Episode 133: Drawing and Painting Dinosaurs
January 2nd, 2022 | by David Marshall
We learn to draw and paint dinosaurs with Dr Emily Willoughby
January 2nd, 2022 | by David Marshall
We learn to draw and paint dinosaurs with Dr Emily Willoughby
October 1st, 2021 | by David Marshall
We're introduced to Kairuku waewaeroa, a new giant penguin from New Zealand
October 17th, 2017 | by David Marshall
‘Dinosaurs of China’ at Wollaton Hall, Nottingham, UK, is a one-time only world exclusive exhibition of dinosaurs. Featuring fossils and [&hellip
July 29th, 2017 | by Chris Barker
The Late Cretaceous rocks of Ganzhou, China, are rife with oviraptorids. We have seen these strange theropods before here at [&hellip
July 18th, 2017 | by Guest Blogger
“Must go faster!” yells Dr Ian Malcolm, as his mangled, yet rather toned, body was hauled away in the Jurassic [&hellip
July 7th, 2017 | by Guest Blogger
Implications for Dinosaur Nesting Behaviour and Thermophysiology Oviraptorosaurs had received a pretty bad reputation when they first popped onto the [&hellip
June 26th, 2017 | by Guest Blogger
With advancements in computed tomography (CT) scanning comes an increased understanding of the internal structures preserved in extant and extinct [&hellip
June 18th, 2017 | by Guest Blogger
Articles on dinosaur neurovasculature are like buses: you wait for most of the Phanerozoic for one to arrive and then [&hellip
October 7th, 2015 | by David Marshall
Birds have a long evolutionary history; the earliest of them, the famed Archaeopteryx, lived 150 million years ago in what [&hellip