All about dinosaurs, fossils and prehistoric animals by Everything Dinosaur team members.
28 12, 2009

Dinosaur Cake Toppers – Wonderful Dinosaur Cake Decorations

By |2024-04-18T15:08:54+01:00December 28th, 2009|Categories: Everything Dinosaur News and Updates, Everything Dinosaur Products, Main Page, Press Releases|0 Comments

Dinosaur Cake Toppers – Dinosaur Cake Decorations

In response to requests from customers and visitors to the Everything Dinosaur website who have downloaded our free party cake recipe ideas, we have added a new product to our range.  Announcing the arrival of dinosaur cake toppers, otherwise known as dinosaur cake decorations.

Dinosaur Cake Decorations

To view the Everything Dinosaur’s extensive range of dinosaur toys and gifts: Visit Everything Dinosaur.

Team members at Everything Dinosaur, have been asked to recommend inexpensive, yet robust dinosaur models suitable for putting on a dinosaur themed cake, such as a dinosaur birthday cake.  Always up for a challenge, our experts have identified a set of dinosaur and prehistoric animals that fit the bill.  Best of all once they have been used to decorate a cake, these study robust models can be quickly washed to remove any icing or other cake residues and they are ready for creative, imaginative play.  Models vary in size from 11 cm to 16 cm in our chosen cake toppers range.

Set of Five Dinosaur Cake Decorations (Dinosaur Cake Toppers)

Picture credit: Everything Dinosaur

Please note, whilst we promise to send out 5 different models, those supplied may vary from those illustrated in the picture – but whatever our experts send, you can be assured that the models will be cool, and just great for imaginative play.

Dinosaur Models Not for Eating

These models are not for eating (non-edible), but make lasting gifts once the party cake has been consumed.

Our dedicated dinosaur experts promise to supply five different prehistoric animal models in every set, five being in our opinion, an ideal number to place on a dinosaur cake.  So if you are looking for the finishing touch to your wonderful dinosaur themed birthday cake, then look no further, these handy dinosaur models are just the thing to make your young dinosaur fans swish their dinosaur tails in excitement.

A Decorated Dinosaur Birthday Cake

dinosaur cake decorations
Dinosaurs around a watering hole. An Everything Dinosaur cusotomer sent into Everything Dinosaur a picture of a birthday cake that they had made complete with dinosaur cake decorations.

Picture credit: Everything Dinosaur/Samina Babar

27 12, 2009

Time to Feel Good About Ouselves – Feedback from Customers

By |2023-01-01T10:25:48+00:00December 27th, 2009|Categories: Everything Dinosaur News and Updates, Main Page, Press Releases|0 Comments

Feedback from Everything Dinosaur Customers

With the season of goodwill towards all men definitely upon us, the team members at Everything Dinosaur have been sorting through all the many hundreds of letters and feedback forms sent in by customers over the last few months.  We work very hard to ensure that all our customers get tip-top service from us, and the feedback forms, letters and emails we receive reflect the way in which we genuinely try to help.

Feedback from Everything Dinosaur Customers

A short blog today, as we out of the office but here are some of the comments from Everything Dinosaur customers that we have received over the last few weeks.

“Very impressed with the customer service and turnaround time.  Delivered to Ireland in under a week” – Janet (Ireland)

“Thank you for including the fact sheets on prehistoric animals, an unexpected and helpful bonus” – Elizabeth (Glos)

“Magnifique” – Jean (France)

“Thank you for the very quick and prompt delivery” – Sally (Isle of Man)

“Lots of really good stuff for my autistic grandson” – Sheila (Nottinghamshire)

“Great range of models and I really appreciated the customer service” – Carl (New York)

Thank you to all our customers, to the teachers that we have helped, to the schools that we have visited and to all those nice people who have given us feedback on our performance.

Thank you.

