[]
Your ongoing selection
Asset(s) Assets
Your quote 0

Your selection

Clear selection
Item added to cart
View cart and checkout
{"event":"pageview","page_type1":"undetected","page_type2":"_assets_search_override","language":"en","user_logged":"false","user_type":"ecommerce","nl_subscriber":"false"}
{"event":"ecommerce_event","event_name":"view_item","event_category":"browse_catalog","ecommerce":{"items":[{"item_id":"PIX4661655","item_category":"illustration","item_category2":"no_copyright","item_category3":"standard","item_category4":"walter_b_myers","item_category5":"not_balown","item_list_name":"search_results","item_name":"dimetrodon_among_alethopteris_dimetrodon_among_alethopteris_artist_s_view_of_a_dimetrodon_among_seed","item_variant":"undefined"},{"item_id":"UDK5446395","item_category":"photo","item_category2":"no_copyright","item_category3":"standard","item_category5":"not_balown","item_list_name":"search_results","item_name":"dimetrodon_side_view","item_variant":"undefined"},{"item_id":"XEE4165678","item_category":"illustration","item_category2":"undetermined_copyright","item_category3":"standard","item_category4":"unknown_artist_20th_century","item_category5":"balown","item_list_name":"search_results","item_name":"prehistoric_animal_a_dimetrodon","item_variant":"undefined"},{"item_id":"PIX4661663","item_category":"illustration","item_category2":"no_copyright","item_category3":"standard","item_category4":"walter_b_myers","item_category5":"not_balown","item_list_name":"search_results","item_name":"dimetrodon_grandis_dimetrodon_grandis_portrait_artist_s_view_of_a_dimetrodon_about_280_million_years","item_variant":"undefined"},{"item_id":"FLO6040779","item_category":"illustration","item_category2":"out_of_copyright","item_category3":"standard","item_category4":"wolff_maage_hugo_1866_1947","item_category5":"not_balown","item_list_name":"search_results","item_name":"reconstruction_of_extinct_synapsid_dinosaur_dimetrodon","item_variant":"undefined"},{"item_id":"PIX4661731","item_category":"illustration","item_category2":"no_copyright","item_category3":"standard","item_category4":"walter_b_myers","item_category5":"not_balown","item_list_name":"search_results","item_name":"doliosauriscus_doliosauriscus_was_a_fossil_carnivorous_reptile_of_the_order_of_therapsides_and_the_s","item_variant":"undefined"},{"item_id":"DGA1135688","item_category":"photo","item_category2":"out_of_copyright","item_category3":"standard","item_category5":"not_balown","item_list_name":"search_results","item_name":"dimetrodon_four_legged_reptile_of_permian_period_drawing_photo","item_variant":"undefined"},{"item_id":"CTD3713082","item_category":"illustration","item_category2":"in_copyright","item_category3":"premium","item_category4":"cortada_xavier","item_category5":"not_balown","item_list_name":"search_results","item_name":"dimetrodon_cisularian_2017_mixed_media_on_paper","item_variant":"undefined"},{"item_id":"DGA1136446","item_category":"photo","item_category2":"out_of_copyright","item_category3":"standard","item_category5":"not_balown","item_list_name":"search_results","item_name":"illustration_of_two_dimetrodons_in_rocky_landscape_photo","item_variant":"undefined"},{"item_id":"DGA1136788","item_category":"photo","item_category2":"out_of_copyright","item_category3":"standard","item_category5":"not_balown","item_list_name":"search_results","item_name":"dimetrodon_sp_sphenacodontidae_early_permian_artwork_by_j_dang_photo","item_variant":"undefined"},{"item_id":"FLO7233577","item_category2":"in_copyright","item_category3":"standard","item_category4":"john_f_20th_century","item_category5":"not_balown","item_list_name":"search_results","item_name":"dimetrodon_dollovianus_extinct_non_mammalian_synapsid_1908_print","item_variant":"undefined"},{"item_id":"PIX4661665","item_category":"illustration","item_category2":"no_copyright","item_category3":"standard","item_category4":"walter_b_myers","item_category5":"not_balown","item_list_name":"search_results","