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$5By Fabrizio De Rossi This is a Royalty Free image suitable for every educational, editorial, or commercial purposes.
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By Fabrizio De Rossi This is a Royalty Free image suitable for every educational, editorial, or commercial purposes.
The dinosaur Tyrannosaurus rex was an apex predator from the Cretaceous Period. It is depicted in this art preying upon a Triceratops prorsus, possibly one of its common meals. Illustration by Sergey Krasovskiy
The most famous of all dinosaurs, Tyrannosaurus rex, was also among the last. It was found in rocks in the western US and Canada that were formed in the last million years of the Cretaceous Period. Illustration by Sergey Krasovskiy
Two Tyrannotitan chubutensis engage in facial biting as a test of dominance. Despite the name, Tyranotitan is only distantly related to tyrannosaurs, but instead close kin to other Southern Hemisphere carnosaurs. Illustration by Sergey Krasovskiy
Ubirajara was a small meat-eating dinosaur with long decorative filaments on its shoulders. Its fossils were found in Lower Cretaceous rocks in Brazil, but smuggled to Germany by fossil dealers. Illustration by Julio Lacerda
Udanoceratops was a leptoceratopsid ceratopsian dinosaur from the Late Cretaceous of Mongolia. Illustration by Andrey Atuchin
By Lucas Lima The “vampire squid from hell” looks like a cross between a squid and an octopus, but it’s the last surviving member of its own lineage. It lives in an extreme depth where oxygen is scarce and not many other creatures are able to thrive. This is a Royalty Free image suitable for every…
By Fabrizio De Rossi Velafrons, sailed forehead, is a big duck-billed dinosaur whose fossils were found in Mexico. It lived 72 million years ago and was similar to other round-crested hadrosaurs like Corythosaurus and Hypacrosaurus. This is a Royalty Free image suitable for every educational, editorial, or commercial purposes.
A flock of the early bird Gobipteryx flies by the turkey-sized dromaeosaur Velociraptor. Illustration by Lucas Attwell
By Nathan E. Rogers Although Velociraptor is now a famous movie monster, in reality they were no larger than a turkey. These feathered predators lived in the arid environment of Cretaceous Period of Mongolia. This is a Royalty Free image suitable for every educational, editorial, or commercial purposes.
The vendobionts are part of a phylum of quilted organisms from the Ediacaran Period. Some paleontologists suggest they are a long-extinct group with no living relatives. This illustration contains Cyanorus, Yorgia, Vendia, Archaeaspinus, Ovatoscutum, Parvancorina, Temnoxa, Kimberella, Tamga and Solza. Illustration by Andrey Atuchin
By Joschua KnüppePreviously known as Das Monster von Minden, it took almost two decades for this German theropod to finally get a name. It is notable for being one of Europe s largest predatory dinosaurs at 9 m (30 ft) long. This is a Royalty Free image suitable for every educational, editorial, or commercial purposes.
By Julio Lacerda This scaly creature lived over 500 million years ago all over the globe, with the best-preserved fossils found in the Burgess Shale in Canada. Detailed examination of the spines shows that they were iridescent in life. This is a Royalty Free image suitable for every educational, editorial, or commercial purposes.
By Lucas Lima This extinct animal belongs to a group of ruminants called palaeomermycids, known for their unusual headgear. Xenokeryx was named after the Star Wars Queen Padmé Amidala due to the character s similar hairstyle. This is a Royalty Free image suitable for every educational, editorial, or commercial purposes.
Xiongguanlong was an early tyrannosaur found in China. It stood about as tall as a human and is characterized by its long snout. Illustration by Sergey Krasovskiy
Two Gigantspinosaurus–early stegosaurs named for their gigantic shoulder spines–look wearily as a Yangchuanosaurus walks by. Illustration by Sergey Krasovskiy
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