothed cat on the prowl for an easy meal, might mistake the slow moving, ground hugging glyptodont for an easy target, after all, this armoured prehistoric mammal was hardly able to flee from such a predator.  However, as well as being covered in dermal body armour, strong enough to deter even the most ferocious bites, members of the Glyptodontidae had another means of defence, and a recent scientific study has provided an insight into just how effective this defence was.

Prehistoric Mammals

A number of glyptodont species have been named and described, many with elaborate tail spikes and clubs, some of which resemble medieval maces and other brutal weapons.  A new study, from a team of South American scientists indicates that these clumsy looking beasts were able to swing their tails and clubs with the precision of a Kevin Petersen off-drive or a Roger Federer back hand.

Physicist Dr Rudemar Ernesto Blanco and his colleagues from the Faculty of Science in Montevideo, Uruguay conducted experiments to assess the mechanical efficiency of the various tail clubs found on glyptodonts.  Their research, published in the scientific journal Proceedings of the Royal Society Biology, suggest that just like cricket bats and tennis racquets, the tails of glyptodonts had a “sweet spot” and this coincided with the positioning of the largest spike or part of the tail club.

This new study provides evidence that the glyptodonts were no push overs when it came to a prehistoric pecking order.  Their tail spikes and clubs were highly adapted to deliver accurate, powerful blows on any other creature brave enough to challenge them.  These tail clubs were not just used to fend of predators, but also used to settle disputes amongst rivals, perhaps fighting over mating rights.  A number of glyptodont fossils have been discovered with broken skulls, perhaps testimony to the power and accuracy of a rival’s tail club.

Hitting the “Sweet Spot”

Stars of the tennis circuit or cricket know the importance of hitting the ball with the correct part of the bat, proper use of such equipment can prevent wrist injuries and ensure a tennis ball is hit with more power or a cricket ball is thumped effortlessly to the boundary.  It seems that natural selection may have led to the evolution of “sweet spot” amongst glyptodonts.

A Scale Drawing of a Glyptodont (Glyptodon clavipes)

Picture credit: Everything Dinosaur

To see a scale model of a Glyptodon and other scale models of dinosaurs and prehistoric mammals, take a look at the CollectA Deluxe model range: CollectA Deluxe Prehistoric Life.

Dr Blanco and his team were inspired by previous studies into the mechanics of tennis racquets and baseball bats to try to engineer a better designed instrument for the sports person to use.  A large, “sweet spot” or “centre of percussion” provides a considerable advantage.  The glyptodonts originated in South America, perhaps the absence of large mammalian predators allowed this particular family from the order Xenarthra to grow large and evolve into many numerous forms.  The fossil record shows that glyptodonts migrated into North America when the land bridge connecting South America to the northern part of the Americas was formed.  Indeed, one member of the Xenarthra is still spreading northwards to this day – the armadillo.

Dr Blanco commented:

“We found in several of the large species the centre of percussion was almost at the same position of the largest spike in the tail.  These spikes were probably useful to increase the damage during a tail blow like those in the middle age spiked mace”.

Studies of smaller species of glyptodonts carried out by the South American team indicate that smaller animals used their tail clubs in slightly different ways when compared to the larger species.  These animals probably used their tail clubs in more varied ways with less power and precision.

Asked to comment on this aspect of their research Dr Blanco stated:

“We concluded several large species of glyptodonts used the tail clubs mainly for powerful blows in ritualised fighting but the small species used the tail clubs also in other situations as defence against predators”.

It seems that many of these larger species of glyptodonts (some were up to 3 metres long), were very capable of wielding their tail clubs with devastating effect.  Perhaps the hungry Smilodon had better look elsewhere for a meal.

We at Everything Dinosaur have our very own “sweet spot” for the glyptodonts.  As a fossil group, their significance cannot be doubted after all, Charles Darwin studied them and the Glyptodon name (means grooved or carved tooth) was first used by Sir Richard Owen.  Glyptodonts are often included in Ice Age mammal box sets, although they were more associated with inter-glacial periods and warmer climates than the Northern Hemisphere mammal models that normally accompany them in these box sets.

Glyptodonts

We especially like the Glyptodon mother and baby soft toys.  It is hard to imagine these cute creatures wanting to hurt anyone.

