A Diary: Sharing the MUJA and Hatching the Past experience.

DSC00264B Looks like paradise isn’t it?  Well it seems that every picture I took in Asturias  could be made a tourist postcard!DSC00284BNow imagine that in the middle of all this beauty,  you, an obvious palaeontolgy buff  had the opportunity to visit this:lumen nuestras menos peso (1)The shape of the building of the MUJA (Museo del Jurásico) tells all: it’s a footprint. The main fossil remains in the Jurassic coast of Asturias are footprints… that is the traces of the living (not the dead!) animals… and some of the footprints found there are considered the biggest of the world. In three days and with all the commitments I had, it was impossible to see much, but hey, we had the immense fortune of being taken on tour by the MUJA‘s scientific director  Jose Carlos García-Ramos and managed to visit a truly “holy of holies” space… these are pictures of the footprints from  the beach called “La Griega“(the Greek)… look at the size and just imagine what sort of animals were making them… it is mind-blowing! And we were actually >there< stomping on ground where a sauropod (probably the size of Argentinosaurus or bigger) just happened to pass by many millions of years ago! Emotions ran high… here’s Carmen, my partner…DSC00438B And here is Jose Carlos and myself inspecting, measuring, speculating…DSC00429B

Within this framework, well, you can imagine that the events went in a flash!P1030283B

DSC00397BYes it was as spectacular as this, the emblematic image of the copulating Tyrannosaurus rexes… but unfortunately I  had a lot of work to do and there was not much time for leisure… after all this was my first physical encounter with Peter Norton‘s magnificent “Hatching The Past“(Dinosaurios Huevos y Bebés in Spanish)… and we witnessed  and helped with the last mounting details.

DSC00355BCarmen is admiring a gigantic nest, possibly a Gigantoraptor nest, that boasts probably the biggest eggs in the dinosaur world… much bigger than any sauropod. The atmosphere of the exhibition was just what I expected. Artful yet entertaining and didactic. A real treat. And I’m extremely honoured to have my artwork hanging on the wall, together with some pieces of Mark Hallett. I’m not worthy!

Here’s a famous illustration of Oviraptor called “Pecking Order”

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Here again with Jose Carlos García-Ramos, scientific director of the museum in front of the Gigantoraptor nest , flanked by the artwork dedicated to it. And the next one is a beautiful juvenile Tarbosaurus skull backed with a copy of my painting for the Random House/Bob Bakker’s “Dinosaurs!” I did a while ago. The original is in the vaults of Charlie and Flo Magovern.

DSC00363BBut I was still to meet the real star of the show: Mr. Peter Norton (Gondwana Studios). He might seem shy and unassuming, but the man not only came all the way from Australia to bring and curate curated the exhibition, he also cast and mounted most of the delicate pieces himself.  P1030269BPieces that range from something as big as this subadult Tarbosaurus:1026261_475431165878664_199130929_o

To something as delicate as this Protoceratops and babies herd…
1048106_475432002545247_591330221_oI could show many more pictures of the exhibition, but I rather direct you to Gondwana Studios website or facebook page. You will be able to see everything in there.

https://www.facebook.com/GondwanaStudios

http://www.gondwanastudios.com/

Come Monday, and the official opening was set. My task was to show around  the city’s Mayor (Rogelio Pando) and the councillor of Education, Culture and Sport from the Government of Asturias ( Alejandro Calvo) and their team, They were genuinely interested and we spent a good deal of time showing the exhibition in detail. They understand perfectly well the importance of this exhibition for the city and needless to say, the importance of Asturias as predominant Palaeontological region in Spain. At the table: José Carlos, Mayor Rogelio Pando, Councillor of Education Alejandro Calvo, Myself and Peter Norton.

P1030228B Everybody was amazed by the formidable array of approachable, didactic material of the exhibition.P1030260BFor me, the piece-de-resistance was the “Reviviendo Dinosaurios” (Bringing Dinosaurs Back To Life) talk in the afternoon. It was (according to Marta Molleda, coordinator of the museum and who organised the event and introduced it) extremely well attended. A little rusty and nervous on my part, but well received by the very attentive and receptive audience. I was ready to send my heretic views of the development of the dinosaur image once again!P1030296B DSC00463B

Needless to say, the excellent audience participation at the end helped to clarify any doubts  and helped to fill any remaining blank spaces … it also served to  surprisingly meet friends from Facebook that followed my work and (predictably) I had never met before… like here Carla Zooplancton, from Oviedo, Asturias! Thanks for coming!1011802_10151664426919166_987695696_n