item_name":"dimetrodons_by_a_lake_dimetrodon_lakeside_view_of_an_artist_of_dimetrodons_in_a_permian_landscape_di","item_variant":"undefined"},{"item_id":"HFE4443488","item_category":"photo","item_category2":"no_copyright","item_category3":"standard","item_category4":"alain_guerrier","item_category5":"not_balown","item_list_name":"search_results","item_name":"aven_marzal_prehistoric_zoo_dimetrodon_carnivorous_pelycosaur_260_ma","item_variant":"undefined"},{"item_id":"FLO7237349","item_category":"illustration","item_category2":"no_copyright","item_category3":"standard","item_category5":"not_balown","item_list_name":"search_results","item_name":"dimetrodon_limbatus_with_its_distinctive_neural_spine_sail_on_it1908_lithograph","item_variant":"undefined"},{"item_id":"DGA1136436","item_category":"photo","item_category2":"out_of_copyright","item_category3":"standard","item_category5":"not_balown","item_list_name":"search_results","item_name":"illustration_of_dimetrodons_of_permian_period_in_arid_landscape_photo","item_variant":"undefined"},{"item_id":"DGA1135839","item_category":"photo","item_category2":"out_of_copyright","item_category3":"standard","item_category5":"not_balown","item_list_name":"search_results","item_name":"side_profile_of_a_cimetrodon_photo","item_variant":"undefined"},{"item_id":"HFE4443490","item_category":"photo","item_category2":"no_copyright","item_category3":"standard","item_category4":"alain_guerrier","item_category5":"not_balown","item_list_name":"search_results","item_name":"aven_marzal_prehistoric_zoo_dimetron_grandis_dimetrodon_carnivorous_pelycosaur_260_ma","item_variant":"undefined"},{"item_id":"PIX4661644","item_category":"illustration","item_category2":"no_copyright","item_category3":"standard","item_category4":"walter_b_myers","item_category5":"not_balown","item_list_name":"search_results","item_name":"dimetrodons_dimetrodons_artist_s_view_of_a_dimetrodon_fight_about_280_million_years_ago_dimetrodon_i","item_variant":"undefined"},{"item_id":"FLO4639117","item_category":"illustration","item_category2":"out_of_copyright","item_category3":"standard","item_category5":"not_balown","item_list_name":"search_results","item_name":"dimetrodon_dollovianus_synapsid_predator_of_the_permian_era_chromolithography_of_f_john_series_prehi","item_variant":"undefined"},{"item_id":"FLO4639840","item_category":"illustration","item_category2":"out_of_copyright","item_category3":"standard","item_category5":"not_balown","item_list_name":"search_results","item_name":"dimetrodon_like_permian_carnivorous_synapsid_chromolithography_of_f_john_series_prehistoric_animals_","item_variant":"undefined"},{"item_id":"PIX4661740","item_category":"illustration","item_category2":"no_copyright","item_category3":"standard","item_category4":"walter_b_myers","item_category5":"not_balown","item_list_name":"search_results","item_name":"moschops_artist_s_view_of_two_moschops_250_million_years_ago_in_south_africa_these_disappeared_anima","item_variant":"undefined"},{"item_id":"PIX4661673","item_category":"illustration","item_category2":"no_copyright","item_category3":"standard","item_category4":"walter_b_myers","item_category5":"not_balown","item_list_name":"search_results","item_name":"edaphosaurus_amidst_cordaites_an_edaphosaur_among_cordaites_cordaites_angulostriatus_300_million_yea","item_variant":"undefined"},{"item_id":"PIX4661707","item_category":"illustration","item_category2":"no_copyright","item_category3":"standard","item_category4":"walter_b_myers","item_category5":"not_balown","item_list_name":"search_results","item_name":"cotylorhynchus_cotylorhynchus_was_a_large_mammalian_reptile_synapside_pelycosaur_living_herbivorous_","item_variant":"undefined"}]}}
{"event":"custom_event","event_name":"view_search_result","event_category":"browse_catalog","keyword":"dimetrodon","search_type":"standard","search_bridgeman_artists":"false","search_mode":"automatic","search_zero_result":"false","search_results":23,"search_results_page_number":1}

