Comments: 11
Libra1010 [2019-10-29 14:37:28 +0000 UTC]
Excellent Work - it's amusing to speculate on whether this big, not-actually-a-rhino even notices the tiny passenger hitching a ride on its horns!
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batworker In reply to Libra1010 [2019-10-29 15:51:12 +0000 UTC]
Maybe not. Like the “passenger” - it may not understand that it is sitting on a living creature.
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Libra1010 In reply to batworker [2019-10-30 14:18:36 +0000 UTC]
Either that or it just can't be bothered to notice so infinitesimal a threat!
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RajaHarimau98 [2019-10-29 00:18:26 +0000 UTC]
Loving the bat art! (I guess its appropriate for your username lol) Fossil bats are underrepresented in palaeoart, and I mine is no exception of course. Hopefully I'll change that soon!
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batworker In reply to RajaHarimau98 [2019-11-10 10:46:10 +0000 UTC]
As I said, the problem with bats is that, from the point of view of a non-specialist, they are similar to each other, and fossil bats are no exception. Also, the fact is that from the vast majority of fossil bats, we only know jaw fragments and teeth. I may draw a bat and say that it is Myotis gundersheimensis from the Miocene, or that it is modern Myotis blythii - no one will see the difference. Because no one (including myself) knows what this difference (in external appearance) was.
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