Everything Dinosaur

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

26 12, 2009

And Darwin Mentions the Remarkable Quagga

By |2024-04-18T15:10:39+01:00December 26th, 2009|Categories: Animal News Stories, Everything Dinosaur News and Updates, Main Page|0 Comments

Darwin uses the Quagga to help explain the Laws of Variation

It is interesting to note whilst re-reading the Origin of Species, that Darwin uses the example of several genera of horses to demonstrate reversion in natural selection with striped markings appearing in the offspring of many separate species from the family Equus (horses).

Darwin Illustrates the Laws of Variation

When Darwin’s ground-breaking book the Origin of Species, or to give its full title “The Origin of Species by means of Natural Selection or The Preservation of Favoured Races in the Struggle for Life”, was first published the year was 1859.  The science of genetics did not exist and there was no known scientific mechanism for passing on inheritance.  In chapter 5, Darwin sets out his thoughts on the laws of variation in nature.  He uses Equus (horses) to illustrate how species of the same genus can vary in an analogous manner.  Analogy in this instance is describing the resemblance of structures which depends upon similarity of function, as in the wings of insects and birds.  Such structures are said to be analogous, and to be analogues of each other.

The Quagga

One of the animals used to illustrate the points made by Darwin in this chapter is the South African Quagga.  At the time Darwin wrote this book, the Quagga was still around but within a few years this particular striped horse had been hunted to extinction.

An Illustration of a Quagga (Mojo Quagga Model)

Mojo Quagga replica.

The Mojo Quagga model.

The image (above) shows a Mojo Fun Quagga replica. To view the range of animal models and figures in the Mojo Fun range: Mojo Fun Prehistoric and Extinct Models.

The Quagga had the distinctive markings of the plains Zebra on the head and neck, but the dark markings between the white bars grew darker and whiter towards the rear of the animal with the rump dark brown in colour.  Sadly, this animal was hunted to extinction for meat, hides and to preserve grazing land for domesticated animals.  The last Quagga in the wild was probably killed in the late 1870’s.  Darwin may have viewed a Quagga as there was one at London Zoo until this animal died in 1870.  The Quagga has the remarkable distinction of being one of the very few extinct animals where the date is known when they became extinct.  The last Quagga, alive on Earth was kept in a Zoo in Holland. When this animal died on August 12th 1883, these animals became extinct.

Ironically, even though Darwin et al referred to the Quagga as a separate species, the DNA of hides and the very few skeletons of this animal that remain indicate that it was actually a sub-species of the highly variable plains Zebra.  Attempts are being made to reproduce the Quagga by selectively breeding Zebra species.

The name Quagga was taken from a native language, it is supposed to be onomatopoeic as the sound made by pronouncing the word reflects the call made by the animal.

As these animals have become extinct in recent history, those exhibits seen in museum collections are not fossils but actual skeletons.  The Quagga skeleton is believed to be the rarest mammal skeleton on the planet kept in museums, as so few of these creatures were preserved and retained in Natural History Museum collections.

25 12, 2009

Merry Christmas to all our Web Log Readers

By |2023-03-03T22:52:54+00:00December 25th, 2009|Categories: Everything Dinosaur News and Updates, Main Page|0 Comments

Merry Christmas from Everything Dinosaur

Everything Dinosaur team members wish everyone a very Happy Christmas!

The great day has arrived and Christmas is finally here.  Here’s hoping that all our web log readers have a Happy Christmas and a Peaceful and Prosperous New Year.  We have lots of exciting plans for 2010, but before we get there we have perhaps the worst job of the year ahead of us – stock take.  Between now and New Year we will all be in the warehouse counting the stock, with something like 700 product lines it is a Mammoth (no pun intended) task.

Still, I’m sure someone will bring in some mince pies and biscuits and this will keep us going.

On behalf of all the team members at Everything Dinosaur have a Happy Christmas.

Our award-winning website is still providing support and service, even over the Christmas holidays: Everything Dinosaur.

24 12, 2009

Construction Workers on South African Dam Find Rare Permian Aged Fossils

By |2024-04-18T15:12:58+01:00December 24th, 2009|Categories: Dinosaur and Prehistoric Animal News Stories, Main Page|0 Comments

Permian Aged Fossils – Important Discoveries made at Dam Site

The last period of the Palaeozoic era was the Permian, it ended with the largest mass extinction event in recorded time, the greatest die off of species for 500 million years or more when at least 90% of all land and marine organisms became extinct.  Scientists are always excited when new discoveries of fossils dating from the end of the Permian are announced, they can help them to piece together the causes and the consequences of this mass extinction event.

Permian Fossils

A series of fossiliferous beds dating from the end of the Permian (250 million years ago) have been found during the construction of a new dam, in Bedford, in the Free State (South Africa).  The country of South Africa is one of the most important places in the world for finds of late Permian fossils (Karoo Basin), in a statement sent out to the press it has been stated that “scientists working at the new Ingula Pumped Storage Scheme have mad exciting discoveries of the remains of animals that walked the Earth around 250 million years ago.”

A local resident of the area discovered the first set of teeth of an ancient animal during the construction work in November.  A palaeontologist, Dr Gideon Groenewald, was then appointed as a consultant to review any other finds that may turn up as a result of the excavation work.

About 19 tons of rock was blasted and removed from the construction area for further examination.  Material collected included bone and teeth of plant-eating animals and predators, all dating from the end of the Permian.

Commenting on the new discoveries, Dr Groenewald said:

“The discoveries are of unique importance for science and help in the understanding of the pre-history of the rocks that underlie the eastern Free State.”

The fossil material will be taken to the National Museum in Bloemfontein for further studies, although it is hoped that some of the fossils will be returned to the construction site for the dam, to feature in a planned visitor centre.

The scientists responsible for the study of these new finds are hoping that data extracted will provide more insight into the Permian mass extinction event.

Visit Everything Dinosaur’s award-winning website: Visit Everything Dinosaur’s Website.

23 12, 2009

Evidence of Venomous Dinosaurs – Sinornithosaurus

By |2023-03-03T22:54:26+00:00December 23rd, 2009|Categories: Dinosaur and Prehistoric Animal News Stories, Dinosaur Fans, Main Page|1 Comment

Dromaeosaurs with Poison Fangs.  Was “Dave” Poisonous?

Scientists postulate that the dromaeosaurid Sinornithosaurus was venonmous.

The movie Jurassic Park is arguably one of the most famous dinosaur films of all time.  It was certainly one of the most successful at the box office.  However, the author of the book upon which the film is based, Michael Crichton, who sadly passed away last year, could hardly have guessed that some of the pseudo dinosaur science in the movie could actually turn out to be true.

To read more about Michael Crichton: Jurassic Park author Michael Crichton passes away.

In the first Jurassic Park movie, a venomous dinosaur is encountered.  Known as a “spitter” this theropod, loosely based on the Jurassic meat-eater Dilophosaurus, spits venom at its victims faces, rendering them blind and helpless, thus permitting these movie beasts to overpower their prey without too much danger to themselves.  The evidence of venom in Dilophosaurus is, as far as we can recall never been found, however, a group of US based researchers, along with research colleagues from China, have published a paper that indicates that another type of theropod may have been poisonous and equipped with venom delivering fangs.

A Replica of Dilophosaurus Based on the “Jurassic Park” Interpretation

ITOY Studio Dilophosaurus dinosaur model (2021)

A view of the superb crest on the ITOY Studio Dilophosaurus dinosaur model.

To view the ITOY Studio range of prehisoric animal models: ITOY Studio Prehistoric Animal Models.