'Dimetrodon' images and/or videos results page 1 of 1

Main filters
Buy Print option
Royalty-Free Option
Reuters Results
Media Type
Orientation
Colour
Rights Type
Rights
More filters
Bridgeman Artists
Bridgeman Photographers
Century
Footage filters
Video Original Format
Video Resolution
Video Category
Filter group
Order By:
per page
Filter group
Rights Type
Media Type
No copyright

Display options

View
Image Size

Images of 'Dimetrodon' found, 23

Dimetrodon among Alethopteris - Dimetrodon among Alethopteris - Artist's view of a dimetrodon among seed ferns (Alethopteris). Dimetrodon is a mammalian reptile (Therapside), carnivore living in Permian. Dimetrodon was the apex predator of its time and likely had few enemies save for other Dimetrodon. They came as large as 11 feet long, 4 feet tall, and weighing as much as 300 pounds. Their reptilian hide, a relative novelty for that period, ensured their survival out of water. The large sail may have helped them to regulate body temperature, a survival advantage during the extremes of hot and cold during the Early Permian. Given that Dimetrodon is more closely related to mammals than dinosaurs, it could be that our own body's ability to regulate temperature had its origin in this ancient beast. Alethopteris was a seed fern that populated much of the world during the Carboniferous and Early Permian periods. Long extinct, fossilized leaves from the Alethopteris are commonly found today
Dimetrodon, side view
Content Partner Restrictions
  • Not available to clients invoiced in China
Prehistoric animal: a dimetrodon.
Dimetrodon Grandis - Dimetrodon grandis portrait - Artist's view of a dimetrodon about 280 million years ago. Dimetrodon is a carnivorous mammalian reptile (Therapside) living in Permian. An eleven foot long Dimetrodon grandis traverses an Earth that became cooler and dryer during the Early Permian period. 280 million years ago - long before the reign of dinosaurs - Dimetrodon emerged as the dominant land predator, a position they held for the next 20 million years. Contrary to their reptilian stance and dinosaurlike appearance, Dimetrodon are in fact more closely related to mammals, and hence to humans, than to dinosaurs or reptiles
Reconstruction of extinct synapsid dinosaur Dimetrodon.
Content Partner Restrictions
  • Not available to clients invoiced in Japan
Doliosauriscus - Doliosauriscus was a fossil carnivorous reptile of the order of Therapsides and the suborder of Dinocephales. He lived in the middle of Permian about 265 million years ago. In the picture, in the background, a dimetrodon. 12-foot-long dinocephalian therapsids of the genus Doliosauriscus face off in a dry mid-permian landscape 265 million years ago in what is today Russia. On the horizon is a synapsid of the genus Dimetrodon. Vegetation includes various ferns and cycads. Similar to its better-known relative Titanophoneus, Doliosauriscus was a carnivore, one of the largest predators of its time with large dagger-like canines in front and sharp incisors and flat molars in back for grinding up flesh
Dimetrodon, four-legged reptile of Permian Period, Drawing
(photo)
Permissions
  • Permission required for immersive exhibition use - Please contact us;Permission required for TV use - Please contact us
Content Partner Restrictions
  • Not available to clients invoiced in Italy
Dimetrodon (Cisularian), 2017 (mixed media on paper)
Permissions
  • Permission required for all uses - Please contact us
Copyright
  • Copyright Applies
premium
Illustration of two Dimetrodons in rocky landscape
(photo)
Permissions
  • Permission required for immersive exhibition use - Please contact us;Permission required for TV use - Please contact us
Content Partner Restrictions
  • Not available to clients invoiced in Italy
Dimetrodon sp, Sphenacodontidae, Early Permian. Artwork by J Dang
(photo)
Permissions
  • Permission required for immersive exhibition use - Please contact us;Permission required for TV use - Please contact us
Content Partner Restrictions
  • Not available to clients invoiced in Italy
Dimetrodon dollovianus, extinct non-mammalian synapsid. , 1908 (print)
Content Partner Restrictions
  • Not available to clients invoiced in Japan
Copyright
  • Copyright Applies
Aven Marzal Prehistoric Zoo/Dimetrodon/Carnivorous Pelycosaur 260 Ma/
Dimetrodon limbatus with its distinctive neural spine sail on it1908 (lithograph)
