Natalia Jagielska
@nataliajagielska.bsky.social
11K followers 1.3K following 1.6K posts
A Pole in China 🍲 PhD in Paleontology 🦴 Postdoc at the Chinese University of Hong Kong 🦕 Dinosaur Doodler. Brexit-causing immigrant 💼
Posts Media Videos Starter Packs
Pinned
nataliajagielska.bsky.social
Pinned. I'm a doctor in palaeontology 🦕 specialising in pterosaurs, with years of museum experience in 🇬🇧 & 🇵🇱 Currently starting a postdoc at the Chinese University of Hong Kong 🇭🇰

I also work on initiatives for social mobility & migration, draw dinosaurs and consult for TV & games 📺
Natalia with a stuffed Palaeo Plushies pterosaur on her shoulder Natalia and her Jack Russell Terrier An illustration of a grey pterosaur in a forest
Reposted by Natalia Jagielska
valdevia.art
Spontaneous Carcinometamorphosis, commonly known as Mancini's disease after the famed boxer-turned-crustacean Bruno Mancini, is a disease that will slowly turn skeleton to exoskeleton, hands to claws, lungs to gills, until a human being finds itself where all the roads of evolution lead: crab.
A textbook anatomical drawing of a human with a large crab claw for an arm. Some of the organs inside appear to be that of a crab's. A black-and-white photo of a patient in a hospital, being held by two nurses. The man's arms are now crab claws, and his skin is turning into an exoskeleton. His eyes are now at the end of stalks. A textbook showing three black-and-white pictures of a person's arm turning into a crab claw. The three stages read "Presymptomatic patient", with a regular man's arm, "Exoskeletalization", where the arms turns hard and segmented and the fingers start fusing, and "late stage transformation", where the arm is fully crab-like.
Reposted by Natalia Jagielska
chrisgrey.bsky.social
This deserves more attention than it has received.

Gove: "we were too anxious as a government to secure those deals in order to show that Brexit was working".

Exactly as so many of us warned at the time, and as the government denied at the time.
www.yorkshirepost.co.uk/country-and-...
Michael Gove admits that post-Brexit trade deals were bad for farmers
Michael Gove has admitted for the first time that the Australia and New Zealand trade deals negotiated by the former Tory government did not protect Britain’s farmers.
www.yorkshirepost.co.uk
Reposted by Natalia Jagielska
kaseygifford.bsky.social
We should be asking this
c o n s t a n t l y.
Reposted by Natalia Jagielska
jamespascoe.bsky.social
They really did choose some truly iconic artwork for this book, and I think this would be my first ever encounter of the fabled @cpdinosaurs.bsky.social since my copy is from 1988 and I’d only been alive a few years at that point 😅 Some truly beautiful vintage Palaeoart on display here
Pterosaurs restored with bat like wings flying above a gorgeous landscape. Check out the rays of the sun and those ferns Megalosaurus looking a little leaner than its usual representation and again a stunning and detailed landscape The iconic Crystal Palace Iguanadon  What could have been…
Reposted by Natalia Jagielska
phantomarine.bsky.social
thank you for the happy birthdays

don't read my comic

my comic called phantomarine

don't read it at www.phantomarine.com
Reposted by Natalia Jagielska
faineg.bsky.social
getting sleepy, thinking about scuttling into the ol’ hole
Crab in moist crack
Reposted by Natalia Jagielska
ambrox.bsky.social
A mischievous archaeopteryx has appeared!
An abstract looking archaeopteryx on a plain green background
Reposted by Natalia Jagielska
berensreverie.bsky.social
The Kiss

#paleoart #berensart2025
"fighting dinosaurs" fossil reimagined as The Kiss by Gustav Klimt
Reposted by Natalia Jagielska
saskajanet.bsky.social
Strike a pose (Common Grackle) #birds 🌿
Iridescent black bird with bright blue neck and head, yellow eye and pointy, downward curve beak. Bird is perched on the edge of a concrete bird bath with beak pointed skyward. Background is soft focus green and pink.
Reposted by Natalia Jagielska
paleontologizing.bsky.social
In the middle of a dozen other projects, I've been working on a life-sized, 3D-printed vaquita porpoise for @kaseysnow.bsky.social to show off at #TwitchCon 🐬

🤞🏽 Cross your fingers I have enough time to paint it properly before I fly out on Wednesday 🤞🏽
Photo of me holding a life-sized vaquita porpoise 3D print in my arms.  It's still unpainted, so the bright white-colored plastic filament makes it look almost like a tiny, 1-meter-long beluga
nataliajagielska.bsky.social
The only appropriate way of holding a conversation with someone way above your league
Reposted by Natalia Jagielska
kateinkharkiv.bsky.social
Kostiantynivka today, where russia attacked a church, killing two people.