After the very successful day, it was time to visit the “sweets” shop at the museum… well “sweets” for me at least… there were more and better paleo-goodies here than in the Natural History Museum in London, believe me… and at rather affordable prices! I was surprised to find some original -rather well made, something extraordinary for my standards- resin dinosaur miniatures made in Spain that I hadn’t seen anywhere before. Once a kid…P1030285B

But if I thought that we were to return with nothing else in our hands. Have a look: the event was prominently featured in the two local newspapers… we were interviewed also for TV… but were unable to see the results. If you cannot read Spanish, well… you get the feeling… As you can see in one of the pictures I seems to be taken aback by one of Mark Hallett‘s paintings!MUJA1BMUJA2BWe know that the so-called “budget cuts” all over Europe (and the world) normally take -shamefully- to specially victimise anything related to Culture, and the MUJA is unfortunately no exception. I would like to thank the over-worked personnel  of the museum (starting with Marta Molleda), which despite having to work endless hours multi-tasking and of being much fewer in number than what a museum like MUJA really needs, managed to keep the things running smoothly.

Thanks also to them, the events and Dinosaurios Huevos y Bebés have been and will continue to be a long lasting success in educating and delighting  vast audiences… We would also like to thank Mar Gómez (Peter’s partner and associate) for giving us a much needed  support, inspiration and guidance and also to  Laura Piñuela, José Carlos García Ramos’ wife (unfortunately absent for a paleo-meeting in Turkey) who gave us invaluable support in absentia…. and obviously to my partner Carmen Naranjo… for virtually everything else!

 

Thanks also to Jose Ignacio Ruiz-Omeñaca from the MUJA for invaluable corrections and general guidance.

Now let’s make a wish…we want to see the exhibition  “Hatching The Past” keep marching around Europe in the near future when it departs Spain! Europe deserves it too! Any more takers?

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“Hatching The Past” goes to Asturias, Spain!

… and get the “Bringing Dinosaurs Back To Life” treatment… well this had to happen before any “eggs and babies“…!Tyr SexB

Yes. I have been invited to give my usual talk at the famous Museo del Jurásico . “Reviviendo Dinosaurios”  this time! We will be there to open the proceedings and serve as a guide for the start of the “Hatching The Past” exhibition that  will see the MUJA as the starting point of a tour of Europe. As we know “Hatching the Past” started in Colorado with Charlie and Flo Magovern from Stone Co and now under the sponsorship of Peter Norton and Mar Gómez (Gondwana Studios) will be renowned the world over.

We will be there the first of July  from 11 in the morning (more details to follow). This will (paradoxically) be my first formal presentation in a Spanish museum. It will be a treat not only to be there (both the museum and surrounding landscape are amazing) but to finally have the opportunity to establish a dialogue with those Spanish friends and dinosaur fans that might be coming.

As you can see from these image of  obne of the notorious mounts of the museum, my recent revamp of my old  “Tyrannosaurus Sex” image fits just nicely!1280px-MUJA-Tyrannosaurus

Only museum in the world with life size dino-copulation… they had to be Spaniards after all!  Así que,“Dinosaurios: Huevos y Bebés” están aquí… ¡Nos vemos en el Museo del Jurásico!

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Heterodontosaurs now and then…

HeterodontBThis is part of an ambitious future project  with John Hutchinson that might develop in something really interesting. I showed this illustration to someone that replied “what is that weird squirrel?!”. Now, you must agree that at the level of weirdness this probably takes all the awards. Recent discoveries have changed our image of heterodontosaurs for ever! This is the way Heterodontosaurus was portrayed in Random House’s “Dinosaurs: The Most complete, Up-To Date Dinosaur Encyclopedia” by Thom Holtz and myself:HeterodontosaurusB

The discovery of Pegomastax and Tianyulong made this a thing of the past and transformed not only our image of heterodontosaurs but also of ornithischians too… yes that famous “porcupine” Psittacosaurus -that I broke to the world in an illustration for my book “Extreme Dinosaurs!”  done well before the year 2000- doesn’t look that weird any longer. If we consider that the newly discovered, extremely fuzzy heterodontosaurs are actually quite ancient (lower Jurassic)  ornithischians, this  testifies to the extraordinary diversity of the Dinosauria in the 169 million years of evolution, and a probable  wild range of different kinds of metabolism, associated not only with posture but covering (Insulation? Defense? Display?) integument too. It might be that the animal was even venomous too! Not that this is anything new, only that corroborates what some of us have been thinking since the 60’s and 70’s. The fibrous and fuzzy integuments date back to the origin of dinosaurs and are not exclusive to the evolutionary branch that gave origin to birds!