Glyptodon Mother and Baby

Prehistoric Mammal (Glyptodont Soft Toys).

Picture credit: Everything Dinosaur

To view the range of prehistoric plush and dinosaur stuffed toys available from Everything Dinosaur: Dinosaur and Prehistoric Animal Soft Toys.

25 08, 2009

Writing Yourself into the History Books using Prehistoric Ink

By |2023-03-03T17:17:12+00:00August 25th, 2009|Dinosaur and Prehistoric Animal News Stories, Main Page, Palaeontological articles|0 Comments

Ancient Cephalopod Ink Sac – Provides Ink for Self Portrait

Although the solid piece of a belemnite’s skeleton (the guard) is a common find on the beaches of Charmouth and Lyme Regis (Dorset, England), finding the preserved soft body tissues of any cephalopod is an extremely rare event.  However, such is the state of preservation at one fossil site in Wiltshire, that not only have soft tissues been preserved but scientists have been able to reconstitute the ink from the squid-like creature’s ink sac and then write and draw with it.

Prehistoric Ink

The fossil in question is a belemnite, the scientists who made the discovery commented that the chances of finding such an exquisitely well preserved belemnite specimen, one that had soft parts including an ink sac still preserved as “a billion to one chance”.

Many scientists talk about a discovery re-writing the fossil record, but in this instance the researchers were able to liquefy the ink contained in the preserved remains of a 155-million-year-old creature and draw the animal as it would have looked in life and even sign its Latin name Belemnotheutis antiquus under this unusual self portrait.

The word “belemnite” comes from the ancient Greek for a dart.  The internal skeleton or guard (made from tough, resistant calcite),  is a very common find, particularly at the famous “belemnite beds” on the Charmouth side of the Lyme Regis bay area.

An Illustration of a Belemnite

Picture credit: Everything Dinosaur

The specimen that yielded the ink for the self portrait came from a site near Christian Malford in Wiltshire.  This location had been originally discovered by engineers building the Great Western Railway in the 19th Century but the directions to it were lost and a team of researchers from the British Geological Survey set out to see if they could re-locate it.  This is a case of real fossil detective work.  They had some original notes to go on, plus the fact that the fossil site had to be found somewhere along the Wiltshire stretch of the old Great Western Railway.

Fortunately, the team were able to rediscover this special site, and some of their subsequent excavations were filmed as part of the BBC/Open University series “The Fossil Detectives”.  The site when it was discovered in the early 1840s, was quickly recognised as being of very great importance.  A number of leading scientists in the embryonic study of palaeontology wrote papers on the specimens found at the site, including Sir Richard Owen and Gideon Mantell.

Some Fossilised Belemnite Guards (Dorset)

Picture credit: Everything Dinosaur

The pound coin provides a scale for these various pieces of fossil belemnite guard found in just a few minutes whilst searching the high water mark at Charmouth beach.

Belemnites Related to Extant Squid

Belemnites resembled squids and they probably fulfilled the same role in the marine food chain as many squid species do today. They had ten arms of equal length and each arm had as series of between 30-50 curved hooks that helped them to grasp prey and manipulate it towards their beak-shaped mouths.

Many fossils of the marine reptiles known as ichthyosaurs have belemnite hooks preserved in the area where the stomach would have been. This indicates that many of these marine predators preyed on belemnites and that they were an important food source.  Scientists have estimated that although the origins of the belemnite family can be traced back to the Palaeozoic it was during the Mesozoic that this group rapidly diversified and expanded.  An estimated 2,000 species of belemnite are known in the fossil record.  Despite being hugely successful in marine environments, no trace of belemnite fossils have ever been found in strata derived from a freshwater environment.  It seems that belemnites were entirely marine and nektonic (swimming actively).

To view a model of a belemnite and dinosaur toys we recommend that you take a look at the CollectA Prehistoric Life model range: CollectA Age of Dinosaurs Prehistoric Life Models.

Fossils of cephalopods with soft tissue elements preserved are extremely rare.  Pictures show a superbly preserved specimen of a Belemnotheutis spp.  The animal is facing towards the right and some of the hooks associated with the tentacles can be seen in the top right corner of the picture.  Belemnites probably swam backwards by projecting a jet of water through a syphon-like structure that was positioned under the front of their bodies.

