Ancient Dinosaur Depictions

Dinosaur Fighting a MammothTo the right is a picture of a dinosaur fighting a mammoth from the book Buried Alive by Dr. Jack Cuozzo (click to enlarge). It was taken by the author in Bernifal Cave, one of the caverns in France that is renowned for Neanderthal artifacts. The cave was subsequently closed to the public. Science News was given the opportunity to publish the remarkable photo, but declined. It seems that evidence against the prevailing paradigm of naturalistic origin is selected against. It is buried alive by the scientific establishment. As Cuozzo says, this is natural selection in the most literal sense!

Ishtar GateIshtar GateDinosaur Fighting a Mammoth

In 600 BC, under the reign of King Nebuchadnezzar, a Babylonian artist was commissioned to shape reliefs of animals on the structures associated with the Ishtar Gate. Many centuries later German archaeologist Robert Koldewey stumbled upon the blue-glazed brick and that gate was rediscovered in 1899. The animals appear in alternating rows with lions, fierce bulls (rimi or reems in Chaldean), and curious long-necked dragons (sirrush). The lions and bulls would have been present at that time in the Middle East. But, on what creature did the ancient Babylonians model the dragon? (click the depiction to enlarge) Koldewey believed that the sirrush was a portrayal of a real animal and in 1918, he proposed that the dinosaur Iguanodon was the closest known match to the sirrush. The same word, sirrush, is mentioned in the book of Bel and the Dragon, from the Apocrypha. Both the description there and the image on these unearthed walls, which are now displayed in the Berlin Vorderasiatisches Museum, appear to fit a sauropod dinosaur. (Shuker, Karl P.N., “The Sirrush of Babylon,” Dragons: A Natural History, 1995, pp. 70-73.)

Bronze Lid Persian Dragon Vessel

To the right is a bronze Persian pot manufactured toward the end of the 1st Millennium AD that is part of the Genesis Park collection. The most fascinating element of this vessel is the stylized, scaled dinosaur-like dragon that forms the spout. Dragons form an integral part of Persian mythology and beliefs. The ceremonial undertones of this vessel lead us to believe that it was associated with Zoroastrianism. Several malevolent dragon-like creatures are mentioned at various points in the Zoroastrian scriptures. One such popular dragon myth involves Azi Dahaka – a three-headed Persian dragon that will devour one third of all men and animals at the end of the world.

Turkish Dragon by Levni in SurnameAlthough the Ottoman Empire ruled for over six centuries, there are not many depictions of dinosaurian creatures in their artwork (as compared to Medieval European art). Perhaps dragons were not as common in the eastern European/Middle East theater at that time. The Turkish painting to the left, entitled “Procession of the Trade Corporation during the Festival of 1720 in Constantinople” is in a surname (or historical album) called The Surname-I Hümayun archived at Topkapi Museum of Istanbul. It was written and illustrated under the direction of Abdulcelil Levni (aka Abdulcelil Çelebi) who was the official Ottoman court painter till he died in 1732. The picture shows the guildsmen, followed by clowns and what seems to be a mechanical three-headed dragon. (Click for an enlargement of the dragon.) Note the similarity to baby sauropods dinosaur. Asauropod with multiple heads, a condition known as polycephaly, while curious, is hardly unknown among dinosaur reports.

Sumatran Corythosaurus

Up to the 1800s the Dayak peoples of Borneo and Sumatra produced multiple pieces of art depicting long-tailed, long-necked creatures with a headcrest. Some of these animals resemble hadrosaurs. This particular work, housed in the Ethnographical Museum of Budapest, depicts a creature that bears a striking resemblance to a Corythosaurus. It is apparently being hunted by these ancient Indonesian peoples. (Bodrogi, Tibor, Art of Indonesia, 1973.)

OviraptorBeaked Dragon X-RayBeaked DragonChinese stories and stylized dragon depictions are fairly common. But an unusual beaked dragon statue came up on the antiquities market and is now in the Genesis Park collection. The bronze styling on this artifact suggests it is from the Han Dynasty (206 B.C. – A.D. 220). It displays numerous characteristics of the beaked dinosaurs (like the Oviraptordepicted alongside for comparison): tridactyl feet configuration, metatarsal stance, scale-like representation all over the body (except for the horn which has a striated pattern), long (albeit slender) tail, elaborate head crest and a long neck. This piece was submitted for industrial X-Ray authentication and the patina was also chemically tested, showing that the artifact was clearly genuine. A beautifully preserved beaked dinosaur mummy (Edmontosaurus) was discovered in Alberta, Canada in 2013. The specimen sported a fleshy crest atop its head (like a rooster). Researchers theorized that the hat-like ornament was brightly colored to allow for identification. This was the first non-bony crest discovered on a dinosaur. It closely matches the look of the Chinese beaked dragon.

