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Replica made with a 3D printer. OH 24 (Olduvai Hominid No. 24, nicknamed "Twiggy") is a fossilized skull of the species Homo habilis. It was discovered in Olduvai Gorge, Tanzania by Peter Nzube in 1968. The skull was found crushed almost flat and was therefore named after the famously skinny model of the time Twiggy.
Spindle shaped organism with primary and secondary branches Artist's 3D reconstruction of Fractofusus misrai. In the summer of 1967, S.B. Misra, an Indian graduate student (1966–69) at Newfoundland's Memorial University discovered a rich assemblage of imprints of soft bodied organisms on the surface of large rock slabs, while mapping the Conception Group of Avalon Peninsula of Newfoundland ...
The uploader of this file has agreed to the Wikimedia Foundation 3D patent license: This file and any 3D objects depicted in the file are both my own work. I hereby grant to each user, maker, or distributor of the object depicted in the file a worldwide, royalty-free, fully-paid-up, nonexclusive, irrevocable and perpetual license at no additional cost under any patent or patent application I ...
3D reconstruction of Diskagma buttonii. Diskagma buttonii is a problematic fossil that has been named before its biological affinities have been understood. Its size and complexity suggest that it had the degree of cytoskeletal complexity found in eukaryotes, but it predates the other fossil candidate for the oldest eukaryote Grypania, now known to be 1800 million years old, [2] and at 2200 ...
[2] [12] At the time of the auction, the fossil was mounted on a steel armature, and positioned in an attacking stance. [13] The missing bones were replaced by sculpted and 3D-printed replicas, [16] including mirrored versions of existing material. [8] The auction lot also included 3D scans of the fossil, with a license to use the scan data. [7]
Its type specimen is BMNH In. 42706a,b, In. 42707, which is a 3D body fossil of its exoskeleton found near modern-day United Kingdom. [5] It is thought to have grown up to around 40 cm (16 in) long, [ 6 ] but later study estimated its total length about 24 cm (9.4 in).
The generic name Weewarrasaurus refers to the Wee Warra fossil locality where the fossils were found, and the Greek word saurus, meaning lizard. The specific name, W. pobeni, honours Poben. The opal banding on the fossil was used to confirm that both parts of the dentary, which do not form a continuous sequence, were from the same individual.
Timorebestia has a wide body marginally surrounded by continuous rayed fins: a pair of lateral fins and a rounded caudal fin.The anterior region is a short head, bearing a pair of antennae as long as half of the body length.