We think the pictures shown, represents a Belemnotheutis spp. from the famous Solnhofen limestone deposits in Germany.

The British Geological Survey team removed a total of 240 tonnes of rock in the ten days or so they had to explore the site.  A number of extremely well preserved invertebrate fossils were found, including one of the squid-like animal that was able to yield ink from its fossilised remains.  The dark, stained area of the fossil was carefully treated with an ammonia solution which permitted the ink to be liquefied and used for the illustration.

Amazing Preservation

The amazing preservation was the result of what palaeontologists call the “Medusa effect”.  Fossilisation occurs very quickly, permineralisation is rapid and soft body parts are fossilised as well.  The soft tissue becomes mineralised with phosphatic elements and even eyes and delicate tentacles are captured by this very rare process.

Commenting on the re-discovery of the Victorian fossil site, Dr Phil Wilby of the British Geological Survey stated:

“It’s among the world’s best fossil preservation.  It’s a squid-like creature, but it’s not like anything we have in the world today.   You really don’t imagine anything so soft could be so well preserved three dimensionally.  It still looks as if it is modern squid ink.  It’s absolutely incredible to find something like this.  We felt that drawing the animal with it would be the ultimate self-portrait”.

Dr Wilby can be seen in photographs proudly showing off the drawing of the ancient marine animal.  When asked whether other drawings would be made using the prehistoric ink, Dr Wilby stated that this material was so valuable that it would be very unlikely that more drawings would be made.  Part of the remaining ink sac and ink has already been despatched to Yale University in Connecticut (United States) for further, more detailed analysis.

The British Geological Survey team remain unsure as to why conditions arose at the bottom of the sea at this precise location 155 million years ago that permitted such exquisite preservation of organic remains.

A Replica of a Belemnite (CollectA Age of Dinosaurs Popular Belemnite Model)

CollectA Belemnite model.

CollectA Age of Dinosaurs Popular Size Belemnite model.

To view the CollectA Belemnite model (whilst stocks last) and other replicas of iconic fossil animals: Everything Dinosaur Learning Materials (Fossil Replicas).

Dr Wilby stated:

“About 155 million years ago, millions of these animals were dying in this precise area.  We don’t know why that is.  In normal circumstances, the decomposition process means only the hard parts of animal are preserved, such as the bones, shell and teeth.  The odds of this find are easily a billion to one and probably much greater”.

Such fossils can tell scientists much more about these strange, squid-like creatures than the rostrum or phragmocone remains.  The fossilised soft tissue once studied will enable scientists to discover whether this particular belemnite was a fast or slow swimmer by analysing the structure of the preserved muscle fibre impressions.

More than twenty of these very special fossils have been removed from the site and added to the British Geological Survey collection at Nottingham.  It is hoped that over the next few months more data on these extinct creatures will be obtained as the fossils are prepared and studied under laboratory conditions.

One thing is for sure, a belemnite has literally managed to write its name in the fossil record.

24 08, 2009

Mammoth Tooth Found on Golf Course

By |2023-09-02T08:07:54+01:00August 24th, 2009|Dinosaur and Prehistoric Animal News Stories, Main Page|0 Comments

Mammoth Tooth Found on Golf Course

Golfers may be used to having to avoid bunkers and water hazards but having to ensure they miss the remains of a prehistoric animal on the course is certainly a bit unusual.  The members at Morrison Lake Country Club in Saranac, Michigan will be facing this prospect after a 4 kilogramme Mammoth tooth was found in a small stream on their golf course.

Mammoth Tooth

A sharp eyed groundskeeper spotted the fossil and brought it to the attention of the golf course owner.  After an examination, the strange object was confirmed as being the tooth of a Mammoth and that it would be at least 10,000 years old.  Teeth of such creatures can be found washed out of Quaternary aged gravels and do turn up in some unusual places.  However, the groundskeeper believes that other elements of the skeleton including parts of the tusk and vertebrae may also be present.

It seems that part of the golf course may have to be closed in the near future to allow palaeontologists to have a thorough examination of the area.  Think they will need more than a sand wedge to extricate Mammoth remains.

