The Last Plesiosaur
A reproduction of one of Utropiia’s Natural History Museum Museum’s most prized artifacts, this drawing (artist unknown) depicts Hercules Peabody’s encounter with what is believed to have been the last living plesiosaur, discovered in a closed-off lagoon during one of his tropical expeditions.
The ancient plesiosaur had somehow survived in this forsaken part of the jungle and attacked Peabody’s expedition when it disturbed it habitat.
Accounts of this encounter are hazy, but Peabody himself asserts that he successfully fought off the prehistoric monster and sent it back to its murky underwater hideout, breaking one of its teeth in the process.
The original, extremely rare drawing is on display in the Natural History Museum and is the only surviving document from that expedition, along with a broken tooth from the plesiosaur.
Size:
A reproduction of one of Utropiia’s Natural History Museum Museum’s most prized artifacts, this drawing (artist unknown) depicts Hercules Peabody’s encounter with what is believed to have been the last living plesiosaur, discovered in a closed-off lagoon during one of his tropical expeditions.
The ancient plesiosaur had somehow survived in this forsaken part of the jungle and attacked Peabody’s expedition when it disturbed it habitat.
Accounts of this encounter are hazy, but Peabody himself asserts that he successfully fought off the prehistoric monster and sent it back to its murky underwater hideout, breaking one of its teeth in the process.
The original, extremely rare drawing is on display in the Natural History Museum and is the only surviving document from that expedition, along with a broken tooth from the plesiosaur.
Size:
A reproduction of one of Utropiia’s Natural History Museum Museum’s most prized artifacts, this drawing (artist unknown) depicts Hercules Peabody’s encounter with what is believed to have been the last living plesiosaur, discovered in a closed-off lagoon during one of his tropical expeditions.
The ancient plesiosaur had somehow survived in this forsaken part of the jungle and attacked Peabody’s expedition when it disturbed it habitat.
Accounts of this encounter are hazy, but Peabody himself asserts that he successfully fought off the prehistoric monster and sent it back to its murky underwater hideout, breaking one of its teeth in the process.
The original, extremely rare drawing is on display in the Natural History Museum and is the only surviving document from that expedition, along with a broken tooth from the plesiosaur.
Size: