Thank you for your comments!

Adam

This Post Has 12 Comments

  1. (Miss) Anne P.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=e5Li5Acq8ZQ&feature=relmfu

    Start at 9:20 for another entry on your “Fiction” section. I sent the long clip from “Journey to the Center of the Earth” 2008 Rick Schroder part 4, so you can freeze your own frames, maybe caption in English “most deadly dinosaur ever”. I found your site when looking to verify that claim. Your work is excellent! Thanks.

    1. Thanks! That’s one way to satisfy a plesiosaur. It looks more like an…I don’t know what. Plesiosaurs weren’t the most deadly dinosaurs, they weren’t dinosaurs at all!

  2. Tamar

    Hi Adam!

    This site is great – full of really nice pictures and information on plesiosaurs!

    I thought you and your readers might be interested in my company’s new app – Real World Dinosaurs – now available on the app store.

    http://realworlddinosaurs.com

    It’s not about plesiosaurs, but like your blog it’s got great information, plus animations of each dinosaur it covers. More dinosaurs will be added, too!

    Anyway, I hope you’ll check it out!

    All our best,

    Tamar and the CGMuse Team

  3. Adam Burden

    Underwater dinosaurs are my 3 year old son Henry’s favorite. Your blog here is the one stop shop for his love for the aquatic Dino world!! The information you have is extremely helpful on my end when he has a thousand questions regarding each dinosaur.

  4. Victor

    Thank you for your site, I have reconnected with the love for dinosaurs and marine reptiles I lost years ago and I’m enjoying this site a lot.

    I have one question, why aren’t there living evolutive remnants of plesiosaurs? Is it known what happened to the clade?

  5. Matt Wood

    Great site and thanks for rgw Hauffiosaurus page

    Matt Wood

  6. Jose

    Hi Adam,

    Cool and very useful site. Thank you.

    You can see some free videos of Patagonian and Antarctic plesiosaurs here and collaborate with my field trip patreon and collaborate in my field trips and fossil preparations.

    https://www.patreon.com/user?u=46988884

    I hope the pages are of interest.

    Best wishes

  7. Robin

    Very informative site!

    How do you think Plesiosaurs used its tail? Did it have a vertical or horizontal fluke?

    Thanks!

    1. Darren Withers

      Plesiosaur reference material at its finest. I’m constantly dipping into it, very inspirational for a short paper I’m hoping to publish. About a young juvenile Cryptoclidus I discovered, and now on permanent display at the Peterborough Museum and Art Gallery.

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