Install Theme

Your web-browser is very outdated, and as such, this website may not display properly. Please consider upgrading to a modern, faster and more secure browser. Click here to do so.

stay on task, kid

novelties and art reference. • art blog. • comic. • archive. • about.
May 1 '12
dendroica:

The more we discover about dinosaurs, the more these “terrible lizards” resemble otherworldly birds. None more so than the microraptor, which paleontologists have meticulously reconstructed in a paper in Science. Not only was the microraptor about the size of a modern-day crow, it looked very crow-like according to paleontologists, even down to the discovery that it sported dark iridescent feathers, the first yet recorded in nature. “This study gives us an unprecedented glimpse at what this animal looked like when it was alive,” said co-author Mark Norell, chair of the American Museum of Natural History’s Division of Paleontology, in a statement. “While we’ve nailed down what color this animal was, even more importantly, we’ve determined that Microraptor, like many modern birds, most likely used its ornate feathering to give visual social signals.” (via Meet the dinosaur that looks like a crow)

dendroica:

The more we discover about dinosaurs, the more these “terrible lizards” resemble otherworldly birds. None more so than the microraptor, which paleontologists have meticulously reconstructed in a paper in Science. Not only was the microraptor about the size of a modern-day crow, it looked very crow-like according to paleontologists, even down to the discovery that it sported dark iridescent feathers, the first yet recorded in nature. “This study gives us an unprecedented glimpse at what this animal looked like when it was alive,” said co-author Mark Norell, chair of the American Museum of Natural History’s Division of Paleontology, in a statement. “While we’ve nailed down what color this animal was, even more importantly, we’ve determined that Microraptor, like many modern birds, most likely used its ornate feathering to give visual social signals.” (via Meet the dinosaur that looks like a crow)

242 notes (via scientificillustration & dendroica)Tags: microraptor dinosaur scientific illustration Iridescence wings

  1. twerkingbutterflies reblogged this from scientificillustration
  2. kettleraptor reblogged this from scientificillustration
  3. barleywine reblogged this from gypsymane
  4. gypsymane reblogged this from oneeyeoneheart
  5. kaleidosea reblogged this from leopardhawk
  6. leopardhawk reblogged this from oneeyeoneheart
  7. oneeyeoneheart reblogged this from ethnogeometrik
  8. fullmoononthehighway reblogged this from pythias
  9. sovami reblogged this from dendroica
  10. cael-lilikoi reblogged this from pythias
  11. pooryorickdraw reblogged this from scientificillustration and added:
    Confession: I’m still not used to the idea of dinosaurs with feathers. I grew up on smooth/scaly dinos and any...
  12. aw8tingannabell reblogged this from daughterofavalon
  13. daughterofavalon reblogged this from manticoreimaginary
  14. manticoreimaginary reblogged this from pythias
  15. warriorbirdy reblogged this from pythias
  16. dunkleo reblogged this from pythias
  17. firmscaldinghandshake reblogged this from pythias
  18. nocturnaldiscoveries reblogged this from dendroica
  19. suztan reblogged this from pythias
  20. cephalopodqueen reblogged this from pythias
  21. arbitrarypterodactylsauce reblogged this from pythias
  22. piratmisc reblogged this from pythias