Fang Jian Ornamental BoxFang Jian Ornamental BoxAnother fascinating Chinese artifact is the Late Eastern Zhou Sauropod (Fang Jian) ornamental box to the right. Displaying a tridactyl foot, a long neck and a head that resembles a Brachiosaur, this depiction is compelling. (Fong, Wen ed., The Great Bronze Age of China, Metropolitan Museum of Art, 1980, p. 285.) Miniature Seated Chinese DragonThe seated dragon sculpture in cast bronze to the left comes from the Tangy Dynasty and is currently housed at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art. Many more such dinosaur-like Chinese dragon depictions could be considered from this time period, like the painted ceramic dragon to the lower left, identified by the exhibiting museum as Tang Dynasty (618-906 AD). Next we consider an even older dragon artifact from the Shang dynasty (1766-1122 B.C.) that was advertised on the Chinese antiquities market as a dinosaur depiction. It displays relief lines in a scale-like pattern, a broad beak, a dermal frill, and a headcrest that is strikingly like the dinosaur Saurolophus (shown below on the right). This jade statute, now in the Genesis Park collection, is made of white colored nephrite with differential weathering, cleaving veins and earth penetration, demonstrating authenticity. (Click to enlarge.)

Chinese Tang Dynasty Painted Ceramic Dragon Shang Dynasty Artifactsaurolophus

About 4,000 years ago, the Hongshan culture in China produced many wonderful jade dragon carvings (along with other clear animal representations). Over time these dragon productions became highly stylized and were especially popular as pendants. Most of these pieces only resemble dragons in a crude sense, but a few of the older dragon statues appear to be reproductions of certain dinosaurs. Notice the resemblance this jade dragon bears to a small Protoceratops dinosaur. The unusual, red carving on right is part of the Genesis Park collection. Hongshan Turquoise Dragon5Hongshan vs Protoceratops

Greek VaseThe February 26, 2000 issue of Science News contained an article that commented on a Hesione vase artifact housed at the Boston Museum of Fine Arts (Hesman, 2000). On this ancient Greek vase are a series of somewhat unusual paintings, including one that portrays a monster with the head of a dinosaur. This pottery was created around 550 B.C. and depicts the Greek hero Heracles rescuing Hesione from this “monster of Troy.” Forced to concede that it is an amazingly realistic dinosaurian depiction, Science News concluded that the paintings on this unusual vase simply prove that ancient people dug up and assembled fossils. But there is no evidence for sophisticated Ancient Paleontologists.

A 1971 landslide in the Girifalco region of southern Italy brought to light hundreds of ancient artifacts of a pre-Greek civilization. A lawyer named Mario Tolone Azzariti asserts that he found some dinosaurian representations among them (pictured below). To the left is a terracotta statue measuring about 18 cm long, shaped remarkably like a Stegosaurus dinosaur.  The triangular plates run down its back to the tail. Girifalco Dinosaur Girifalco DinosaurGirifalco Dinosaur

In the view from above (center) the object reveals a strange curving of the plates, as if the animal had been represented lumbering from side to side. The legs are large and awkward, as if carrying great weight, not at all like those of a lizard. There is also a clear representation of a Stegosaurus on a piece of broken pottery (right).

The art below is from the Mesopotamian cylinder seal of Uruk, an artifact currently housed at the Louvre. The animal on the right is an artist’s conception from a skeleton of an Apatosaurus. There are many striking similarities between these two depictions. The legs and feet on the artifact clearly fit the sauropods better than any other type of animal. The biggest difference is at the head. Cartilage forming the shape of a frill or ears may be stylized or accurate (since there is no way to know from the skeletons we have today). As for the musculature, the ancient artist draws with stunning realism. One has to ask where the artist got the model to draw so convincingly the trunk of a sauropod.

Manshiyat Ezzat Cosmetic PaletteThe January 2003 issue of National Geographic magazine presents an artifact described as a “cosmetic palette . . . from a cemetery of the first dynasties in Manshaat Ezzat.” These long-necked creatures displayed on page 78 fit the pattern of other ancient dinosaur-like depictions, including arching, muscular necks and stout bodies. This artifact depicts many lifelike animals (including a giraffe on the reverse).

two Dog PaletteTo the far right is displayed the Narmer Palette, which dates back to about 3,100 BC. It is from the ancient Egyptian capital of Hierakonpolis and shows the triumph of King Nar-mer with long necked dragons that appear to be in captivity. Immediately to the right is the Two Dog Palette from the same period. It is displaying a pair of “dinosaur-like” creatures along with numerous clear representations of living animals (clearly not drawn to scale).