A Close-up View of a Model of a Steppe Mammoth Showing Molar Teeth

A close view of the interior of the Eofauna Scientific Research Steppe Mammoth model. Mammal teeth can help with idenfication.

A close-up view of the mouth of the Steppe Mammoth. Picture credit: Everything Dinosaur.

Picture credit: Everything Dinosaur

The model in the photograph is the Eofauna Scientific Research Steppe Mammoth replica, to view the Eofauna range of models and figures: Eofauna Scientific Research Models and Figures.

Visit the award-winning and user friendly Everything Dinosaur website: Everything Dinosaur.

23 08, 2009

Triassic Dinosaur Footprints Found up a Mountain in Switzerland

By |2022-12-26T12:06:17+00:00August 23rd, 2009|Everything Dinosaur News and Updates, Main Page|0 Comments

Evidence of Huge Triassic Carnivore Found up a Swiss Mountain

Dinosaur footprints found in Switzerland indicate the presence of a large, carnivorous theropod dinosaur during the Triassic.

Switzerland might be more famous for cuckoo clocks and Swiss army knives but it is gaining a bit of a reputation as a hot spot for Triassic dinosaur remains.  For example, back in 2007 the discovery of a huge bone bed of plateosaurs was announced by scientists from the University of Bonn.  The site in question is regarded as the largest congregation of dinosaur bones ever found in Europe.

To read more about the bone bed: Huge Bone Bed found in Switzerland.

Dinosaur Footprints

A team of researchers from the Natural History Museum in Basel have found a set of three-toed dinosaur footprints, half-way up a mountain.  The footprints, believed to be from a bipedal, theropod dinosaur are some of the largest footprints of their kind ever found in Europe.  The tracks indicate that approximately 210 million years ago, this area of Europe was stalked by a large predatory dinosaur, perhaps more than 6 metres long.  Evidence of such a large, carnivorous dinosaur from such ancient sediments has caused scientists to re-think the evolution of the theropod lineage, footprints of this size are known from the Early Jurassic but not from the Late Triassic.  This indicates that large meat-eating dinosaurs evolved earlier than previously thought.

During the Triassic, Switzerland was part of a huge landmass in the Northern Hemisphere called Laurentia, this part of the world was a coastal plain and a number of important Mesozoic fossils have been found in the country, but never before has evidence of such a large meat-eating dinosaur been discovered.  The footprints measure up to 40 cm long and indicate a very large carnivorous dinosaur, perhaps exceeding Liliensternus in size, a Late Triassic carnivore, a member of the Coelophysoidea whose fossils have been found in Germany and France.

Tracks Covering a Substantial Area

The footprints were found at approximately 3,300 metres on a mountain in Ela Nature Reserve.  During the Late Triassic this part of the world had a tropical climate and it seems that the footprints were made when this dinosaur walked across a shallow area of salty water.  The prints were fossilised and then over millions of years geological pressure forced the strata to buckle and fold forming the Alps. The prints are difficult to spot, they are only visible when direct sunlight does not shine on them, and to see them tourists will have to endure an eight hour hike.  Hopefully, casts will be made and these will be put on display at a local museum and visitor centre.

Large Theropod Dinosaurs Lived During the Early Jurassic

CollectA Deluxe 1:40 scale Saltriovenator dinosaur model.

CollectA Deluxe Saltriovenator dinosaur model.  A very large theropod dinosaur was described from Lower Jurassic sediments, indicating that some meat-eating dinosaurs might have grown very large prior to the Jurassic.

The three-toed print can be just made out in the centre of the photographs shown in the media.  As trackways have been discovered (a set of fossil footprints), the Swiss scientists hope to calculate how fast this dinosaur was moving.  Other dinosaur footprints are known from this area but they are all herbivores, most likely prosauropods such as Plateosaurus.

A Large Coelophysid or a Primitive Ceratosaur?

It is impossible to state precisely what sort of theropod dinosaur made these footprints.  It could be a very large coelophysid or perhaps a primitive ceratosaur.  The fossil record for meat-eating dinosaurs of the Late Triassic is particularly poor.

If it was a crested meat-eater it may have resembled a Liliensternus, but at this time this is pure speculation.

An Illustration of Liliensternus

Liliensternus dinosaur drawing.

Picture credit: Everything Dinosaur

To view models of carnivorous dinosaurs and other prehistoric creatures: Dinosaurs and Prehistoric Animal Models.

22 08, 2009

Pterosaur Locomotion – New Evidence to support a Quadruped Gait

By |2023-03-03T08:06:12+00:00August 22nd, 2009|Main Page, Palaeontological articles|0 Comments

More Evidence to support a Quadrupedal stance in Pterosaurs

A new, scientific study has been published that examines pterosaur locomotion.

The pterosaurs are an extinct group of flying reptiles.  Known from the fossil bearing strata dating from the Triassic to the end of the Cretaceous, these bizarre creatures were the first truly diverse and successful flying vertebrates (not withstanding one or two genera of Permian gliders).  The wings of these strange reptiles were formed out of skin that stretched from the body over the forelimbs and were supported by an elongated fourth digit.

Pterosaur Locomotion

For many years scientists have debated the aerial capabilities of these flying reptiles.  Studies of endocasts of braincases and papers written on these animal’s ability to balance have been published and many researchers now believe that these animals were very capable fliers.  However, whilst graceful and fully at home whilst airborne, how these animals moved around on the ground has long been debated.  It has been argued, almost since the first pterosaur fossils were studied in the 18th Century, that these animals were clumsy on land.

Some scientists have proposed that these animals had a bipedal stance (especially the larger pterosaurs such as the Late Cretaceous azhdarchids), whilst others have proposed a quadrupedal stance.

Studying Footprints and Tracks

Ichnologists (scientists who specialise in the study of footprints and tracks), have found a number of pterosaur trackways.  A paper was published recently on a set of tracks made by a large pterosaur and preserved in Upper Cretaceous strata in Mexico.  These indicate a quadruped gait and stance.  This evidence is supported by trace fossils from perhaps the best preserved pterosaur trackway site in the world, that found in the  Upper Jurassic limestone deposits of Crayssac in south-western France.

A number of pterosaur tracks have been identified in the Crayssac site.  Some scientists have argued that previously described pterosaur trackways may actually be crocodilian but the absence of a tail drag and five digit impressions at the French location suggest that the majority of the trackways ascribed to various types of pterosaur have been accurately described.

Different Trackways

A number of different sized and different length trackways are known from this region.  They indicate the presence of a number of different types of pterosaur in the environment at the time.  The trackways were made in shallow, inter-tidal water and some of the tracks are several metres in length.  Crucially, the tracks indicate a quadrupedal gait, and, surprisingly measurements taken by French scientists indicate that some of these pterosaurs were capable of moving quite quickly when on the ground.  How these animals took off, or landed has yet to be determined, but it is suggested that these graceful reptiles were capable of touching down or taking off in a similar fashion to modern birds.

Some of the footprints indicate that certain species had webbed feet, an adaptation to their marine environment.  Perhaps these animals filled an ecological niche similar to extant pelicans of today.

A Pterosaur Model – CollectA Deluxe/Supreme Guidraco Figure

CollectA Guidraco pterosaur model.  Study into pterosaur locomotion.

The colourful CollectA Deluxe/Supreme Guidraco pterosaur model showing the quadrupedal stance.  Model has an articulated jaw. Picture credit: Everything Dinosaur.

Picture credit: Everything Dinosaur

Everything Dinosaur stocks a wide range of pterosaur figures including the: CollectA Deluxe/Supreme model range.

21 08, 2009

Review of the Safari Wild Dinos Tapejara Model

By |2022-12-26T11:50:34+00:00August 21st, 2009|Dinosaur Fans, Everything Dinosaur News and Updates, Everything Dinosaur Products, Main Page|0 Comments

Review of the Safari Wild Dinos Tapejara Model

It is always a privilege to get our hands on a new pterosaur model, especially one that is not yet another replica of Pteranodon longiceps.  Pteranodon is perhaps, one of the most famous of all the pterosaurs (flying reptiles) and it was a spectacular animal but nonetheless, the new model of Tapejara from Safari is a welcome addition to the range of pterosaur models that are available.

