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Author: Paul Willis

Palaeo News: Beetles in dino dung

News today of new species of beetle trapped in the dung of an early dinosaur. Beetles (Coleoptera) are the most diverse group of organisms in the world today and they have their origins back to the Permian period but the Triassic period appears to be when the incredible diversification of beetles began. But when palaeontologists…
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518 million year old nursery found in China

A newly discovered fossil deposit near Kunming, China, may hold the keys to understanding how these organisms laid the foundations for life on land and at sea today, according to an international team of researchers. The fossil deposit contains an exceptionally preserved trove of early vertebrates and other rare, soft-bodied organisms.  More than half of…
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Always been a Palaeo Nerd!

Going through boxes of old family photographs and came across this classic. In 1978 a 14-year-old Palaeo Paul won my age group for my fossil collection in a competition run by the Australian Museum. The competition was open for any natural history collection so my fossils were up against collections of butterflies and insects, rocks,…
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Fieldwork at Alcoota, NT

Back in 1988, Palaeo Paul was a keen postgraduate student chasing the fossil crocodiles of Australia. While most of my field work was at the amazing Riversleigh Station in northwestern Queensland, we did here of crocodile fossils coming from the Alcoota site in the Northern Territory.  At that time, this site was being worked by…
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Showing off Eric

This must have been around 1989 when I took some friends from down the street into the Australian Museum to view Eric, the opalised Plesiosaur. I had not long finished cleaning Eric and putting him back together and was so proud of him, I just wanted to show him off to anyone and everyone! (and…
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Palaeo News Video (Aug 7, 2020)

1. The skull of Macrocnemus 
2. New dinosaur fills a gap in evolutionary history 
3. Dinosaur Stampede revisited 
4. World’s smallest dinosaur is probably a lizard 
5. Myanmar Amber Fossils 
6. The monster croc that ate dinosaurs

Saving A Dinosaur: Our approach to funding research and protecting fossils

Palaeo Pictures has acquired the opalised bones of a small dinosaur. You may well ask why a video production company wants to get into owning fossils! It’s a long and complex story that comes down to finding a new way to secure these unique pieces of our natural heritage and to fund their preparation and study. At stake is the future of uniquely Australian fossils and the science that delivers our understanding of them.

Why Palaeo Pictures?

There are so many video production companies already out there and more are appearing every day. It seems that everyone wants to get into video production! So why is Palaeo Pictures different from everybody else?