The Planet Dinosaur plesiosaurs (part 2)

So, time for more Planet Dinosaur plesiosaurs... In part 1 of we familiarised ourselves with the taxonomy and appearance of the plesiosaurian stars of the fourth episode of the BBC's Planet Dinosaur, 'Fight for Life'. Now we're all set up to pick apart, with ruthless abandon, the animators' painstaking efforts to bring…

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The Planet Dinosaur plesiosaurs (part 1)

Astute viewers of BBC's plesiosaur-fest on Planet Dinosaur this week may have spotted my name dash across the screen at the end credits. 'Fight for Life', the fourth in the series, was the first episode, and so far as I'm aware only episode, to plunge us into the Mesozoic oceans and introduce…

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‘Sea Monsters’ movie released

The newest film offering from National Geographic opened to 78 IMAX theaters across the United States, the largest ever opening for an IMAX movie. ‘Sea Monsters’ is set in the Late Cretaceous Western Interior Sea, and follows the journey of a growing Dolichorhynchops. The official website is now complete and up and…

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Hive Studios release plesiosaur animations

On Monday the 18th of June, Hive Studios announced the first installment of their animation library featuring some amazing animations of prehistoric animals, including some plesiosaurs. The plesiosaurs are Cryptoclidus, but it's also worth checking out the Allosaurus and Othnelia animations too. The animations feature in the ABC Science documentary "CRUDE", all…

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How big was Liopleurodon ferox?

Read more about the article How big was Liopleurodon ferox?
Mounted skeleton of Liopleurodon ferox in the Tubingen Museum, Germany (from Martill and Naish, 2000).

There is an unofficial 'Premier League' in vertebrate palaeontology which consits of the animals which attract a lot of public attention. Its members include T. rex, Seismosaurus, Argentinosaurus, Giganotosaurus and so on - the biggest and fiercest extinct animals. When the BBC broadcast 'Walking with Dinosaurs' they moved Liopleurodon ferox firmly into…

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