http://evosaur.com/dinodemo
Dinosaurs!
>>2305685
>background for customized dinosaurs
>grass
Dropped.
I'm high as fuck and love this.
>>2305685
Here's a Stegosaurus I made that I like the look of
>>2305707
What's wrong with grass?
Grass is probably older than dinosaurs
>>2305734
Grass was thought not to have evolved until the Cenozoic, however there have been grass in dinosaur dung from the Mesozoic so the guy you're replying to is triggered over nothing
>>2305742
>swimming along
>shoves its head under the water at 12,000,000 mph
>HERD U WERE TALKIN SHIT. LIKE I WOULDNT FIND OUT.
I made a mammoth that I think looks pretty cool.
>>2305730
Thats a beautiful Stegosaurus, anon.
I made an allosaur male and female. I think maybe I sperged out too much and put too much detail, but I tried to balance realistic, subdued colors with bright blues and whites.
>>2305904
nice, I like how you didn't go crazy with the lacrimal horns and nasal rugosties.
The tail looks a bit stiff for a tetanuran.
Are you aware that an Australian paleontologist detected dimorphism in the AOF but died after publishing in lecture but not in press?
>>2305736
>in the Mesozoic
Yeah, the tail end of it.
>>2305910
I didn't actually draw it, just used that app in the OP to design its colors and patterns etc.
I was not aware, and what is the AOF?
>>2305967
http://www.nature.com/articles/ncomms1482
COLORS
>>2306142
>molecular clocks
>reliable
Choose one
Did a baby dino. They probably wouldn't be quite this colorful, but I like the way this looked.
omg this is fun,thanks op
>>2306311
I just realized I spelled "Albertosaurus" wrong in that filename. Whoops
>>2305904
Thanks for the compliment man!
I always love bright blue coloration on creatures, it makes everything look so much more dazzling and surreal
>>2305904
Also is the male in your pic the bright blue one?
If so that would be feasible as in birds the males are usually the sex with brighter colouration
>>2306344
Arise Chickun
>>2306344
Yes he is. I actually used the female option for both as the male's had an obligatory red crest. The "all male allosaurs had a bright red crest" meme needs to die.
>>2305907
Jennifer Lawrence?
this is a dinosaur
>>2306729
please don't trigger the BANDfags
>>2306729
nice
Dinosaurs
Stan, the man.
A spino helping a young carcharodontosaurus explore a new world experience.
Modern bird ritual to the great ancient ancestors
Dead thread
anyway I'm thinking about leveraging my dig experience to try and get a job at a museum
>>2310607
>I'm thinking about leveraging my dig experience to try and get a job at a museum
kek
you paid to go on a dig and now you think they're going to pay you to do work grad students do for free?
unless your 'dig experience' gave you a PhD you're screwed.
you can probably prep bones as a volunteer though.
>>2310614
I didn't pay to go on a dig, and the job going is front of house.
Are you that jaded cunt that was one side of that argument last thread? Why not change career if it's turned you into such a depressing cigarettes and cheap whiskey cynic?
>>2310629
>Are you that jaded cunt that was one side of that argument last thread?
not sure which jaded cunt or argument you mean.
I have held volunteer positions on digs, in museums, and as a fossil preparator. I've also been an unpaid grad student and an intern in all of those positions.
getting a paid job in a museum usually requires a doctorate, the competition is fierce and there aren't many positions. Working on a dig doesn't by itself qualify you for any museum job aside from janitor or gift shop cashier. Academic positions go to academics.
>>2310629
also my whiskey is generally quite expensive.
>>2310629
also also,
at my local museum (DMNS) positions interacting with the public (interpreters) are filled by unpaid volunteers. Mostly retirees with an interest in the subject and not many friends.
>>2310631
>>2310633
I believe I match their criteria. I have a broad skill base and experience with tour guiding and other interaction with the public. There's a number of other external factors which make me think I've got a reasonable enough chance in securing one of the available positions to make it worth applying.
>>2310653
if it's a volunteer position you'll probably get it.
your dig experience probably doesn't make any difference in that case though. you could get the position just as easily without any experience. Because you're working for free and they love that.
I like it.
>>2310819
It's a paid position. I never explicitly said so but surely there's enough context clues for you realise that.
>>2310968
>surely there's enough context clues for you realise that.
the process is exactly the same when applying to volunteer. As is the competition.
and as I said, where I live that's not a paid job.
I just want to make pretty things