20 July 2025

Terrible Lizards

 
This is awesome.  Throughout our history, our perception of dinosaurs – the “terrible lizards” of the title, has evolved according to our understanding of these prehistoric beasts.  This animation tells a single story, but the animation changes to show the various forms of dinosaur depictions that have come about throughout the few short centuries since they first siezed our collective imagination.

It was created by David James Armsby, a Scottish animator, artist and filmmaker.  Armsby is an autodidact when it comes to animation.  He started experimenting at the age of 16 and through a process of trial and error he learned how to create his own films.  I think I will end this short post with his own words, so you can then get on with watching this amazing short.

"Terrible Lizards is my own personal tribute to all things palaeontology, paleoart, and paleo-media throughout the past two centuries, and our ever-evolving understanding of these ancient and fascinating animals.”

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.

14 July 2022

Valley of the Last Dinosaurs


Tyler Lyson is one of those very lucky people who has known since he was a small child exactly what he wanted to do and was born close to where he wanted to do it, the Hell Creek Formation.  This is one of the most dinosaur bone-rich places in the world and where dinosaurs roamed when the big rock landed from the sky. MEL Films joins him on one of his annual ‘dino camp’ excursions where a triceratops skull, hidden for 160 million years, awaits discovery.

14 November 2021

Gea and Fossils


Don’t be put off by the rather uninspiring title.  This is, quite simply, the best educational animation I have seen for an age.  It’s about fossils and introduces us to Gea who has an inventor uncle (don't we all?).

He sends her a package and she finds Zum (pronounced Zoom), a flying robot designed to assist in the cataloguing of fossils.   Unfortunately, Zoom knows nothing about them so it’s up to Gea to show him the ropes – and the complete history of fossils. This explains the length of this animated short but believe me, the time will zoom by.

This animation is wholly delightful in as much as it makes what can be quite a difficult subject wholly accessible if not entertaining. It was created by Render Area, a visual effects, 3D animation digital production company based in Spain for Museo Geominero in Madrid. They have thrown the animation equivalent of the kitchen sink at this piece with so many different techniques used to form the whole.

So, if you happen to have a kid rampaging around your house at the moment (or one who is staring listlessly at the ceiling) who also happens to be fascinated by dinosaurs and how they came to be fossilised, plonk him or her down in front of this.  You will have peace and quiet for almost exactly half an hour.

11 February 2021

Apocalyptos


When two young gods fall out the consequences for life on earth can be... apocalyptic! This very entertaining animated short was created by a group of students at Supinfocom Valenciennes in 2015 and, after the festival runs, has recently been released on to the internet.

For anyone interested in animation, Greek legend and dinosaurs, this is a must!

1 August 2016

The Sky Art of Galleta Meadows

Did you know that dinosaurs, mammoths and sabre-toothed cats still roam the deserts of San Diego County in California?  Outside of the town of Borrego Springs lies Galleta Meadows.  Scattered around the staggering dessert landscapes, enormous steel sculptures are juxtaposed against the pristine heavens.  The man behind it, Dennis Avery, called it Sky Art.  It is easy to see why.

If you work in an office environment then his name will ring a bell.  He founded the company you use for your labels.  Although he passed away in 2012 he ensured that his vision would live on.  He allotted the land around the remarkable sculptures as a place where people could set up camp and visit free of charge.  It is certainly worth a visit to the desert to encounter his extraordinary legacy, although you do have to be careful of a very much extant animal – the rattlesnake.

11 July 2016

The Age of Rust


Ever heard of Petramosaurus Cavator?  This amazing species from the Alps is the subject of this award-winning documentary.  Follow the entire life-cycle of the species, from birth, to mating to inevitable demise.

Yet what is the future of this captivating and noble creature when it comes in to contact with man? That is the subject of this wonderful short by Francesco Aber and Alessandro Mattei who created it as their graduation film from the National School of Cinema in Italy.

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.

31 May 2014

Dinosaurs: All You Ever Really Need to Know in 3 Minutes


Unless, of course, you are a huge dinosaur fan, in which case this animation by The Brothers McLeod covers stuff that you already learned before you could talk.  However, for those of us with simply a passing fascination (a passination?) for  these amazing beasts this potted history of their time on our pale blue dot will be adequate, especially if we like to appear knowledgeable without the prerequisite study involved!

