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Some shots of the megalodon skeletal an life restoration im doing

Currently on its way to be the most accurate megalodon restoration currently

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evolution-incarnate:

Sketch:$60 Lineart:$80 Character design:$100 Color sketch:$100 Color lineart:$120 Additional full characters:$20 Additional partial characters:$5 Rendered piece:$150 Complex background:$60 Simple 3D model:$300 Complex 3D model:$600 Animation: $200 Price might depend on subject pic.twitter.com/BZarsqpCqk  — EVOLUTION, Ewalina song (she/her) 🦈 (@Evoincarnate) May 15, 2023ALT

My commission prices and examples

I kinda need some cash so if you want a comm feel free to contact me on here or Twitter

still kinda need money

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hardtimes:

glowing-and-confused:

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So the CONTEXT is that Xbox is releasing Diablo IV and they changed their logo to match that, BUT I’m CACKLING over the idea that Xbox decided 4 days of pride was enough and that the gays should burn in hell now

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(via thepageofhopes)

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kirbuu:

zanda-rl:

dummy-dot-exe:

人魚 VS 猫 by よぬ石

both the human and the other mermaid helping jdgjosijgidfjg

Something about how calmly and diligently the two are working and the way she is looking away makes me think this isn’t the first time she has done this…

(via strawberry-crocodile)

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terumbudivers:

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Shark with Terumbu Divers

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sharkposting:

Daily shark day 9:

Ornate Wobblegong

The ornate wobbegong (Orectolobus ornatus) is a species of carpet shark that lives in Australia and possibly other countries in the Western Pacific Ocean. It is coloured golden brown, yellow-green and blueish-grey, and it grows to maximum 120 centimetres (3.9 ft). Described by Charles Walter De Vis in 1883, it is similar in appearance to other Australian wobbegongs and has previously been classified as the same species as the Gulf wobbegong. It is a nocturnal species, hunting at night, and it can bite humans when disturbed. The International Union for Conservation of Nature has listed it as a least-concern species.

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strawberry-crocodile:

strawberry-crocodile:

She/Her but the way Steve Irwin talked about a three meter long saltwater crocodile

ways that i am she/her

  • I am a girl actually despite what you think (most of the time it is this)
  • Gay Queen
  • The way 19 year old nbs on tumblr she/her their favorite pathetic fictional man while still viewing him as a man but like. queer and Gender.
  • When the third act twist in a kid’s monster movie is that the monster has kids and Is A Mommy and all the sudden it’s she/her

(via strawberry-crocodile)

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sharkposting:

Special greek shark week!!

I’m in Greece right now so for the next 10 days I will only cover sharks that can be found around the Mediterranean sea!

Daily shark day 10:

Angel Shark

Squatina squatina, the angelshark or monkfish, is a species of shark in the family Squatinidae (known generally also as angel sharks), that were once widespread in the coastal waters of the northeastern Atlantic Ocean. Well-adapted for camouflaging itself on the sea floor, the angelshark has a flattened form with enlarged pectoral and pelvic fins, giving it a superficial resemblance to a ray. This species can be identified by its broad and stout body, conical barbels, thornless back (in larger individuals), and grayish or brownish dorsal coloration with a pattern of numerous small light and dark markings (that is more vivid in juveniles). It measures up to 2.4 m (7.9 ft) long. Like other members of its family, the angelshark is a nocturnal ambush predator that buries itself in sediment and waits for passing prey, mostly benthic bony fishes, but also skates and invertebrates. An aplacental viviparous species, females bear litters of seven to 25 pups every other year. The angelshark normally poses little danger to humans, though if provoked, it is quick to bite. Since the mid-20th century, intense commercial fishing across the angelshark’s range has decimated its population via bycatch – it is now locally extinct or nearly so across most of its northern range, and the prospects of the remaining fragmented subpopulations are made more precarious by its slow rate of reproduction. As a result, the International Union for Conservation of Nature has assessed this species as Critically Endangered.

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