Safari Wild Dinos Tapejara

Tapejara was a bizarre crested pterosaur, fossils of which are associated with the Santana Formation of Brazil.  This animal had an incredible head crest, which was up to 1 metre tall in some specimens.  Scientists believe the huge head crest was a feature of males and may have been used in elaborate courtship displays.  The crest would have produced considerable drag and made Tapejara vulnerable to crosswinds.  Large crested males would have been slow flyers and relatively unstable.

This may be an example of an aspect of natural selection.  Those males strong enough to cope with such a disadvantage may have been the ones that females were attracted to.  This is similar to the peacock’s tail, the larger and more unwieldy the tail, the greater the number of highly visible eye spots the more peahens seem to appreciate the owner!

Darwin wanted to conduct an experiment on peahens and peacocks to assess the effect of a clipped tail on the chances of a peacock attracting a mate.  As far as we can recall he never got the chance to carry out this experiment.

Tapejara Fossils

Tapejara fossils are associated with sediments that date from the Aptian and Albian faunal stages of the Cretaceous.  It is thought that this particular pterosaur lived on the coast of the newly formed Atlantic ocean.  The downturned and toothless beak seems particularly suited to snatching slippery fish from the surface of the sea.

The new Tapejara model from Safari Ltd has a bright head crest, the modellers have attempted to follow the latest scientific thinking and have tried to depict a male of this species.  The body is sculpted in such a way so as to indicate the presence of a furry body, many scientists believe that these active creatures were warm-blooded and so would have had insulating fur.  The model is hand-painted and shows fine detail and Tapejara is depicted in a flying and gliding position.

New Model of Tapejara from Safari

Picture credit: Everything Dinosaur

To view the Tapejara model from Safari Ltd and the other exciting prehistoric animals (including pterosaurs) in this model range: Safari Ltd. Wild Safari Prehistoric World.

Model Measurements

With a wingspan of 23 cm and a body length of 9 cm, the model works well with 1:72 scale figures (Tapejara wingspan estimated to be 5 metres approximately).  The Safari Ltd model does recreate the bizarre crest and the purple colouration around the rostrum works well with the blueish hue around the eyes.  The nostrils are accurately depicted, as is the large opening in the skull between the eyes and the nostrils (preorbital fenestra), which covers over half the length of the skull when viewed from the side.

In in all, this model is a welcome addition to the Wild Dinos range from Safari, although with some confusion over the actual taxonomic relationship between the various members of the Tapejara genus, the exact species is difficult to determine.  It may be a representation of T. imperator, but whatever the actual species, it is great to see a new model of a flying reptile being introduced.

20 08, 2009

Yes we have some New Pyjamas!

By |2024-04-17T13:43:38+01:00August 20th, 2009|Everything Dinosaur News and Updates, Main Page, Press Releases|0 Comments

Dinosaur Pyjamas arrive Safely

After a very long wait, our shipment of dinosaur pyjamas has finally arrived.  It seems that our pyjamas and the container in which they were in got lost and have had a very roundabout journey on their way to us.  Having arrived in England and been unloaded, the shipment was sent to the wrong despatching hub, it seems to have travelled backwards and forwards across the UK, with ourselves desperately trying to catch up with it.

The Dinosaur Pyjamas from Everything Dinosaur

Picture credit: Everything Dinosaur

Dinosaur Pyjamas

Finally, we cornered our wayward pyjamas at a depot in Coventry (West Midlands), after a bit of a tussle we were able to extract our boxes from the others that had been gathered there and our brave team were able to get their hands on the pyjama sets that we had all been waiting for.

We started early this morning to check all the new stock and put them into our on-line shop.  Pyjamas are now available, we have contacted those customers on our waiting list and will have to order more shortly.

Here’s hoping that the next batch of dinosaur themed pyjamas behave themselves.

To view the huge range of dinosaur and prehistoric animal toys and gifts available from Everything Dinosaur’s award-winning website: Visit Everything Dinosaur.