Primitive Dromaeosaur

The dinosaur in question is the primitive dromaeosaur Sinornithosaurus (the name means “Chinese bird lizard”, a metre long theropod from the Jehol biota of the famous Liaoning Region of northern China. The upper teeth in the top jaw (maxilla) resemble the teeth of “rear-fanged” snakes which bite their prey and channel venom into the wound.  Rear-fanged snakes, also known as “back-fanged” snakes are so-called because their fangs are at the back of the jaws instead of the front.

The fangs themselves are grooved on the latero-anterior of the tooth (front and side surface), instead of being hollow to allow the injection of venom as in front-fanged snakes.  Rear-fanged snakes usually prey on small animals such as mice, rats, lizards, birds and frogs.  They need to use a chewing action in order to bring their prey to the rear part of their mouths to inject the poison.  A rear-fanged snake is said to be opisthoglyphous.

Perhaps the most deadly of all the rear-fanged snakes is the African Tree Snake or Boomslang (Dispholidus typus).  This arboreal snake has a range across much of the woodland terrain of sub-Saharan Africa.  The largest snakes are up to 1.4 metres long and their normal prey is chameleons, other lizards, as well as tree frogs and small birds.  The venom is extremely toxic, destroying the fibrinogen in the blood and causing internal bleeding.  One bite can prove fatal to an adult human.

The Liaoning discoveries date from approximately 135 – 110 million years ago (Cretaceous).  Animal and plant remains deposited on the floors of lakes have been preserved by fine-grained volcanic ash that rained down on the lake’s surfaces and settled on the lake bed.

Sinornithosaurus

Scientists from the University of Kansas (USA), and colleagues from the Northeastern University of Shenyang, China, have published a paper detailing the evidence of a venomous dinosaur in the scientific journal “The Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences”.  The Sino-American team point out that the some of the teeth in the maxilla of Sinornithosaurus resemble those of rear-fanged snakes which bite prey and channel venom down a groove in the teeth into the flesh of the victim.

The jaws of many Dromaeosaurs have more teeth than the fearsome tyrannosaurs, Velociraptors for example had approximately 80 teeth in the jaws whilst the fearsome Tyrannosaurus rex had approximately 60.  The shape of the teeth are also different.  One thing meat-eating dinosaurs seem to have in common is their ability to open their jaws very wide.  For a suspected rear-fanged dinosaur such as Sinornithosaurus the ability to get prey items adjacent to the venom delivering teeth would have been essential.

Diagrams of the skull and jaws of Sinornithosaurus show the over-sized teeth in the maxilla with the grooves and the sub fenestral fossa – the proposed site of a venom gland that stored the poison prior to its delivery along the tooth groove.  The upper teeth of this particular primitive dromaeosaur appear to be over-sized and fang like (maxillary fangs).

Perhaps the finest dinosaur fossil ever found, certainly one of the most complete and detailed is the fossil called “Dave”, believed to be semi-adult Sinornithosaurus.  This fossil from the Jehol biota is beautifully preserved and there is the slab and counter slab components making this little feathered dinosaur one of the most complete specimens ever discovered.  The fine, feathery filaments are clearly seen, indicating feathers in non-avian dinosaurs.  The dinosaur was named “Dave” as a cultural reference to a comedy sketch where two people try to describe the location of a friend called Dave.

The confusion surrounding their conversation reflects the problems American palaeontologists had when trying to converse with their Chinese colleagues, as they did not share a common language.

Venomous Dinosaurs?

Does this new research indicate that “Dave” was venomous?

The grooves in the teeth can be seen in the close up of the skull, the arrows point to some of the grooves.  The scientists who produced this new paper have speculated that this little carnivore predated upon the abundant birds which inhabited the wooded environment that Sinornithosaurus is believed to have lived in.

Kansas University Professor Larry Martin commented:

“This thing [Sinornithosaurus] is a venomous bird for all intents and purposes”.

Researcher David Burnham stated:

“You wouldn’t have seen it coming.  It would have swooped down behind you from a low-hanging tree branch and attacked from the back.  It wanted to get its jaws around you [hence the large gape].  Once the teeth were embedded in your skin the venom could seep into the wound.  The prey would rapidly go into shock, but it would still be living, and it might have seen itself being slowly devoured by this raptor.”