Content Partner Restrictions
  • Not available to clients invoiced in Japan
Illustration of Dimetrodons of Permian Period in arid landscape
(photo)
Permissions
  • Permission required for immersive exhibition use - Please contact us;Permission required for TV use - Please contact us
Content Partner Restrictions
  • Not available to clients invoiced in Italy
Side profile of a cimetrodon
(photo)
Permissions
  • Permission required for immersive exhibition use - Please contact us;Permission required for TV use - Please contact us
Content Partner Restrictions
  • Not available to clients invoiced in Italy
Aven Marzal Prehistoric Zoo/Dimetron grandis/Dimetrodon/Carnivorous Pelycosaur 260 Ma/
Dimetrodon dollovianus, synapsid predator of the Permian era. Chromolithography of F. John (series prehistoric animals of the Reichardt Cocoa Company), originally published in “Animals of the Prehistoric World”, 1910, Hamburg (Germany), text by Wilhelm Bolsche.
Dimetrodon, like Permian carnivorous synapsid. Chromolithography of F. John (series prehistoric animals of the Reichardt Cocoa Company), originally published in “Animals of the Prehistoric World”, 1910, Hamburg (Germany), text by Wilhelm Bolsche.
Moschops - Artist's view of two Moschops 250 million years ago in South Africa. These disappeared animals were not dinosaurs but herbivorous mammalian reptiles (Therapsides) living in Permian. Two giant Moschops face off on a sandstone mesa 250 million years ago in what is today the Karoo region of South Africa. Moschops was not a dinosaur, rather it was a mammal-like reptile that, like Dimetrodon, was more closely related to mammals than to true reptiles such as lizards. Moschops was a heavy-built, 4-legged herbivore that grew up to 16 feet long
Edaphosaurus amidst cordaites - An Edaphosaur among cordaites (Cordaites angulostriatus) 300 million years ago in Europe. Edaphosaurus was a large herbivore (more than 3m long) living in Permian. A ten-foot-long, 600 pound synapsid of the genus Edaphosaurus boreages in a brackish mangrove-like swamp of gymnosperms of the genus Cordaites 300 million years ago in what is today Western Europe. Like its better-known synapsid cousin Dimetrodon, Edaphosaurus had a large sail on its back supported by elongated neural spines, however unlike Dimetrodon, these spines include numerous short cross bars; while the sail may have served the purpose of both helping to regulate body temperature and as sexual display, the purpose of the cross bars is unknown. Jaw and teeth structure suggests that Edaphosaurus probably dined on both plants and small invertebrates, such as mollusks. Tree-like Cordaites, now extinct, grew on wet ground similar to the Everglades in Florida, numerous fossils of which are now found associated with coal deposits. Also in this image are several examples of extinct seed fern of the genus Neuropteris as well as smaller examples of generic fern that may have been present during the period. Other fauna include two examples of the large dragonfly-like Meganeura, a centipede, and in the foreground a juvenile prehistoric shark of the genus Xenacanthus, its distinctive spine projecting from the back of its head and out of the water
Cotylorhynchus - Cotylorhynchus was a large mammalian reptile (Synapside, Pelycosaur) living herbivorous from early Permian to mid-Permian (299 to 265 million years). They were the largest terrestrial animals of their time, measuring 6 metres long and weighing two tons. Giant, 20-foot-long and one-ton synapsids of the genus Cotylorhynchus forage in an Early Permian swamp 275 million years ago in what is today North America. Also in this image on the lower left is a 3-foot long lepospondyl amphibian of the genus Diplocaulus. Vegetation includes ferns and horsetails in the foreground and on the horizon is a forest of ginkgos. Cotylorhynchus is the largest known non-mammalian synapsid and was the largest land animal of its time. An herbivore, Cotylorhynchus had a massive barrel-shaped body and limbs with a relatively small head, making it perhaps one of the most unattractive land animals to have ever walked the Earth. Standing about 6 feet tall at the shoulder Cotylorhynchus probably had no predators; even the fierce Dimetrodon (also a synapsid) weighed little more than 300 pounds compared to Cotylorhynchus' 2,000