Sizzlin' Snakes (@sizzlingsnakes) 's Twitter Profile
Sizzlin' Snakes

@sizzlingsnakes

Paleontology Studier | Draws as a hobby | Nerd | PSU EMS '25

The best part about sizzling snakes? You can never tell if they're hissing or if they're cooking.

ID: 730205537200181252

linkhttps://www.tumblr.com/blog/taphonomenon calendar_today11-05-2016 01:19:01

22,22K Tweet

301 Followers

1,1K Following

Dr. Joe Moysiuk (@cambrojoe) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Still going through photos from my recent trip to the Moroccan Anti-Atlas. Here, some shots from the incredible #Devonian mud mounds at Hamar Laghdad, brimming with trilobites, cephalopods, corals, brachiopods, and more. #FossilFriday #Paleozoic

Still going through photos from my recent trip to the Moroccan Anti-Atlas. Here, some shots from the incredible #Devonian mud mounds at Hamar Laghdad, brimming with trilobites, cephalopods, corals, brachiopods, and more. 
#FossilFriday #Paleozoic
Ausarchosaur (is counting the days til WWD 2025) (@ausar_the) 's Twitter Profile Photo

They’re not paleonerds, they’re tourists. How do I know? Paleonerds would break an arm and leg to use the supposedly most hyper-accurate reconstruction and are unfunny in a niche-interest nerd way. Half of these gimmick accounts use AI and are just unfunny, plain and simple.

arandomtapironline (@anrandomtapir) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Earth 406 million years later After the splitting of the supercontinent,a mass buckling of rock in the center created a massive chasm that with a unknown element formed a great waterfall splitting the world in 2. With terraforming the world would see a new age of beasts and man.

Earth
406 million years later
After the splitting of the supercontinent,a mass buckling of rock in the center created a massive chasm that with a unknown element formed a great waterfall splitting the world in 2.
With terraforming the world would see a new age of beasts and man.
Liam Power (@beagliam) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Paradolichopithcus gansuensis skeletal, a large bipedal cercopithecine from across Eurasia. This animal has adaptations to hominid-like bipedalism compared to Australopithecus. While not an obligate biped, it was very adapted to spend a lot of time standing upright like a person.

Paradolichopithcus gansuensis skeletal, a large bipedal cercopithecine from across Eurasia. This animal has adaptations to hominid-like bipedalism compared to Australopithecus. While not an obligate biped, it was very adapted to spend a lot of time standing upright like a person.
👑 King Edmarka 🦖 (@king_edmarka) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Sketch of the bizzare Diplocaulus; a nectridean from the latest Carboniferous to the Late Permian of the US and Morocco. It is an aquatic, salamander-like animal well known for its boomerang-shaped skull, which may have helped provide lift when swimming .

Sketch of the bizzare Diplocaulus; a nectridean from the latest Carboniferous to the Late Permian of the US and Morocco. It is an aquatic, salamander-like animal well known for its boomerang-shaped skull, which may have helped provide lift when swimming .
obamaatredrobin (@obamaatredrobin) 's Twitter Profile Photo

started my recent diet 3 weeks ago with the plan to lose 80 pounds by november so i can eat this entire thing and ruin my entire health and wellbeing

👑 King Edmarka 🦖 (@king_edmarka) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Ceratopsian reconstructions from Edwin H. Colbert's "The Dinosaur Book", from 1945. These are honestly AMAZINGLY anatomically sound for such a year; look at the Styracosaurus in particular and then compare it to most depictions of it for the next 2 decades.

Ceratopsian reconstructions from Edwin H. Colbert's "The Dinosaur Book", from 1945. These are honestly AMAZINGLY anatomically sound for such a year; look at the Styracosaurus in particular and then compare it to most depictions of it for the next 2 decades.