The joint US and Chinese team also state that there is evidence in the upper jaw of a venom gland.  The evidence for venomous dinosaurs can be doubted, for example, a number of creatures alive today have grooves in their teeth similar to those seen in the fossils of Sinornithosaurus but these animals are not poisonous. A primate called a Mandrill has grooves in its teeth but these are not associated with the delivery of poison.

Scientists believe the teeth are grooved to make them easier to extract from their victim as they bite or from a carcase as they feed.  The large teeth in the maxilla of this little dromaeosaur could have evolved to help this dinosaur pierce the thick plumage of birds as it attacked them and then to extract the teeth from the bird’s body as it bit down into them.  The grooves may not necessarily indicate the presence of venom.

It is believed that this little dinosaur roamed the undergrowth of the Chinese forests around 128 million  years ago (Barremian faunal stage), feeding on animals smaller than itself.  Why it needed to evolve venom if it fed on small birds is not made clear, some of the birds around at the time were less than 10cm long, not much bigger than a garden robin and when it is considered that this fast-running, predator was over 10 times the size of the birds, the evolution of a toxic venom to subdue victims seems a little superfluous.  Of course, if Sinornithosaurus lived in flocks and attacked larger prey then the ability to poison its victims would have made greater sense.

The complexity over the evolution of poisons in the Animal Kingdom was brought into focus recently when it was proved that the Komodo Dragon (Varanus komodoensis) had a venomous bite to help it overwhelm large prey items such as water buffalo and deer.  It had been thought that the largest species of lizard alive today had a bacterial bite which poisoned prey, with bacteria being introduced into any bitten wound via saliva or bacteria living on the surface of the teeth, but it has now been proved that these huge lizards are venomous.

To view the huge range of dinosaur models available from Everything Dinosaur: Dinosaur and Prehistoric Animal Models.

22 12, 2009

Children Ask Santa for a Special Dinosaur Toy

By |2024-04-18T15:13:46+01:00December 22nd, 2009|Categories: Dinosaur and Prehistoric Animal News Stories, Main Page|0 Comments

Children ask Santa for Dinosaurs at Christmas

It is traditional for children to write to Santa Claus or Father Christmas letting him know what toys they want him to bring for Christmas presents.  The media is full of stories at the moment about which types of toys have sold well and which ones have dropped in popularity.  We came across one news story that discussed the content of children’s letters to Santa and dinosaurs as pets and dinosaur toys were proving to be very popular requests.

Dinosaurs

Many letters addressed to Santa’s toy shop head quarters at the North Pole, letters from young girls and boys, contained requests for dinosaurs as Christmas presents.  The idea of a pet dinosaur is intriguing, we have often speculated what sort of dinosaur would make a good pet if they were still around today, but we have to confess that the vast majority of the dinosaur species would have been very unsuitable as domestic pets.

Children Ask Father Christmas for Dinosaurs

dinosaurs

Cute and cuddly dinosaurs. Children ask Father Christmas for dinosaurs.

Picture credit: Everything Dinosaur

To view the range of dinosaur soft toys in stock at Everything Dinosaur: Soft Toy Dinosaurs.

21 12, 2009

Still Packing and Despatching Christmas Parcels (Helpful Information for Customers)

By |2024-04-18T15:16:25+01:00December 21st, 2009|Categories: Everything Dinosaur News and Updates, Main Page|0 Comments

Everything Dinosaur – Still Packing and Despatching Christmas Parcels

Another early start for team members at Everything Dinosaur this morning, with staff braving the cold and frosty conditions to get into the office for 7am to complete the packing and despatching of Christmas orders.