25 November 2011

Evolution Kills

16 October 2011

The Light Fossils of Darius Twin

As light painting increases in popularity, artists have been creating more and more sophisticated images using the technique. At the forefront of this movement is Los Angeles based graphic artist Darius Twin. His latest project, the creation of dinosaur fossils in light, is quite something to behold. You can see even more at his website too!

The technique involves exposures being made at night (or in a dark room) by moving a hand-held flashlight of the type that can be bought at any store.  So far, so inexpensive but you will also need a camera with the ability to change the shutter speed to very slow – normal every day cameras will not do this. 10 seconds for the shutter speed will do - at least for a simple image. These amazing shots may well have taken longer!

One question which is asked a lot about light painting is why does the artist not show up on the pictures. It seems that you only show up if you cast light on yourself or sit still for too long. If you are quick and wear dark colors, you won't show up. That of course adds something else in to the equation – you have to be pretty sure of the shapes you are going to create beforehand. A sharp eye and a quick hand are, it seems, prerequisites.

Although the digital age offers opportunities which could only have been dreamed of in years gone by, light painting is hardly a new art from.  It can be traced back as far as 1914 when a husband and wife team, Frank and Lillian Gilbreth first used the technique to track the motion of clerical workers. It was not until 1935 and Man Ray in his Space Writing series that the form was used artistically. Even Picasso got in on the act for a short time.


Coming up to date in 2011 the light fossils that you can see here have helped to move light painting on to a new level and one in which artists create ever more sophisticated works of art. We would like to thank Darius Twin for his kind permission to reproduce some of his photographs here – above is a slide show direct from his Flickr photostream including more of these startling images. Also, please don't forget to pay his excellent website, dariustwin.com a visit!

20 November 2010

The Pride of the Valley Sculpture Park

If you go down to the woods today,
You're sure of a big surprise.

So goes the song, but don't expect too many teddy bears where we are going today.  Rather, raise your expectations to include dinosaurs, elephants and all sorts of outlandish creations. The woodlands of England are playing host to the sight of some rather different cretaures.

Churt is a tiny village in the English county of Surrey and has most of the features you would expect from a centuries long established village in this part of the country – as well as something entirely unexpected.  Just outside the village boundaries lies the Pride of the Valley Sculpture Park, a place of unanticipated arty pleasure.

The park is effectively an outdoor gallery which, for sculpture, serves as an ideal pastoral setting.  The sculptures are all found next to or nearby a two kilometre pathway which meanders so that the visitor alights on a new sculpture almost by surprise.

You may need to watch your step a little - you never quite know what to expect when you turn the next corner.  The sight of angels consoling each other perhaps or the occasional gorilla exiting his undergroung lair in search of lunch - neither should not be too much of a surprise.  

What makes Pride of the Valley different from many sculpture parks around the globe is that it does not hold a fixed set of sculptures – its purpose is to display the work of over 150 sculptors and – if you like the work – you can buy it.

Many pieces are made from a single piece of stone or wood.  Others are a collection and you may have to work on it a little.  One piece adds to another.

Until the whole picture is finally revealed.

Of course, these prices are out of the reach of many and most visitors do use the park as a kind of outward bound museum with a rotating set of exhibits, many of which are new to the second time visitor. 

The park speciality is modern and contemporary sculpture, so you will not find anything much older than twenty year within its confines but are virtually guaranteed something to thrill (if you enjoy modern works of art, of course).

This is most certainly not Sparta. The sculptors are both famous and little known with space given for local artists looking to make a reputation for themselves in this field as well as more established names.

Over two hundred different pieces of art are to be found at the park, too many to show here.  Yet what brings the visitors returning to the Pride of the Valley is the fact it is outdoors, forever changing and truly innovative and fascinatingly composed.

The walk is not a maze but you may at first be mistaken for thinking this – but the wooded area serves the sculptures beautifully.  There are three small lakes in the park too, which add to its allure.  And you will not be overrun by other visitors either.

If your tastes are eclectic, you will almost certainly be in your element here.  A surprise awaits around each and every corner, such is the number of sculptures.

The Pride of the Valley Sculpture Park is little known – a best kept secret as it were – and it is true in many ways that it is not designed for the casual visitor looking to kill an hour with the kids.  This is a place for those (young and old alike) with an affinity for modern sculpture whether as an individual – or if the family is collectively inclined – as a tribe.

You may be looking for the off the wall, the bizarre.  In which case you will have come to the right place.

Alternatively,if you are looking for a modern take on the age old scultpor's aim of imitating the beauty of life, you will not be disappointed either. The Pride of the Valley is a special place, so next time you are near Churt, take time out for a short detour.