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Sabertooth diaries 1: excavating old sketches by Mauricio Antón
“As the publication of my book ”Sabertooth” comes closer, I am trying to put some order in the mass of material I have been working with during the last few years. It is interesting to leaf through those fat folders full of sketches, some of them dating from MANY years ago: it refreshes my memory about some of the main subjects I have dealt with in the book, and in fact, it motivates me to tackle some of these subjects again, in anticipation for the next book (title to be disclosed at some point in the future…).
Here are some of those “paleo-sketches” (in the whole sense of the word!). They date from more than 15 years ago (Gosh!) and were my early attempts to put together observations about key aspects of big cat anatomy, especially related to hunting…(these drawings do not appear in the book or anywhere else in this form, so this is a sort of exclusive…)
In the years after I did these sketches I have found many fascinating things about these aspects of felid anatomy, which I have tried to reflect in the new book. These days I am preparing a short video about some of these things, I expect to be posting it soon!”
- First image: “compares the “primitive” skeletal porportions of the early cat Pseudaelurus (left) with those of the very different cheetah (Acinonyx) and sabertooth (Smilodon). Obviously, the skeletons and cats are not shown to scale”
- Second image: “shows aspects of the anatomy of the cheetah, with special attention to the lumbar vertebrae. For the fun of it, I also included a body size comparison betwen the modern cheetah and the extinct species Acinonyx pardinensis. Back then I was already puzzled by the possible meaning of the changes in body proportions during the evolution of sabertooths, and in particular in the shortening of the lumbar vertebra in many species”
- Third image: “shows the sequence of events during a hypothetical hunt by the sabertooth Smilodon: the chase (top); the wrestling struggle (middle); and the killing bite (bottom)”
- Fourth image: “shows the crucial point when the cat attempts to pull a large prey down to the ground, and it highlights some of the muscles relevant for that action”
(Image and text source: Chasing Sabretooths; via @Laelaps on Twitter)
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Eusmilus, a nimravid (false sabretooth) from the Oligocene, had the weirdest skull ever…
(Restoration by Mauricio Anton.)
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Upcoming Sabertooth Book…and film! by Mauricio Antón
There’s a trailer for the film here:
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“Bad day at the tar pits, as a sabre-toothed cat (Smilodon) attacks an already entrapped giant ground sloth, Paramylodon”. By Mauricio Antón.
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Smilodon reconstruction by Mauricio Antón
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Brontomerus mcintoshi by Mauricio Antón.
“Fossils that were found (highlighted in brown), likely from an adult and a juvenile, suggest that Brontomerus mcintoshi would have grown as tall as a double-decker bus.” National Geographic
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Megantereon, Smilodon populator and Promegantereon by Mauricio Antón.
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Megantereon kills Eucladoceros.
Posted on May 20, 2012 via lost beasts with 102 notes
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1: Rubidgea sp. gorgonopsians preying on their smaller relative Aelurognathus
2: Inostrancevia sp. gorgonopsians attacking the herbivorous reptile Scutosaurus
By Mauricio Antón.