For UK based customers today, (21st December), is the latest recommended posting date for Royal Mail first class deliveries, our team members have made sure that they have kept on top of packing and despatching parcels.  We try to turn around parcels as quickly as possible, in this way we are doing all we can to ensure customers don’t miss out on Christmas gifts.

Everything Dinosaur

However, even though the last recommended posting date is today for First Class services, we will still be working up until 12.30pm on Christmas Eve, packing and despatching items for customers who may not be seeing relatives until the New Year.  As for our courier service we will keep going, doing all we can to ensure a rapid turnaround.  A word of caution, a caveat if you will.  We have been notified by our courier service providers that due to the adverse weather in parts of the south and east of the country, some parcels are being delayed by between 24 and 48 hours.   A parcel sent out on Thursday afternoon and scheduled to arrive on Monday, may not actually arrive until Tuesday.

Good job we turn things round efficiently at this end, thus giving the courier and postal services as much help as we possibly can.

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

20 12, 2009

New Research Suggests Prehistoric Koalas Less Reliant on Eucalyptus than Modern Koalas

By |2024-04-18T15:17:29+01:00December 20th, 2009|Categories: Main Page, Palaeontological articles|0 Comments

New Study shows Subtle Differences between Ancient and Modern Koalas

One of the iconic animals of Australia, the cute and cuddly Koala bear is having a prehistoric makeover as a result of a new study into prehistoric Koala specimens.  Firstly, although commonly referred to as a “bear” the Koala is not, indeed there are no bear species that are native to Australia.  The extant Koala (Phascolarctos cinereus) is an endangered species in Australia.  Some still live in the wild but most can be found in protected wildlife areas.  Once hunted for their fur, these sedentary animals spend most of their lives in the trees and eat almost exclusively the leaves of the eucalyptus tree.

The word Koala was believed to have been derived from the aboriginal for “I do not drink”, these marsupials related to the Wombat group, seem to get all the moisture they need from eating eucalyptus, although this word derivation has been questioned.

Prehistoric Koala

New research published in the scientific publication “The Journal of Vertebrate Palaeontology”, contrasts the fossilised species of Koala with their modern counterparts.  By the late Palaeogene, Australia had become isolated from the rest of the world, leaving the marsupials that dominated the mammal based element of the ecosystem to thrive without competition form placental mammals.  As Australia continued to drift north (it is still moving northwards today), the humid warm conditions began to change and the continent became much drier.  The rainforests began to shrink and many animals had to adapt to the new environmental conditions.

This led to a number of adaptations in the Koala genera leading to distinctive differences between extinct and extant Koala species as published in a joint research paper by the University of New South Wales’s School of Biological, Earth and Environmental Sciences and CSIRO.  CSIRO is the Australian Commonwealth Scientific and Research Organisation.

A Shift to a Diet of Eucalyptus

The scientists report that a shift to an eucalyptus diet was probably caused by the change in the climate as Australia moved north.  In the drier conditions it was the Eucalypts that became the dominant tree genera in many areas.  Coping with the new diet caused adaptive changes in the Koala digestive and anatomical structure, as these herbivores adapted to their tough diet.  Differences in the appearance of skulls between extant Koalas and their ancient ancestors, have been revealed with the research team comparing the skulls of modern animals with those found at the Riversleigh Formation in Queensland.

Dr Julien Louys of the University of New South Wales commented:

“In order to accommodate both mechanical demands of their new diet, as well as maintaining their auditory sophistication, the Koala underwent substantial changes to its cranial anatomy, in particular the facial skeleton”.

Ancient Koala

The study of ancient Koala fossils dating from the Oligocene and Miocene epochs indicate that the Koala group diversified from the Wombat family some 40 million years ago.  The Koalas are members of the Diprotodontidae Order, named by Sir Richard Owen (he who coined the term Dinosauria), in 1866.  The modern Koala is the sole survivor of the Phascolarctidae Family.

