31 August 2025

Did TWO Asteroids Kill the Dinosaurs?

Here’s an intriguing thought experiment. Most of us grew up with the familiar story: sixty-six million years ago a single, cataclysmic asteroid slammed into what is now Mexico’s Yucatán Peninsula, triggering a chain reaction of firestorms, tsunamis, and a global “nuclear winter” that spelled doom for the non-avian dinosaurs. But what if that cosmic assassin wasn’t acting alone? What if it had a partner in crime?

Evidence is mounting that the dinosaurs’ extinction might not have been the work of a lone space rock. Some scientists now suggest that the fateful Chicxulub impact could have been part of a one-two punch, with another asteroid – or even a fragmented sibling from the same parent body – striking elsewhere on Earth around the same time. Imagine the devastation of not one, but two apocalyptic collisions within a geological heartbeat.

This theory is explored in detail in a fascinating video by ExtinctZoo (below), which dives into the latest research and speculation surrounding Earth’s most infamous mass extinction. If true, it reshapes our understanding of the end-Cretaceous event: not a solitary strike of bad luck, but a cosmic double blow that ensured the age of dinosaurs was finished, once and for all.

19 June 2025

Ischigualasto – The Valley of the Moon

The name is old – from the native Quechua tribe and it means the place where you put the moon. Ischigualasto is an extraordinary almost off world experience. Geologists have been visiting the valley in Argentina for more than one hundred years. It doesn’t take long to see what attracts them.

29 October 2024

The Incredible Dinosaur Wall of Bolivia

Some things appear where you least expect them.  Although dinosaur tracks have been discovered the world over, climbing up a near vertical wall in a Bolivian quarry? Bolivia – yes, fine. Zooming up hundreds of feet towards the skies? Hardly.  Yet here they are.  Spread across a limestone slab a mile long and almost 300 feet high, this great wall at Cal Orcko near the city of Suvre reveals more than 5,000 footsteps, with 462 discrete trails.

15 September 2024

Bless You


You may have had a moment or two like this: you spend an age working on a project only to get bored with it.  This is the case with the architect in this animated short by Philip Watts.  He decides to spice things up a little with his creation by introducing something that will set the (not quite proverbial) cat amongst the pigeons.

Philip Watts is a film and television editor, but since the early 90's he has been producing animated motion graphics for the television industry. He has also worked as a freelance cartoonist on a few occasions, and recently he started combining these two interests and making my own animated short films, hence Bless You which is a very cunning mix of traditional animation, tilt shift photography and something pretty much like Flash (that’s a guess by the way).  Who cares how it was made, ultimately – it’s great fun and executed with great panache.

6 December 2014

The Dinosaur Graveyard of East Berlin

They lie, dead, struck down where they stood by a global event they could neither forecast nor understand. Extinction came quickly: in a matter of years the dinosaurs were no more. Yet this is no reference to the Cretaceous–Paleogene extinction event which led to the extinction of the majority of dinosaur groups at the end of the Mesozoic era.

These dinosaurs (as you may have suspected) are rather more modern – as was their downfall.

11 January 2013

Paper Age


This is such a great visual idea yet as far but what makes it truly remarkable is that as far as I can make out it is a piece of research in to character rigging, polygon reduction, depth of field and motion blur in Cinema 4D.  A dinosaur made from a thin, pliable material, once considered highly versatile and with many uses, roams its territory, the king of its paper jungle.  Yet it inevitably comes in to contact with a new and different kind of beast altogether….

This short by Ken Ottman may prove perhaps a little contentious, particularly with committed bibliophiles such as myself! When an ereader is invented that gives people the same sensuous thrill as a real book, perhaps I may agree that the paper age is over. Until then, people like me are just going to carry on sniffing the pages (as it were. No, as it really is!).

25 November 2011

Evolution Kills

9 November 2011

Ice Skating Dinosaur in Denver Park


This is very short but I just had to share this with you - just in case you find it as amusing as I did!

It’s not every day, after all, that you get to see an ice skating dino (is it a brontosaurus?) especially one who manages to pirouette so gracefully (if eventually!).

In reality this is an advert for Denver Science Museum. Smoke & Mirrors was responsible for this from concept through to execution. The CG team modeled, textured, animated and lit this ice skating dinosaur, seamlessly integrating it into footage shot by the team in Central Park and transposing it, through the magic of CGI to Denver, where you can see the Rocky Mountains in the background.

7 September 2011

Forget Aquarius - Is this the Dawning of the Age of the Anthropocene?

Human history on a geological scale is miniscule, tiny – a blip.  The geological time scale goes back four and a half billion years from the fiery birth of the earth to the present day.  Now, however, some scientists are calling for an end to the current epoch – the Holocene.  They are suggesting we have moved in to a new epoch altogether – the Anthropocene.  This translates literally to the Human Epoch.  So why the need for change?

The term Anthropocene was only coined ten years ago by Paul Crutzen.  The Nobel Prize winning atmospheric chemist, best known for his groundbreaking work on ozone depletion coined the term to satisfy his need to describe the age in which we are now living.  It is different from the Holocene, he argues (image of the Early Holocene left). The Anthropocene is the representation of the effect a single species has had on the planet.  That species is, of course, us.