An Egyptian apotropaic wand (or magical “knife”) dating from about 1750 BC displays a similar long-necked creature. Made from hippo tusk ivory, this artifact is currently housed in the British Museum. The preponderance of these long-necked depictions in ancient art motivated archaeologists who do not believe men and dinosaurs coexisted to invent a name for this particular creature. It is called a “serpopard,” supposedly a mosaic of a serpent and a leopard. But for those who believe that man was created in the beginning alongside the great reptiles, these palettes seem to be an attempt to depict a sauropod dinosaur. Note the “Four Dogs Palette” with the “serpopard” cut out for clarity.

Egyptian Apotropaic Wand on Hippo Tusk British MuseumEgyptian Predynastic Hierakonpolis Four Dogs Palette1Egyptian Predynastic Hierakonpolis Four Dogs Palette2

Palestrina MosaicTo the left is a beautiful mosaic that was one of the wonders of the second century world. (Click to enlarge or see The Nile Mosaic of Palestrina for more details). Housed in Palestrina, which is just south of Rome, this masterpiece depicts Nile scenes from Egypt all the way up into Ethiopia. Scholars now believe this is the work of Demetrius the Topographer, an artist from Alexandria who came to work in Rome. The top portion of this remarkable piece of art is generally believed to depict African animals being hunted by black-skinned warriors. These Ethiopians are pursuing what appears to be some type of dinosaur. The Greek Letters above the reptilian animal in question are KROKODILOPARDALIS, which is literally translated Crocodile-Leopard (apparently identifying an agile reptilian creature). The picture shown here is only a small portion of the massive mosaic. It also contains clear depictions of known animals, including Egyptian crocodiles and hippos. (See Finley, The Light of the Past, 1965, p. 93.)

Ancient DepictionAnasazi Drawing Anasazi Drawing

The picture above right (click to enlarge) was drawn by North American Anasazi Indians that lived in the area that has now become Utah between 150 B.C. and 1200 A.D. Even noted anti-creationists agree that it resembles a dinosaur and that the brownish film which has hardened over the picture, along with the pitting and weathering, attests to its age. One evolutionist writes, “There is a petroglyph in Natural Bridges National Monument that bears a startling resemblance to a dinosaur, specifically a Brontosaurus, with a long tail and neck, small head and all.” (Barnes and Pendleton, Canyon Country Prehistoric Indians – Their Culture, Ruins, Artifacts and Rock Art, 1995.) Clearly a native warrior and an Apatosaur-like creature are depicted. Yet another Native American rock pictograph found in Utah (left) seems to depict a sauropod dinosaur. Jeremy Springfield Petroglyph2Meso American PotMississippian Saurian2

The petroglyph above to the left was discovered in 2012 by Jeremy Springfield on a trip to Hidden Mountain, just outside of Los Lunas, New Mexico. S8int website brought his story to our attention. The drawing is located on an isolated, inaccessible ledge near a very clear deer petroglyph. What were the ancient Pueblo peoples intending to depict, if not a saurian creature that they knew from that region?

The Mississippian culture flourished from 800 – 1500 AD through the southwestern United States and it is known for their building of mounds. Above in the center is a curious piece from this culture (click to enlarge). Apparently the swirling pattern on its sides signifies that the animal in question lived in water, while the eye markings allude to the beast’s unusually keen vision. Some of these Indian depictions of this rotund animal show tridactyl feet, a long neck and prominent tail held aloft. Above to the right, note the handle on a Mesoamerican pottery object made by Mississippi Caddo Indians. It seems to display a baby dinosaur. This circa 1200 AD artifact is housed at Creation Evidence Museum in Texas (click to enlarge).

UnktehiHenry Rowe Schoolcraft was a geologist and Indian agent who wrote extensively about the Sioux Indians. He heard stories about a monstrous creature called Unktehi, something like an ox but much larger, with great horns. Schoolcraft reproduced drawings of several types of Unktehi monsters on birchbark around 1850. These were based upon rock art describing a war party of five canoes crossing Lake Superior that encountered animals resembling giant turtles, snakes, and moose. But some (upper right) clearly look dinosaurian. Sioux Indians further west, when interviewed by ethnologists, described Unktehi as an immense reptile or serpent with legs. He was shaped like a giant scaly snake with feet and a notched backbone or crest like a giant saw and had a heavy spiked tail. Still otherUnktehi DepictionIndian reports describe Unktehi as a swamp-dwelling creature. Adrienne Mayor, an evolutionist, believes that the Sioux were weaving stories about fossils they encountered (Mayor, Fossil Legends of the First Americans,2005, pp. 235-237). But the pictures and description bring to mind the dinosaur Ankylosaurus (lower right) with a low slung body, long tail, heavy armor, and prominent multiple horns. A plated and horned creature has also been discovered in Cree Indian art (left – click to enlarge) on the Agawa Rock at Misshepezhieu, Lake Superior Provincial Park, Ontario, Canada.