A number of prehistoric genera of Koala are known in the Australian fossil record, two of which from the Miocene and Pliocene epochs do not share the modern Koala’s trait of being almost exclusive eucalyptus feeders.

Fossils of Koalas are extremely rare, most genera are known from fragments of skull, jaw bones and fossilised teeth.  As ancient Koalas lived in woodlands the chances of them being preserved as fossils was extremely small.

The researchers drew their conclusions about the changes to Koala diets and lifestyles after making a detailed study of the possums and extant/extinct Koala species.  The two fossil species analysed (Litokoala kutjamarpensis and Nimiokoala greystanesi) have been found at the Riversleigh site and although there are similarities between ancient and modern species there are substantial differences in the teeth, palate and jaws.

Vocalisation in Prehistoric Koalas

The researchers believe that the prehistoric Koalas also shared with their modern cousins the ability to produce loud “bellows” based on similar large bony prominences — the auditory bullae — that enclose structures in the middle and inner ear.  However the auditory bullae of the extinct Nimiokoala and Litokoala species are not as exaggerated as in the modern koala, according to team member Professor Mike Archer.

Professor Archer stated:

“Modern Koalas are extremely sedentary and vocal animals.  They produce low frequency vocalisations that pass through vegetation and can be heard up to 800 metres away, far exceeding the home range limits of male Koalas.  The fossil Koalas share similar large bony ear structures to the modern Koala and would have been well adapted to detecting vocalisations in the rain-forest environment of Riversleigh in the Miocene era.”

The unique structure of the skull of the modern Koala is a result of having to compromise in terms of evolutionary adaptations between the need to vocalise and change to a tougher diet of eucalyptus leaves claim the researchers.

Everything Dinosaur stocks a range of prehistoric mammal models: Models of Prehistoric Mammals.

19 12, 2009

A Mention for the Remarkable Macrauchenia

By |2024-04-18T15:18:52+01:00December 19th, 2009|Categories: Dinosaur Fans, Main Page|0 Comments

Macrauchenia – A Bizarre South American Hoofed Mammal

The ungulates (hoof-bearing mammals) are very familiar today, they include very well known groups of animals such as deer, pigs, cows and horses, but since they originated in the Palaeocene, plenty of time has elapsed to enable some very unusual forms to evolve.

One such unusual ungulate was the 3-metre-long Macrauchenia, a native of South America.  This type of herbivorous camel-like animal is believed to have survived up until about 20,000 years ago.  Darwin commented on the finding of some strange fossils, later identified as Macrauchenia; when he explored South America as part of his epic voyage with the British survey ship the Beagle.  Darwin thought the fossils were from an ancient Llama, an animal he would have been very familiar with as a result of this extensive travels, but Macrauchenia was a member of a primitive, placental group of mammals called litopterns (Litopterna).

A Macrauchenia Model (Part of the Wild Safari Prehistoric World Model Range)

Safari Ltd models 2018.
New prehistoric animal models in stock at Everything Dinosaur. The Macrauchenia model is in the top right segment of the image.

Macrauchenia, was a nimble quadruped with a short skull and a long camel-like neck.  The name means “big Llama”.  It lived in large herds and probably migrated across the Argentinian plains following the pattern of the seasonal rainfall.

A Model of the South American Mammal Macrauchenia

Glyptodon and Macrauchenia models to be withdrawn.
The Macrauchenia Prehistoric Animal model by Schleich

Picture credit: Everything Dinosaur

To view models of dinosaurs and other prehistoric creatures includind replicas of South American prehistoric mammals: Safari Ltd. Wild Safari Prehistoric World Models.

Fossils of this large ungulate are associated with the Lujan Formation of Argentina.  Palaeontologist think that Macrauchenia possessed a trunk (proboscis); like that of the modern South American tapir.  This would have helped these browsers to grab leaves and twigs from the scrub-like vegetation that covered the South American pampas.

Visit the award-winning Everything Dinosaur website: Everything Dinosaur.

Go to Top