The strange spiny look in Ornithischia  was probably a common feature right from the start and kept evolving in animals like the fibrous, porcupine-like psittacosaurs  and  probably in the newly discovery integument of Triceratops too (more on that in a future post). Was it in any way related to the fuzzy integument that gave rise to proto-feathers  and feathers in theropods and birds? I would  say yes… but in a completely different way.

Here’s the old illustration that started it all (modified to show also Sinovenator the troodontid). I still have somewhere a sketch where I ventured a Psittacosaurus fully covered in spikes and fuzz… however I kept to the evidence available and never dared to to do a  fully furry-coated psittacosaur (after all there’s also evidence of pebbly skin for them)… except perhaps for the babies!Psittacosaurus-SinovenatorB

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What might have been the “Extinction” event at the Natural History Museum…

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Just imagine how this multiple banner would have looked at the entrance of the Natural History Museum in London! (This is only the draft by the way).

Alas… it was never going to be.

Late last year I received an invitation to  illustrate and propose some ideas for the  new exhibition at the BMNH “Extinction. Not The End Of The World” posters and banners. I set enthusiastically to work on some ideas that might have enhanced not only an exhibition that was endorsed by no other than David Attenborough, but also do some designs that would make it work with the spectacular  settings of the museum. The spirit of the designs were to reflect that the world would be extremely overcrowded  without extinction and what is obvious: we are here because of the extinction of billions of species  and many species are not and will not be here thanks to Homo sapiens too. Unfortunately there was no luck and instead the museum selected this:
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After visiting the exhibition, I think they were right after all. The event is a lot more low= key that I thought it to was going to be. In any case, that is what this blog is for: to show the sruff you >might< have seen but couldn’t for one reason or another…

In the meantime here’s the lonely Neanderthal…

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And a Megaloceros… Extinct indeed!Megaloceros

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The John R. Hutchinson Team does it again… in NATURE.

NatureBEmbargo lifted and here we are…Kudos to John R. Hutchinson! He has made it once again and this time in the prestigious science magazine  NATURE. Hutchinson is not only a man of science, but also a man with imagination and sense of humour, so needless to say it is always a pleasure to work with him. This time it was time to tackle Nature with an article about the evolution of the posture from early crocodilian forms to birds (with dinosaurs in between). His remarkable 3D restorations and animations showing the evidence of posture change had its hilarious moments for me (for the sake of clarity, the crocodile looked like vary funny airplane). It didn’t take long for me to come with this “tree of life” idea using some intermediate forms before embarking on flight…. well almost, I’m sure some will object to see this T.rex hanging out on a branch… and as a feathery sort-of porcupine… I must be joking..!

TrexB.

In any case, the sequence we selected to illustrate the evolutionary suquence was a crocodileMarasuchusCoelophysisT rexMicroraptor and Enantiornis.

Some links:

http://whatsinjohnsfreezer.com/2013/04/24/3d_dinosaurs/

http://www.rvc.ac.uk/SML/Projects/Evolution3DDinos.cfm

Youtube videos: http://youtu.be/vwQR1Rh2Q9E and http://youtu.be/g7FSTgX6nOY

It is not the first time John and I haveollaborated together. He is noted for his research  in estimated mass and the relationship with kinetics (specially in big extinct animals). A while ago I illustrated his now notorious article debunking the possibility that T. rex was a fast runner… an article that annoyed a few, but simply and scientifically stated the obvious. Mass and gravity matters and T. rex was not simply an oversized chicken or a “roadrunner from hell”!

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So we are back to NATURE…Since the article unfortunately didn’t make it to be the cover of the magazine, here you have it (as an exclusive) logo included and all!

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Bristol’s best kept “secret”…!

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You won’t see many prehistoric mammals in this blog… but after last year’s visit to Bristol University I couldn’t resist to take a few pictures and do a restoration of a fantastic Smilodon skeleton mount they (inexplicably, it should be put on display at the museum!) have in the vaults of the the Wills Memorial building, for the exclusive enjoyment of students, teachers and workers. The ferocious attack posture was an inspiration to give it the “Luis Rey treatment”… drama at its (mammalian) best!

Obviously I’m expecting to do a soon restoration of the “perfect” Scelidosaurus they have at the museum.

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Hatching The Past (part 2): Interactive with kids!

You may have to agree… oviraptorids never looked like this before!
I think Hatching The Past is a truly bold, didactic attempt to create a vibrant theatrical scenario for kids like I think no one has done before. DSC_0220 DSC_0215 sauro_nestThe costumes, the murals  and the props allow the kids to recreate a dramatic scene that helps them imagine that they can be part of a real world that  happened 75 million years ago. The main thing is after all to foster the sense that this is not just imagination… that the scenes they are theatrically enacting DID happen… and in the meantime change the image of dinosaurs as eternally battling behemoths into a more caring one, where they are seen tending the nests and battling the elements to protect their offspring. The Oviraptor disguise is quite stylish… and the Saltasaurus is simply hilarious… now, if only humans had a longer neck.. and smaller head!

