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You’ve probably seen the same drawings of thylacines often, but in case you are interested, here are two more. I love how their mouths open so wide! :)
Thanks for the submission Danelle!
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I painted a tasmanian wolf. - 2012
Posted on January 13, 2013 via with 105 notes
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Thylacine2 (by Namey McNamerson)
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The thylacine - Thylacinus cynocephalus
The Tasmanian Tiger was hunted to extinction for hunting sheep but research has now show that thylacine jaws were too weak to kill sheep and its prey was probably not bigger than a possum.
Tasmanian Tiger’s Jaw Was Too Small to Attack Sheep, Study Shows
Skull mechanics and implications for feeding behaviour in a large marsupial carnivore guild: the thylacine, Tasmanian devil and spotted-tailed quoll. M.R.G. Attard, U. Chamoli, T.L. Ferrara, T.L. Rogers, S. Wroe. Journal of Zoology. Volume 285, Issue 4, pages 292–300, December 2011
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Posted on September 2, 2012 with 115 notes
Source: geheugenvannederland.nl
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Posted on June 27, 2012 via Welcome to Deerhead with 227 notes
Source: flickr.com
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The Tasmanian Tiger - Thylacinus cynocephalus
The Mammals of Australia. Krefft, from photographs by Victor A. Prout, 1869.
(via flutterknife)
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The thylacine - Thylacinus cynocephalus
Posted on December 24, 2011 via with 139 notes
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So I’ve been playing around with the idea of making a children’s coloring book of extinct animals. I made a different style coloring book for my fish professor (life cycle of a green sturgeon) before, but never published it.
Though, I really ought to be working on commissions or practicing proper scientific illustration not drawing thylacine yawns.