19 08, 2009

Suspending Pterosaurs Some Tips and Helpful Advice

By |2024-04-17T13:44:19+01:00August 19th, 2009|Dinosaur Fans, Everything Dinosaur News and Updates, Main Page|0 Comments

Suspending Pterosaurs – Flying Reptiles take to the Sky

Team members at Everything Dinosaur, are often asked how to theme up a child’s bedroom or classroom with dinosaurs and other prehistoric animals.  In response to the requests that we receive we send out drawing materials, puzzles, quizzes and fact sheets to help achieve the desired affect.  However, the addition of two very good value flying reptile models, just recently out of our testing programme good help in the production of your child’s or classrooms very own “Jurassic Park”.

Suspending Pterosaurs

New arrivals having just from into our on line shop are two flying reptile models.  Nice and big, robust colourful models of pterosaurs (flying reptiles).  These two characters have proved particularly popular with our young testers and their Mums and Dads, for as well as making great prehistoric animal models, an elasticated cord attached to their backs allows them to suspended from ceilings and such like to give a flying effect.

Flying Reptile Models from Everything Dinosaur

Picture credit: Everything Dinosaur

Suitable for children aged three years and upwards, these large pterosaur models (wingspans over 35 cm) are bright and colourful and have proved to be a big hit with young dinosaur fans. Whilst we may take the appearance of these particular models with a pinch of salt (a toothed Pteranodon indeed), we accept that for dinosaur fans wanting to create a flying pterosaur effect in their bedroom, these models are just perfect.

They have been taped to ceilings or secured with a drawing pin, some testers added a loop of fishing line or wool to the elasticated hang tag so they could be suspended at different heights.  They do seem to have delighted the young palaeontologists who saw them used in this way.  We may not be able to comment specifically about the anatomical accuracy of our red crested and black crested pterosaurs, but this did not prevent the testers liking them, far from it.

Flying Reptiles

To view these flying reptiles and the huge range of dinosaur and prehistoric animal models available from Everything Dinosaur’s award-winning website: Dinosaur and Prehistoric Animal Models.

These models have been put in our model section, but also in the “dinosaurs bedding and home” part of our website, as they are a cheap and simple way to help theme up a dinosaur fan’s bedroom.

The Red Crested and Black Crested Pterosaurs

Red and black crested pterosaurs. Two superb flying reptile figures.

Picture credit: Everything Dinosaur

Available individually or as a set, these two flying reptiles are a fun and cheap way to help theme a classroom or bedroom, you can have your very own Jurassic Park bedroom.  As for the colourful crests, scientists are fairly confident that pterosaurs had colour vision. They certainly had good eyesight and the crests on animals such as Tapejara, although of limited use as a stabiliser in flight may have been used to signal and communicate between individuals.

18 08, 2009

Meeting an Old Friend at the Dentist

By |2022-12-26T11:44:50+00:00August 18th, 2009|Everything Dinosaur News and Updates, Main Page|1 Comment

Getting acquainted with Guanlong whilst at the Dentist

An early morning start for one of the Everything Dinosaur team members today, with a visit to the dentist for their six monthly check up.  Whilst waiting nervously for the dental assistant to call them in, they looked around for some reading material to take their mind off the coming ordeal.

Everything Dinosaur

We have no qualms about using various tools from dentistry in our excavation work, dental picks are particularly handy when revolving elements of the matrix from around a fossil specimen, as team members at Everything Dinosaur will testify.  However, when it is our own teeth and gums that are under examination, this is a very different matter.

National Geographic

Fortunately, amongst the clutter of celebrity magazines and other light reading materials, an old National Geographic magazine was discovered and it contained one of the first articles written on the amazing dinosaur finds in the Dzungaria area of northern China.  The article described the amazing predator trap that contained the remains of an adult and an immature Guanlong (a primitive crested tyrannosaur) and two unknown ceratosaurs.  The animals had been trapped over time in an ash pit, perhaps formed when a huge sauropod roamed over soft ground recently covered in ash from a volcanic eruption.

National Geographic went onto to make a feature/documentary about this particular discovery by a joint team of American and Chinese scientists led by Xu (pronounced “shoe”) Xing.  The documentary was called “dino death trap”, reading the article helped to relieve the tension and anxiety as the patient awaited their turn.  It was nice to meet up with an old friend at the dentist.

Guanlong

Everything Dinosaur stocks a range of early tyrannosauroid figures and models.  To view some of these figures such as the CollectA Prehistoric Life model range: CollectA Age of Dinosaurs Models and Figures.

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