Puff the Magic DragonOn the right is shown a photo of one of the curious “dinosaur” petroglyphs near Middle Mesa at the Wupatki National Park. This particular petroglyph is called “Puff the Magic Dragon,” and appears to be a depiction of a fire-breathing dinosaur. Though there is no certain way to date such petroglyphs, this carving is believed to be at least several hundred years old.

Havasupai PetroglyphOn two occasions in the late 1800s, Samuel Hubbard, Curator of Archaeology of the Oakland Museum, visited an area of the Grand Canyon known as the Havasupai Canyon. As an evolutionist, he was amazed to find a petroglyph (carved rock drawing) of an elephant made by Native Americans. But another depiction was “cut into the sandstone much more deeply than the elephant.” Its height was 11.2 inches, with a neck approximately 5.1 inches in length and a tail of 9.1 inches. Hubbard photographed the petroglyph and eventually placed it in his scientific monograph Discoveries Relating to Prehistoric Man (1925, p. 10). What kind of animal is it? Dr. Hubbard believed that he had found an ancient drawing of a dinosaur. He wrote, “The fact that some prehistoric man made a pictograph of a dinosaur on the walls of this canyon upsets completely all of our theories regarding the antiquity of man. Facts are stubborn and immutable things. If theories do not square with the facts then the theories must change, the facts remain.” (Doheny, E. L., Discoveries Relating to Prehistoric Man by the Doheny Scientific Expedition in the Hava Supai Canyon Northern Arizona, 1924, p. 5.) In the far left picture, Paul Taylor compares this ancient drawing to the Edmontosaurus. (Click to enlarge the picture – courtesy of Don Patton.)

Granby IdolGranby Idol

A similar association of an American elephant and dinosaur is presented in the Granby Idol. This queer rock relic was unearthed by W.L. Chalmers near Grand Lake, high in the Colorado Rockies. He found the 66 pound stone (along with various ancient utensils) several feet below the surface while enlarging an irrigation reservoir on his homestead. The stone was made of an exceedingly hard green material, like nothing ever known of in the neighborhood. (“Is Pre-Glacial Man Coming Back?”Hutchison News, January 5, 1923.) On one side is a carved man, holding a tablet containing symbols. On the back are carved a mastodon and two dinosaurs. (Click to enlarge. Courtesy of s8int.com.) According to The Le Grand Reporter in 1923, Jean Allard Jeancon, archaeologist and Curator of the Colorado Historical and Natural History Society, stated, “If this stone can be proven genuine, it is the biggest find in all anthropological research and antedates anything on the American continent and is going to establish the remote antiquity of man. I have Church of San Zan Degolanever seen such remarkable outlines of dinosaurs and mastodons!” Unfortunately this priceless artifact appears to have been lost somewhere in the bowels of the museum system. (Murphy, Jan, Mysteries and Legends of Colorado: True Stories of the Unsolved and Unexplained, 2007.) If a school teacher named Lela Smith had not taken three photos of the Buddha-like stone, the knowledge of this relic would have been lost.

A wonderfully-preserved fresco (on the left – click to enlarge) depicting the archangel Michael overcoming the dragon is displayed at San Zan Degolà, a beautiful little 13th century church in Venice, Italy. The dragon’s proportions and especially its diminutive front legs bring to mind the small theropod dinosaurs like Compsognathus.

Choir stall railings and misericords (shelf-like seats for reclining while standing) in Medieval European churches are often adorned with ornate carvings. A common theme is the depictions of a dragon (symbolizing Satan) fighting a lion (symbolizing Christ). To the bottom-left is one such depiction, showing a dragon that looks very much like a sauropod dinosaur, taken from St. Remigius’ Church. The other three pictures below are taken from Carlisle Cathedral’s misericords, carved in the 15th century. Click to enlarge these pictures.

St. Remigius's Church Misericord2MisericordMisericordMisericord

Rhodesia Cave Painting“A fantastic mystery has developed over a set of cave paintings found in the Gorozomzi Hills, 25 miles from Salisbury. For the paintings include a brontosaurus – the 67-foot, 30-ton-like creature scientists believed became extinct millions of years before man appeared on earth. Yet the bushmen who did the paintings ruled Rhodesia from only 1500 BC until a couple of hundred years ago. And the experts agree that the bushmen always painted from life experiences. This belief is borne out by other Gorozomzi Hills cave paintings – accurate representations of the elephant, hippo, buck and giraffe. The mysterious pictures were found by Bevan Parkes, who owns the land the caves are on. Adding to the puzzle of the rock paintings found by Parkes is a drawing of a dancing bear.” (Anonymous, “Bushmen’s Paintings Baffling to Scientists,” Los Angeles Herald-Examiner, January 7, 1970.) To the left is a reproduction of just such a rock painting from a cave at Nachikufu near Mpika in northern Zimbabwe (formerly Rhodesia). It shows three long-necked, long-tailed creatures sketched in white. (Clark, Desmond J., “The Rock Paintings of Northern Rhodesia and Nyasaland,” in Rock Art of Central Africa, edited by Roger summers, 1959, pp. 28-29, Fig. 52.)

