It’d be great if you added a picture of the prehistoric creature along with the description so we know what you referenced!
2 days ago | 218
Looks great! I could see it being a standing guard, stationing itself in place to protect a gate.
2 days ago | 46
I think I’ve misunderstood the prompt, I drew a normal conulariida while you drew an amazing looking mermaid that looks like one.
2 days ago | 27
Amazing! I hope you make videos on every one going into the lore of the characters as you’ve done a few times
2 days ago | 5
WOOOHOOOOO YOURE DOING ANOMALOCARIS!!!!!!!!! it’s my special interest, I cried when I got to see fossils of it irl lol. IM SO HAPPY!!!
9 hours ago | 0
Following you on instagram has introduced the most cursed reels I’ve ever seen onto my timeline. I want to personally thank you for improving my algorithm.
1 day ago | 1
Yo i got this in my notifications and i thought it was one of those weird science textbook graphs and got really confused. But now, having clicked on it, i see what it ACTUALLY is and i LOVE it
2 days ago | 1
Subjectively
Mermaysozoic Day 1: Conulariida
“Conulariida” refers to a group of prehistoric invertebrates from the Triassic period. These weirdos were part of the same family that now includes sea anemones, jellyfish, and corals. They’d stick their cone-shaped bodies into substrate where’d they’d cling for most of their lives until they either died or fell over. Yeah, there’s evidence that some just lost their grip and spent the rest of their conical existence on their side.
2 days ago | [YT] | 2,379