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Published: 2008-04-02 13:55:53 +0000 UTC; Views: 27259; Favourites: 456; Downloads: 198
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Description
A mind is a beautiful thing... for a placoderm.A long time ago, my friend Jonas started a contest for free-form "alien" design.
[link]
Here is my submission.
Antiarch Placoderms ( [link] ) were early fish that had unusual properties such as armor-plated bodies and jointed, arthropod like front fins. Some species like Bothriolepis, looked like fat lampreys embedded through carapaces of lobsters. They had fairly mobile, claw-like front fins that may have enabled them to crawl through the sediment, or even onto land like mudskippers!
Suppose that the Antiarchs had beaten the later varieties of fish earlier on in the "land race" during the late Devonian.
Weird, polydactyl fish-salamanders like Acanthostega were the ancestors of every land-living vertebrate today. As the Acanthostegans crawled on their eight-finned stubs on -this- Devonian, they got a rather unpleasant surprise.
Heavily armored, predatory Antiarchs had gotten there first. As the 'Stegans quickly found out, the croc-sized, armored, pincer toting Antiarchs made short work of competitors on land. The 'Stegans reverted back to a littoral existence and for the rest of Earth's history, did not get more exciting than evolutionary footnotes.
Triumphant on land, the Antiarchs flourished. They shuffled around at first, and refined their front fins into fully functional limbs over time. Crawling, snake-like beasts were soon replaced with awkward, gangly bipeds.
Some of the bipeds folded their tails underneath for support. In time, the tail turned into a separate limb of its own. Of course by that time, the Antiarchs were as far from their boxy ancestors as lizards would have been from lungfish.
Once again, tripedal dynasties battled each other over eons, refining weapons and strategies that gave them warm blood, terrestrial reproduction, speed and intelligence. The specter of mass extinction hung over them throughout. Several times it struck, sweeping the decks clean and randomizing the survivors' chances as masters of land, or scurriers underneath.
Some tripods took back to the sea, like bony crocodiles with oars at first, smooth, sleek hunters later on. Some hollowed out their bones and filled them with air sacs and grew to unseen sizes. Their children thread the earth like giant, iron cranes. Still others took to the sky with spectacular arrangements of wings, fingers and legs. There, they faced overgrown descendants of insects, which had all the time to master the sky in the absence of vertebrate competition.
Some species remained generalists on land, or in the forests and jungles of improbably large, scaled trees. Cataclysms shifted the land and made one habitat give way to another. Some species survived because they could protect themselves well.
Others could afford to eat anything and everything. And one variety made it because they had the curiosity to observe and think about the world around it...
One of them lit a fire one day... on this Earth, mankind still had thirty million years to do the same.
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Comments: 83
KyuremBlack646 In reply to ??? [2021-01-28 04:58:34 +0000 UTC]
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Miakhano In reply to KyuremBlack646 [2021-01-28 13:34:28 +0000 UTC]
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KyuremBlack646 In reply to Miakhano [2021-01-28 13:50:12 +0000 UTC]
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TheHarpyEagle [2016-01-14 01:08:24 +0000 UTC]
Would it be okay if I used a similar concept in my work? Not the same thing of course. But a terrestrial tripodal antiarch?
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Therosaur [2014-07-06 12:20:19 +0000 UTC]
This is awesome!!!!You should expand upon that concept!!!!
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GigoXXIII [2013-11-23 09:10:58 +0000 UTC]
Wow pretty cool, I'v always wondered what life might be like if Placoderms had invaded land. When I try to visual what they might have ended up looking like it's usual some kind of big heavily armored pseudo-reptilian kind of thing
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Heytomemeimhome [2013-10-11 01:44:28 +0000 UTC]
Absolutley amazin, one thing bothers me though :what happened to their pelvic fins ?
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kingcarnagh [2012-07-06 14:47:41 +0000 UTC]
that looks like something off the homeworld of the aliens in the latest war of the worlds!
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PeteriDish [2012-05-09 16:44:49 +0000 UTC]
This would be a saisfacting design for an alien, but it's an "alternate earth" piece! That's amazing!
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nemo-ramjet In reply to PeteriDish [2012-07-30 08:49:32 +0000 UTC]
I think people accidentally produce a lot of "alternate earth" animals when trying to design "aliens"
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PeteriDish In reply to nemo-ramjet [2012-07-30 11:33:23 +0000 UTC]
true. I think I've done that more times than I would have liked myslef...
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wolfwarriorcatgirl [2011-11-02 20:18:38 +0000 UTC]
what is that lol luv it i like weard stuff
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BeatEdgySilver [2011-10-29 00:48:31 +0000 UTC]
Hm... that looks like a possible ancestral form of the aliens from Tom Cruise's War of the Worlds. Compare with the concept art in this gallery: [link]
I'm thinking the "Martians," as I'll call them for now, suffered a mutation in the past that doubled the number of anterior limbs, and the second pair eventually became smaller and suited for manipulation.
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nemo-ramjet In reply to BeatEdgySilver [2011-10-30 20:58:38 +0000 UTC]
The rear leg could have evolved from a tail, too...
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Zippo4k [2011-06-30 16:02:05 +0000 UTC]
I still look back at this and admire it. I'm sorry that contest was a bust (I regret ever bringing it up) but this is such a great piece of work by itself.
