
Few badges that have been collecting in the complete folder over the last month & a bit ^______^/
THANKS FOR BUYING Y'ALL!
█ OPEN for badge commissioning also,
-check this listing for rough price-outlines n' more examples. ♥
Inked with various size feltips and brushpens. Coloured with markers, pencils and a smattering of gelpen.
Smoke Cloud, Ash & Nate Dual © computerfreak
Deezmasaurus © deezmo
Gantradies © Grant Moxham
Scribetail © NicholasScribetail
ARTwork by Erika Vasos, Jun 2015
THANKS FOR BUYING Y'ALL!
█ OPEN for badge commissioning also,
-check this listing for rough price-outlines n' more examples. ♥
Inked with various size feltips and brushpens. Coloured with markers, pencils and a smattering of gelpen.
Smoke Cloud, Ash & Nate Dual © computerfreak
Deezmasaurus © deezmo
Gantradies © Grant Moxham
Scribetail © NicholasScribetail
ARTwork by Erika Vasos, Jun 2015
Category Artwork (Traditional) / General Furry Art
Species Unspecified / Any
Size 1390 x 1000px
File Size 5.34 MB
Listed in Folders
Their 'sickle claw' did you mean? -or the did you mean the extended crotch-bone? :3
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deinonychus
That entry explains a bit on anatomical use and function theories, but;
-If you meant the claw, that was typically positioned in such a way that the curved claw was not damaged whist running/walking. And they think was utilized more for climbing and pulling apart prey to eat than the glorified 'hooking into and disemboweling' of larger prey. (kinda like a 'single finger' type extension instead :3 )
-If you mean the lowered pelvic bones, this is probably a bad realistic anatomical representation (at best) & there may have been less of a 'visible protrusion' with instead dino-bodies being wide enough on their underside not to see that, but a lot of the 'bird-hipped' dinosaurs (so all dinosaurs. Point in case they are not 'dinosaurs' technically if they are not bird-hipped, but instead just reptiles.) of the Therapod variety share a similar skeletal autonomy. :3 [link]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deinonychus
That entry explains a bit on anatomical use and function theories, but;
-If you meant the claw, that was typically positioned in such a way that the curved claw was not damaged whist running/walking. And they think was utilized more for climbing and pulling apart prey to eat than the glorified 'hooking into and disemboweling' of larger prey. (kinda like a 'single finger' type extension instead :3 )
-If you mean the lowered pelvic bones, this is probably a bad realistic anatomical representation (at best) & there may have been less of a 'visible protrusion' with instead dino-bodies being wide enough on their underside not to see that, but a lot of the 'bird-hipped' dinosaurs (so all dinosaurs. Point in case they are not 'dinosaurs' technically if they are not bird-hipped, but instead just reptiles.) of the Therapod variety share a similar skeletal autonomy. :3 [link]
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