crazyjetty:

amillionlayers:

queerglorfindel:

thebookbandersnatch:

ohnoproblems:

wellmanicuredman:

astrosaurustyrannus:

the-zimbabwe-yahweh:

yougottalettheeren:

kawaii-automaton:

swimmingferret:

chyna-r:

silenthill:

chyna-r:

silenthill:

imagine a crocodile with horse-like legs… unstoppable… i would love to ride one o’ those into battle

are you..high 

….carry on 

Fun fact these ‘crocodile cousins’ with ‘horse-like legs’ existed and was known as a ‘sabre-toothed cat in armour’ due to it’s speed out of water and long fangs. There was the ‘DogCroc’ ( Araripesuchus wegeneri) and ‘BoarCroc’ (Kaprosuchus). The DogCroc (featured above) was only around the size of a small dog, with its skull easily fitting into the palm of someones hand. It lived during the Lower Cretaceous-Upper Cretaceous period;

*Comparison of a DogCroc’s skull to a Sarcosuchus skull. (Sarcosuchus is the largest known crocodile species and was large enough it could even prey upon a T-Rex and could weigh up to ten tonnes and be over forty feet long.)

However the BoarCroc (Kaprosuchus) was twenty-foot long and could gallop across land and preyed upon dinosaurs.

@prismfawn

TONIGHT

WE RIDE 

@astrosaurustyrannus

I LOVE THESE SO MUCH

@ohnoproblems

life goals/wife goals

@queerglorfindel ready your weapons; at dawn we ride

BRING ON THE ARMIES

I wonder what their metabolisms were like… and how long could they sustain that gallop for?

Crocs are the most fascinating animal group in history. What we have today is positively boring compared to how experimental this group has been in the past.
In addition to the “dog croc,” there were also arboreal crocodiles. That means they lived IN TREES.
There was one species that was the size of a whale and lived almost, if not entirely at sea. But, like most whales it was a filter feeder, and not a killer.
Crocodiliforms are magic.

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