Famous russian “Christian values” on full display.
Reposted by Natalia Jagielska
Reposted by Natalia Jagielska
crawlieswithcri.bsky.social
If you see this, post something toothy

#Salmon #fish #becurious
photo of the head of a decaying male Chinook salmon, he has very large, sharp teeth
Reposted by Natalia Jagielska
hugopaleoart.bsky.social
Pterosaurs of Mesozoic, 50X65 cm, color pencils and black pens
#pterosaur #mesozoic #paleoart #art #color #pterodactyl
Istiodactylus, Caviramus, Apatorhamphus, Bellebrunus, Rhamphorhynchus, Anurognathus, Pterodaustro, Dimorphodon, Cycnorhamphys, Angustinaripterus, Thalassodromeus, Archaeoistiodactylus, Balaeognathus, Tupandactylus, Leptostomia, Mythunga, Guidraco, Campylognathoides, Keresdrakon, Feilongus, Aetodactylus, Quetzalcoatlus lawsoni, Moganopterus, Caulkicephalus, Albadraco, Pangupterus, Jeholopterus, Pterodactylus, Petrodactyle, Normannognathus, Huaxiadraco, Kunpengopterus, Aerodactylus, Cascocauda, Europejara, Peteinosaurus, Anhanguera, Dsungaripterus, Austriadactylus, Ikrandraco, Sordes, Eudimorphodon, Sinomacrops, Mistralazhdarcho, Gnathosaurus, Klobiodon, Geosternbergia, Nurhachius, Tapejara, Kariridraco, Dearc, Nyctosaurus, Phosphatodraco, Tropeognathus, Darwinopterus, Ardeadactylus, Scaphognathus, Hatzegopteryx and Quetzalcoatlus northropi
Reposted by Natalia Jagielska
jessdkant.bsky.social
One curious thing on this site about speaking out against the encroachment of LLMs is that inevitably you get accused of being anti-tech. I don’t hate technology. I’ve used machine learning in my own code before. But I also recognize that oligarchs are so hellbent on pushing this tech for a reason.
nataliajagielska.bsky.social
I absolutely love the fact they've Pokemon-ised the museum staff, for the upcoming Pokémon partnership with the Field Museum. Museums, take note.
Reposted by Natalia Jagielska
richardfallon.bsky.social
A literary Iguanodon at the Earth Sciences Library. Do any other libraries have dinosaurs or other antediluvian creatures carved into the furniture?
Reposted by Natalia Jagielska
Reposted by Natalia Jagielska
Reposted by Natalia Jagielska
athanaca.bsky.social
-This is not the sky-

😢It is really sad to see adorable birds dying because of the reflection on windows, so I made this illustration for some bird protection organizations to propagandize this situation.

#bird #illustration #animalprotection #originalart #animal #digitalart #animalart #artist
an illustration of a long tailed strike hitting onto the glass, which reflects the the sky
Reposted by Natalia Jagielska
nataliajagielska.bsky.social
An illustration I did for a competition in China 🤞Anchiornis
Reposted by Natalia Jagielska
Reposted by Natalia Jagielska
djbirddanerd.bsky.social
10 years ago, our co-edited Topics in Geobiology volumes on #Ammonoid #Paleobiology came out:

From anatomy to ecology:
doi.org/10.1007/978-...
From macroevolution to paleogeography: doi.org/10.1007/978-...

In the last months of 2025, i will explore new discoveries on these topics in a thread:
Ammonoid Paleobiology: From anatomy to ecology
This two-volume work is a testament to the abiding interest and human fascination with ammonites. We offer a new model to explain the morphogenesis of septa and the shell, we explore their habitats by the content of stable isotopes in their shells, we discuss the origin and later evolution of this important clade, and we deliver hypotheses on its demise. The Ammonoidea produced a great number of species that can be used in biostratigraphy and possibly, this is the macrofossil group, which has been used the most for that purpose. Nevertheless, many aspects of their anatomy, mode of life, development or paleobiogeographic distribution are still poorly known. Themes treated are biostratigraphy, paleoecology, paleoenvironment, paleobiogeography, evolution, phylogeny, and ontogeny. Advances such as an explosion of new information about ammonites, new technologies such as isotopic analysis, tomography and virtual paleontology in general, as well as continuous discovery of newfossil finds have given us the opportunity to present a comprehensive and timely "state of the art" compilation. Moreover, it also points the way for future studies to further enhance our understanding of this endlessly fascinating group of organisms.
doi.org