Bambara SauropodThe Bambara peoples of Mali Africa created wonderful wood and iron figurines in the 1800s. Humans, horses, antelopes, and much more are beautifully portrayed. To the right is an iron figure that was entitled “dinosaurian sculpture” by the auctioning gallery. It shows a four-legged creature with long neck and tail like a sauropod dinosaur. The neck has a slight widening and a ridged frill that makes it an especially fascinating depiction. The iron piece is actually a functional tool, with a hook at the end, perhaps used to retrieve a hot pot off the fire.

Gryposaurus and Dogon BronzeAnother African tribe from the Mali region produced a dinosaurian object in the mid-1800s. Our friends at the s8int website note that this is the same time frame when Sir Richard Owen coined the term “dinosaur” in England. The bronze artifact to the left shows a Dogon tribesman riding a long-necked, long-tailed reptilian creature. The oddly bird-like head with strong jawline and ridged head and neck are reminiscent of certain “duck-billed” ornithopod dinosaurs like the Gryposaurus, whose skeleton is found in the Kaiparowits Formation in Utah. The diamond-shaped pattern on Roman style lead sword with dino2the skin matches fossilized skin impressions discovered on a hadrosaur in southern Utah. The sizes of the Dogon rider and the large-nosed Gryposaurus are modeled roughly in correct proportion.

In 1924 some Roman style lead artifacts were excavated near Tucson, AZ (see right). Described on p. 331 of David Hatcher’s book The Lost Cities of North & Central America is the unique carvings on these implements, particularly a clear dinosaur depiction on a sword. The Arizona Historical Society still has the sword.

Misc Sauropod Stone clean lower resTo the left is pictured an Ica Ceremonial Burial Stone from the Nasca culture (100 BC to 800AD) that is carved in a bas relief technique. In 1500s the Spanish Conquistadors brought back stories that there were stones with strange creatures carved on them found in Peru. Some of the stones were even brought back to Spain. The Incan Chronicler Juan de Santa Cruz Pachucuti Lumqui wrote in 1571 about the strange engraved stones in Ica. (See Swift, Dennis,Secrets of the Ica Stones, 2006.) Dom Geronomo Cabrera was a Spanish conquistador who settled the area of Ica in 1570.One of his descendants, Dr. Javier Cabrera, saw these stones as a child and began collecting them in the 1960s. He eventually accumulated over 11,000 such stones. Retired from the University of Lima, Dr. Cabrera focused upon validating these finds within the scientific community. His credibility was strengthened by long-necked creatures displayed on pottery in the museum of Lima (lower right).

Pottery DepictionPottery DepictionPottery Depiction

DW Ica Stone1 Clean

 

 

 

 

 

Beautiful tapestries (see below) have been found in the tombs of the area (dated from 200 – 700 AD) with a repeating pattern that looks like dinosaurs (pictures courtesy of Dennis Swift). Indeed, the depictions on some of the Ica Stones how the sauropod dinosaurs with a crest of spines much like those on the Acambaro figures, and preserved skin remains discovered by Paleontologist Stephen Czerkas:“Recent discovery of fossilized sauropod (diplodocid) skin impressions reveals a significantly different appearance for these dinosaurs. The fossilized skin demonstrates that a median row of spines was present… Some are quite narrow, and others are broader and more conical.” (Czerkas, “New Look for Sauropod Dinosaurs,” Geology, December, 1992, p. 1,068.)

Swift Cup CleanedTapestry Depiction Tapestry DepictionPottery Depiction

Dino Skin with Great Bumps - CA Museum of NatureFossilized Dinosaur Skin

Also, of interest is the fact that the skin of many of the carved dinosaurs has rounded, bump-like depictions. Some scientists had pointed to this as evidence that this stone art is not scientifically accurate. However, more recent discoveries of fossilized dinosaur skin and embryos have silenced these same critics. For example, Luis Chiappe and colleagues discussed certain sauropod dinosaur embryos found in South America: “The general skin pattern consists of round, non-overlapping, tubercle-like scales…A rosette pattern of scales is present in PVPH-130″ (Chiappe, et al., 1998, p. 259). Note the skin depictions above to the left. “Both taxa show a round pattern of small polygonal scales, which in some places is interrupted by larger oval tubercles surrounded by the small scales, resulting in rosette-like structures. …which also match the most common textures known in dinosaurs.” (Christiansen, and Tschopp, “Exceptional Stegosaur Integument Impressions from the Upper Jurassic Morrison Formation of Wyoming,” Swiss Journal of Geosciences 103:2, 2010.)