His case is that by our actions we are going to leave a permanent signature in our earthly geology. These actions will be traceable back to us even millions of years in the future when scientists (possibly not us by that time) will be able to see the point at which we changed the earth’s oceans and biosphere irreversibly.

The geological time scale is vastly important in terms of understanding what has happened to the earth over hundreds of millions of years.  As rock is penetrated it delivers revelations about what life was like ten thousand, ten million or at its very beginnings billions of years ago.

The changes to the time scale have to this point always been natural.  The great big meteoric rock that killed off the dinosaurs for example was one point at which the time scale changed.

So indeed was the Ice Age which resulted due to a shift in the earth’s orbit.   There are many different epochs and their records are in the rocks.  Imagine them like pages in a book, each one making a chapter telling its own part of the planet’s lengthy and complex history.

Not just one book, though – think volumes.  It’s like one of those huge episodic Dickens novels but about stone instead.

Each epoch is only a small part of the scale.  They are subdivisions of a Period – the one in which we find ourselves currently is the Quaternary Period.  Each Period is a subdivision of an Era.

We are in the Cenozoic Era.  Still with us?

We are currently in the Holocene epoch, which has only been around since the last Ice Age twelve thousand years and is in terms of geological eras still pretty wet behind the ears itself.  Even its name translated from the Greek means entirely new.  So, why bother with the change at all – couldn’t we, shouldn’t we simply be included in the Holocene?

Well, that sets the scene for what will no doubt become the hottest of heated debates in geological circles.  Like Knights Templar of stones and rocks, there is a body which guards the integrity of the geological time scale.  They go under the marvellous title of the International Commission on Stratigraphy (image in the head of a certain Time Lord flashing his telepathic paper and saying I’m with the ICS – cool).

In May they will meet up to discuss the findings of their Anthropocene Working Group (no doubt referred to as the AWG).

The battleground is set – with it seems just under half of the ICS agreeing with the need to change and slightly over half of them in favour of giving the idea the old heave ho.  Most foresee, however, that we are living in an age which may well see a massive shift in the contents of the fossil record. However, it was only a few years ago that scientists were predicting a new Ice Age and look what came of that.

It is possible of course (and many geologists agree) that it is way too early to tell if this will truly be the case as – to put it simply – we just haven’t been around long enough to leave anything but a thin sliver on the fossil record.

Although they use the term informally they see no need to, ahem, set it in stone.

Buy Nikon Cameras

Image Credits
Ammonite - Flickr User Kevin Zim
Fossil Frog Flickr User Kevinzim
Early Holocene
Meteor Collision
Ice Age House

14 December 2010

Pencil Vs Camera - A Series by Ben Heine

You could say that Belgian artist Ben Heine is talented.  As well as being a painter, he is a portraitist, caricaturist, illustrator and photographer.  These talents are combined in one of his latest projects, Pencil Vs Camera, some of which we reproduce here with his very generous permission. Above, a distinctly modern twist on a classic Vermeer, who becomes Girl With A Pearl Earring and Gas Mask.
A dinosaur threatens Paris.  Taken from Montmartre Hill, the setting is fine for some fun with both art and the city.  We can't quite make up our minds here at Kuriositas whether this is a Tyrannosaurus rex but we are happy that he has finally found a use for those rather puny forearms.  Heine has been drawing and taking photographs for over ten years and this series is the natural result of graphic exploration and his evolution as an artist.

The idea for the series came unexpectedly and like a lot of art, inspiration was drawn from the mundane events of life. One evening of multitasking a short while ago and Heine was writing a letter at the same time as watching the television.  When he re-read the letter before popping it in to the envelope he saw the image of the television transparently behind the letter.  The idea then came to show two actions in one image.

Pencil Vs Camera was born.  In order to contrast the realism of the photograph Heine has come up with some extraordinarily imaginative alternate realities going on at the paper level.  Although very modern in approach this picture gives away the artist's love of the art of previous centuries.  In this he has interpolated his own takes on famous paintings by Millet, Botticelli and Goya - do you recognise them?  The eye at the centre? The tool by which the art is examined and interpreted.  Your eye.

It is important to Heine that in a project like this there are no rules.  The imagination leads the way and what goes on to the paper is generally not what goes on in the every day.  The photos are after all the reflection of the real world and what is on the paper is perhaps what could happen if imagination were to become a reality.  Certainly where better a place for aliens to circle on their first visit to Earth than the Atomium in Brussels?

Although all of the series are created with a sense of humour (if not occasional mischief) there are some serious messages too.  The above (no. 15) draws out attention to the plight of the koala in Australia, where its habitat is slowly being encroached upon and its numbers in the wild dwindling.  Effectively, the battle between drawing and photography is both the focus and message of the series.  As both transcend language (and Heine speaks six to varying degrees of fluency) the viewer can decide whether they ignore what is really going on behind the paper.

We would again like to thank Ben Heine for his kind permission to use these images on Kuriositas.  As you may have guessed these represent only part of this particular series - and the tip of the iceberg for his creativity in general.  You can see the rest of them in their set on Flickr.  While you are there why not take a look at his collections?  Go make yourself something to eat and drink - you may be there for some time!