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nemo-ramjet In reply to Zippo4k [2011-07-07 10:06:54 +0000 UTC]
Thanks bro... don't worry about the contest, you still made us produce some nice artwork! This piece was instrumental in developing my "detailed fine line" technique later on...
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Zippo4k In reply to nemo-ramjet [2011-07-07 12:47:04 +0000 UTC]
Thanks! (still feel kinda bad though, but that's alright.)
I'm glad to see that it had a positive effect on you all.
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Ebervalius In reply to Zippo4k [2012-07-20 11:41:32 +0000 UTC]
What happened to the contest, btw?
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Zippo4k In reply to Ebervalius [2012-07-22 00:52:07 +0000 UTC]
That burned out partly due to the pace of college picking up and eruption of anxiety attacks (they run in my father's family. I'd say they aren't frequent but they are topic sensitive, so they can easily be provoked which is... deeply upsetting for me. Still, they're something I'm working on.)
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Chimpeetah [2009-06-10 02:21:17 +0000 UTC]
Wow I love this creature, I wish you could continue, though "sadly" you are still busy with Snaiad and the Dinosauroid Project...you criminal Keep up the good work
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Laughing-Dove [2009-05-27 11:34:07 +0000 UTC]
Now there's a beast I'd love to see moving. Frankly, I see potential for a second Snaiad...all hints aside, I'm perfectly tickled by the way you've done the anatomy, it's completely plausible somehow, if looking a bit awkward to me--although, I daresay that would be thanks to my struggle to get my head around it's locomotion. :3
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BarsoomianBOB [2009-02-08 04:58:08 +0000 UTC]
Alright, I hate to ask, but I can't help it, I need to know: is it facing us, or looking up at the sky? Or, none of the above?
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nemo-ramjet In reply to taylrock [2008-06-24 01:38:26 +0000 UTC]
Check out my journal, other people are already doing it! I'll probably waiting for the entire game to come out first...
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taylrock In reply to nemo-ramjet [2008-06-26 02:13:28 +0000 UTC]
well...w-e u can at least practice w/ the demo like i am
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Vladdyboy [2008-05-19 01:29:22 +0000 UTC]
Beautiful! I see you sticked with the whole "Barlowe-esque" theme!
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OrzhovSlodier [2008-05-02 22:40:31 +0000 UTC]
I can only imagine what some of the other species would look like. I hope you advance this concept a little.
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nemo-ramjet In reply to OrzhovSlodier [2008-05-10 14:40:52 +0000 UTC]
Thanks! I will advance such subjects, but only in a very long time.
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Emmoyenne [2008-04-13 01:38:08 +0000 UTC]
Is its vague similarity in shape to a neuron coincidental? I can't imagine they'd have even remotely the same functions. Maybe the title is throwing me off.
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nemo-ramjet In reply to Emmoyenne [2008-04-14 21:01:09 +0000 UTC]
A neuron? Wow, I never thought about it... but it does look like one, with an axon and dendrites, etc... complete coincidence!
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thomastapir [2008-04-10 04:59:34 +0000 UTC]
This thing is so cool I donβt even know where to startβ¦I keep coming back to it and getting more out of it. I love the whole background concept; I love how the jointed exoskeletal forelimbs have been refined into βantennaeβ (or am I misinterpreting them?βanyway, theyβre cool); I love the folding tail/legβ¦A very exotic and impressive design in every way. I was just thinking recently about how the placoderms, especially the antiarchs, represent such a rich and exotic source for creature designs, and how theyβve been rather under-exploited/appreciated in sci-fi biology. Itβs great to see you do something so imaginative with this unique and often-overlooked group!
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nemo-ramjet In reply to thomastapir [2008-05-10 14:58:06 +0000 UTC]
Thank you very much... and sorry for the late responses, I'm ripple-answering my comments! Actually, the antennae are antennae, not like that of an insect, but developed as a novel sensory organ later on, when they made the transition to land.
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thomastapir In reply to nemo-ramjet [2008-05-12 03:36:16 +0000 UTC]
Ah, gotcha...Sorry, I should have gotten that from the description in which you described the evolution of the legs. I just love the idea of fish with jointed exoskeletal limbs...I have a lot of ideas for creatures based on both placoderms and iniopterygians, which is one of the reasons I was so excited to see your design.
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nemo-ramjet In reply to thomastapir [2008-06-10 00:31:17 +0000 UTC]
Thanks! By the way, your new limb-fin designs are just out of this world... I really like them!
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thomastapir In reply to nemo-ramjet [2008-06-10 04:57:28 +0000 UTC]
Thank you! Hah, I wish I could take full credit for them, but to a large extent I was just riffing on one of Piatnitskysaurus' concepts. I'm glad you like them though, and thanks for all the recent faves! : )
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PousazPower [2008-04-05 02:27:57 +0000 UTC]
How did the "hands" evolve on the tail and limbs?
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nemo-ramjet In reply to PousazPower [2008-04-06 10:17:07 +0000 UTC]
The hands branched off like lobster claws, while the middle toe in the tail is the terminal end of the caudal vertebrae. The ones on the side are inflexible, they started out more like a stegosaur's tail spikes...
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NDean [2008-04-04 18:34:46 +0000 UTC]
truly spectacular... love the logic and reasoning behind it
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