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Finally! The Murals in Situ.

Finally the day has come: here are some (updated and upgraded) pictures of the opening of the now famous Stone & Company Hatching The Past exhibition (coming soon to a town near you).  The murals are 3 meters high, so you can have an idea of the dimensions… they are lifesize! I have never worked on this scale before so I’m very glad to see how it worked  at the end.

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This section of the exhibition is a playground for children. It includes nest models and baby dinosaur models for the children to play and photograph themselves with… they also can be dressed as baby dinos under the attentive eyes of their gigantic parents!

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And here  we have Nick Regester and Alenna Magovern showing their excellent printing job. They, together with Flo and Charlie Magovern have been responsible for this incredible mount. Hard, but rewarding work indeed! Congratulations to them!

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Cannibal Daspletosaurus?

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This is my contribution to Dave Hone‘s new project. He is trying to gather funds for  research into a very well preserved Daspletosaurus skull that once again gives evidence that tyrannosaurs were cannibals or at least had fierce  battles between them. For more information  do visit https://www.microryza.com/projects/cannibalism-in-giant-tyrannosaurs. Very soon, there is going to be available a signed, canvased  limited edition  print of this artwork  to help fund the effort.

As we have seen before, we have come a long way in reconstructing tyrannosaurs and the new feathery coverage gives us a complete new dimension of how these animals may have looked. To show how I normally work my pictures I’m adding the original sketch that served as the basis… The title “cannibalism” also suggests scavenging… but there’s much more information that is being extracted from the remains that challenge any straightforward notion of scavenging.

Instead I wanted to show two adults battling and scarring each other… the battle might lead to the death of one or simply the scarring of each other… there’s also evidence that the some of the wounds would have healed… so the animal survived the bruising!

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It’s official… The *New* Big Golden Book of Dinosaurs is advertised at Amazon!

Sixty years ago children and dinosaur fans in general marvelled at the great illustrations of Rudolph Zallinger (both at the Yale Museum famous mural and at children books like Dinosaurs And Other Prehistoric Reptiles)… Artistically his stylish artwork remain a landmark, but Random House decided that given that there is an abyss between what was dinosaur science then and what we know about dinosaurs today it was about time that the Golden Book of Dinosaurs had a drastic revamping.

BigGBofDinosB2Brachiosaurus: from the iconic image of perennial swamp-dweller back in the Fifties to land-strutting and conifer roamer as we see it today. And Allosaurus? Well, Zallinger inspired the Marx toys I used to play with when I was a little kid (dragging tail an all)… but now we think of it as the nimble lion (or at least the leopard) of the Jurassic. Many grew up with The Golden Book of Dinosaurs and Other Reptiles in the late Fifties, Sixties and even the Seventies. It has been quite a challenge to completely re-do it. I feel fortunate (and humbled… never pretended to fill in Zallinger’s shoes) to have been given  the opportunity  to re-work the piece of memorabilia, once again with my partner in a series of books for children: the legendary Dr. Robert T. Bakker. With his palaeontological wisdom and imagination and his inimitable style, together we have had the challenging responsibility of the updating and rehashing of this also legendary, classic, “cult” item.

And it has been a mammoth task. Despite the obvious cover reference, we don’t pretend a direct comparison between the two books or indeed the artwork… we just wanted to show of how dramatically our view of dinosaurs has changed in only sixty years, using as a vehicle a publication that has been familiar to everybody fall these years.

Given that for technical reasons we spent an over long time to finish it (more than two years), it comes without saying that we had to keep changing and updating the enormous stream of new information we get from dinosaurology these days…  and all is captured  here. It is updated to the last minute! I have applied every possible digital and non-digital technique in anchoring Dr. Bob’s overflowing, expert narrative… and I’m hoping that the results are not disappointing. You will be the judge.

I am not allowed to show more than the cover for the time being (the book will be on sale in September… yes we will have to wait that long unfortunately!),  but in the meantime in this Blog I will be showing once in a while  snippets and artwork outtakes of the book that couldn’t make it to the final version… or artwork that differs drastically from what you are going to see there. There’s a lot of new stuff in my vaults now…Be prepared for a really thrilling ride in vertebrate evolution… just to give a little advance notice: any of my old T. rex  depictions will become outdated instantly… and this book (and Dr. Bob Bakker) are  to be hold responsible for it!Golden Book Of Dinois coverB

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