Theropod Stone with Dino Eating Fish

Other items of anatomical accuracy that attest to the authenticity of these Ica Stone depictions include the positioning of the tail and legs. Early critics said the Ica Stones were fakes, in part because their tails were sticking out while walking. Paleontologists in the 1960s were confident that dinosaurs dragged their tails. The paleontologists were wrong and the Ica Stones were right. Ica Stone Hunting DinosScientists now believe dinosaurs held their massive tails off the ground while walking, because there are no drag marks on dinosaur trackways. The dinosaurs on the Ica Stones are depicted standing upright, rather than with legs splayed out in a lizard-like position. That, according to dinosaur experts, is “dead on” accurate. The stylizing of animals depicted on the Ica Stones matches those found in the Nascan Lines (monkey with curled tail, hummingbird, and stylized dinosaur). Many of the Ica Stones were been blackened so that the artistic etchings stand out. While some fraudulent Ica Stones have been manufactured in recent years to sell to tourists, a number of the dinosaur stones were found in tomb excavations by experienced archaeologists. Moreover microscopic analysis of the patina (covering the stone surface), copper traces and oxidation in the etching grooves unambiguously distinguishes between the authentic and the recently forged artifacts.

Herrera Museum Moche Pot CleanMoche Canchero 500-700 AD cropped clean

Not far from the South American Nasca sites are the Moche Indian archaeological locations. These Moche tribes inhabited northern Peru about 100-800 AD. Among the artifacts currently in the Lima museums are the Moche stirrup-spout pots (left). These are their main artistic medium, featuring red & white ceramic pots displaying realistic medical procedures, combative events, musical instruments, plants and animals. Official guides at Peru’s numerous museums and archaeological sites will tell you that the native cultures depicted only things that they saw in nature. So what inspired the dragon-like images like that on the canchero to the right? In Lima’s Larco Museum there are numerous vases that clearly Moche Strombus & Shell2depict long-necked reptilian monsters with three or four toes, in some cases carrying a trophy head on their tail. These creatures bear a resemblance to those shown on the Ica stones, including the dermal frills. They have been dubbed “Strombus Monsters” because they are sometimes shown hiding in a Strombus shell. (Note the Moche pot on the left. Both this piece and the canchero are part of the Genesis Park collection – click to enlarge.)

Pategonia Map

A dictionary (Casamiquela, R., Diccionario Tehuelche, Va. Adelina: Patagonia Sur Libros, 2008.) on the language of the Patagonian natives (the Tehuelche groups) by the late historian Rodolfo Casamiquela displays a 16th century map (right). It depicts terrain of the Terra Magellanica (what is now Argentina) and shows a hunting party shooting at a ñandú and also displays some very dinosaurian-looking animals up above. Click to enlarge and look top center and to the right.

Mayan Dinosaur Head - BonampakMaya dinosaur head being carried to sacrifice - BonampakThe ancient Maya culture, which flourished around the 6th century, is famous for their excellent artwork. Bonampak is a Maya archaeological site in Mexico where there are a number of wonderful murals, including the remarkable one to the left. It shows the presentation of various war captives to the ruler, Chaan Muan, along with some trophy heads (perhaps brought for sacrificing). In addition to the human heads, the men are carrying an animal head and what looks a lot like a dinosaur head (enlarged in the picture to the right). Both the teeth and the large size make it doubtful that the Maya artist was depicting a lizard or snake.

In 1945 Waldemar Julsrud, a resident of Acambaro, Mexico who had archaeological experience, discovered clay figurines buried at the foot of El Toro Mountain. Eventually over 33,000 ceramic and stone figurines were found! These range from detailed artwork, to fine musical instruments, to roughly-shaped animal depictions, to monstrous creatures. There are clear similarities to Chupicuaro Cultural artifacts (800 BC to 200 AD) found in the area, a culture that Julsrud co-discovered.

Smiling Dino Cleanacambaro dino hi-resAcambaro Sauropod Hi Res CleanClub-tailed Dino CleanBut the authenticity of Julsrud’s find has been challenged because the huge collection included clear dinosaur figurines. In 1954 the Mexican government sent a team of archaeologists to investigate. In 1955 Charles Hapgood, Professor of Anthropology at the University of New Hampshire, conducted an elaborate investigation including radiometric dating and thermo-luminescence testing by the University of Pennsylvania. Subsequent investigations were conducted by the Mexican government. Thus Julsrud’s work has undergone considerable scrutiny. The MexicanDennis Swift's Acambaro Figurinegovernment even imprisoned men for digging up and selling these artifacts on the black market. Moreover, the dinosaurs are modeled in very agile, active poses, fitting well with the latest scientific evidence and lending credence to the artists having actually observed these creatures. Like the Ica Stones, some sauropod’s are depicted with a distinctive spinal frill. The remains of an ice-age horse (now extinct), the unfossilized skeleton of a woolly mammoth, and a number of ancient human skulls were found at the same location as the ceramic artifacts, validating the antiquity of the site (Hapgood, Charles, Mystery in Acambaro, 2000, p.82.). Dr. Ivan T. Sanderson was amazed in 1955 to find that there was an accurate representation of a Brachiosaurus, almost totally unknown to the general public at that time. Sanderson wrote, “This figurine is a very fine, jet-black, polished-looking ware. It is about a foot tall. The point is it is an absolutely perfect representation of Brachiosaurus, known only from East Africa and North America. There are a number of outlines of the skeletons in the standard literature but only one fleshed out reconstruction that I have ever seen. This is exactly like it.” (Hapgood, p. 85.)

acambaro iguanadon hi res cleanDobbs Ankylosaurus GPT Rex Dino5Acambaro Ankylosaurus

Further evidence of the authenticity of Julsrud’s finds is a figurine that resembles the Iguanodon dinosaur figurine (above left, photo credit – Don Patton). This was one of the first dinosaur skeletons discovered. The early concept of its appearance was almost comical in the mid 1800s. By the turn of the century it had improved considerably but fell far short of what we now know. The Acambaro figurine exhibits knowledge we have gained only in recent decades. No hoaxer could have made this model in the 1940s. In fact, there is a movement in recent years to “slenderize” the sauropod dinosaurs, suggesting that they were more agile and less plump (much like the Acambaro figures). For example, in 2009 scientists “devised a new statistical model that can more accurately predict the mass of an animal based on the width of its bones” resulting in a downsizing ofApatosaurus, which had “been widely cited as weighing about 42 tons. According to the new equation, these creatures actually weighed about 20 tons, or less than half earlier estimates.” (Moskowitz, Clara, “Giant Dinosaurs Get Downsized,” Live Science, December 12, 2009.) Other recognizable Acamabaro shown above include figures are the Tyrannosaurus-like theropod figurine and the Ankylosaurus statue. The beak on this figurine is slightly broken off, but the distinct horns, short neck, dermal spikes, pudgy feet and powerful tail are all nicely replicated. (Both of these pieces are in the Genesis Park collection.) Genesis Park staff participated in research on Mount Toro in Acambaro where most of these artifacts have been excavated. Many figurines remain buried in the ground there and new pieces are regularly being exposed as a result of erosion, construction work, and farming.

Tiwanaku ArtifactSwift Dueling Dino VaseTo the right is an artifact from Tiwanaku, an important Pre-Columbian archaeological site in Bolivia. Tiwanaku is recognized by Andean scholars as one of the most important precursors to the Inca Empire. The sculptor depicted a dinosaur-like creature at least 800 years before European scientists discovered dinosaurs. The vase on left was also discovered in the Tiwanaku region. It depicts dueling dinosaurs and is believed to date from 500 – 1000 A.D. The style closely resembles the Nasca dinosaurian depictions (on the Ica Stones).

Axel Photo Amazon Warriors and Dinosaur

In May of 2012 researcher Vance Nelson brought to our attention a panel of pictographs found on a rock ledge at the edge of the Amazon rain forest basin in northern Peru. This artwork is said by secular archaeologists to be thousands of years old. Amazingly, one of the pictographs shows nine warriors hunting what appears to be a dinosaur. In the 1940s the American explorer Percy Fawcett brought back reports of a large dinosaur-like creature from this same region of the Amazon.

Ashanti artifact

The Ashanti people of Ghana in western Africa are known for their bronze carvings that were used over the centuries as gold weights (used along with a scale in the gold dust trade). Eventually, these little statues became a bit of an art form and many accurately depict various African animals. The curious gold weight to the left dates back to the 1800s and is now part of the Penn Museum collection (Image #AF2478 commissioned by Genesis Park). It was unidentified initially, “despite diligent search in the animal kingdom.” (Plass, Margaret, African Miniatures: The Goldweights of the Ashanti, 1967, p.92.) A jeweler in Philadelphia first suggested that it resembles a juvenile dinosaur. (Heuvelmans, Bernard, Les Derniers Dragons d’Afrique, 1978, pp. 336–337.) It has a fan tail and a beak-like mouth, distinctive characteristics of some of the recently-discovered oviraptorosaur fossils.

Thai Dragon Incense BurnerViet Dragon Incense Burner

To the left is an ancient Thai incense burner pictured in the book Arts of Asia : Materials, Techniques, Styles by Meher McArthur. Curiously enough, it looks like a stylized version of a sauropod, the fossilized bones of which were actually found in Thailand. Notice the birds perched on the back of the dragon, much as we see them do today on the back of a hippo. A similar motif is seen in a Viet incense burner to the right. This cast bronze work is dated to the 3rd century A.D. and is from the Dongson culture. The piece is housed at the Boston Museum of Fine Arts.

Deep in the jungles of Cambodia are ornate temples and palaces from the Khmer civilization. One such temple, Ta Prohm, abounds with stone statues and reliefs. Almost every square inch of the gray sandstone is covered with ornate, detailed carvings. These depict familiar animals like monkeys, deer, water buffalo, parrots, and lizards. However, one column contains an intricate carving of a stegosaur-like creature. But how could artisans decorating an 800 year old Buddhist temple know what a dinosaur looked like? Western science only began assembling dinosaurs skeletons in the past two centuries. (Pictures are courtesy of Don Patton.)

Ta Prohm Relief Ta Prohm ReliefCambodia Dinosaur Closeup

The slaying of a ferocious dragon by St. George is an extremely common motif in medieval art. Various European artists interpreted the dragon differently, depending on local knowledge and lore. A wonderful medieval depiction is seen at the Palau de La Generalitat in Barcelona Spain. St. George’s Chapel contains an altar cloth illustrating St. George’s slaying of a dragon. The depiction bears an amazing likeness to the Nothosaurus, a semi-aquatic reptile (comparison below). Notice the correct-size, the crocodilian body style, and the fascinating long, curved teeth at the front of the jaw that gives way to finer dentition towards the back.

Tapestry DepictionNothosaurusNothosaurus3George & Dragon Book of Hours - Morgan MuseumSt. George Killing the Dragon - Fitzwilliam Museum

Yet another interpretation of St. George slaying the dragon is found in the Latin Book of Hours c. 1450 AD which is illuminated by the Master of Jean Chevrot and currently housed at the Morgan Library & Museum (right). Notice the Master’s attention to detail (click to enlarge), as seen in George’s armor, the birds in the sky, and the dragon’s genitals. The Fitzwilliam Museum contains another portrayal (left) of St. George destroying the dragon (probably by Bruges) from a Latin Book of Hours c. 1490 AD. This colorful work from the Flemish School portrays a remarkably dinosaur-like dragon.

Some of the beautiful French chateaus built at the close of the Middle Ages and early 1500s have dramatic dragon illustrations carved into their walls, ceilings, and furniture. These include Château de Chambord, Château de Blois, and Château Azay-le-Rideau. Called “salamanders,” based on a legendary salamander that could survive fire, they became especially popular decorative elements on construction during the reign of Francis I. Often they are portrayed actually as a fire-breathing dragon, like the biblical Leviathan. Note the similarities among the dragons and their resemblance to dinosaurs like Plateosaurus and Thecodontosaurus. A number of household furnishings also depict this dragon, like the antique French pot below to the right. A tapestry at Château de Blois portrays a dragon (and its baby) with gnarly horns on its head that are reminiscent of the dinosaur Dracorex hogwartsia (click to enlarge). [Photo credit: Don Patton.]

French Chateau CarvingFrench Chateau Carving Chateau Chambord Salamander2French Chateau CarvingFrench Chateau Carvingblois dragon5Dracorex Skeleton

French Salamander Bowl 1890 Clean

In Rome there is similar artwork on the outside at the Church of St. Louis of the French. This served for many years as the national church of France in Rome and was completed in the 1580s. Notice on the dragon artwork (to the left) the long neck, tridactyl feet, long tail, neck frill, the scales, and especially the dinosaurian-looking legs. They drop down straight, rather than being splayed out parallel to the ground like a lizard’s legs. Though exposed to the elements on the exterior of the church, the detailed work has been remarkably well preserved over nearly five centuries! Click to enlarge this amazing dragon carving.

Bishop Bell's TombBishop Bell Tomb Dino2In 1496 the Bishop of Carlisle, Richard Bell, was buried in Carlisle Cathedral in far northern England, near the Scottish border. The tomb (see right) is inlaid with brass, having various animals engraved upon it. Although worn by the countless feet that walked over it since the Middle Ages, a particular depiction is intriguing in its similarity to a sauropod dinosaur. It appears to be two long-necked dinosaurs with necks entangled like the Egyptian Hierakonpolis dragon depictions mentioned above (perhaps an amorous posture). The long tails stick out straight like an Apatosaurus and of one (maybe the male) sports spikes at the end. Amongst the birds, dog, eel, bat, fox, etc. depicted around the tomb, this compelling representation of two long-necked creatures should be considered evidence that man and dinosaurs co-existed.

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