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Published: 2018-02-08 21:07:12 +0000 UTC; Views: 6492; Favourites: 161; Downloads: 18
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Drawing so many smilodons lately made me think of this old sketch study and thought I’d dig it up. I drew this when the whole lip theory began, as a thought experiment as I wasn’t overly keen on the dog like lips people were sketching, but ended up never posting it as some people were being attacked for now ‘inaccurate’ sabertooths and I didn’t want to contribute to it. I believe the theory has now been disproved however so I feel safe in posting it.
Whether or not the theory is right I still find it a fascinating idea because it could potentially answer an enormous question, a question so big, that probably only I have wondered it. Why is there no cave art of sabertooths? I mean, people back then were the exact same people we are today, and we’re completely fascinated with sabertooths! People of all cultures have been fascinated with predators, and we have plenty of cave paintings of cave lions! Surely a more fearsome version, with huge bared fangs would capture their attention? I just find it a really difficult concept to believe that there is no art. But, what if the reason there is no art is because they didn’t look that different from lions? In fact we do have one contender, a statuette frequently reported as a cave lion purely for the lack of visible teeth: 78.media.tumblr.com/5c61207e8e…
Now I don’t know about you, but every thing about this looks distinctively non-lion, and arguments for it’s shape (such as lack of tail) are purely because the shape of the rock seems really weak. To me, personally, this looks exactly like a Homotherium and it’s difficult to see it otherwise.
Now of course there are other reasons why we might not have sabertooth art; we might just not have found it. It might have faded or eroded away to nothing, or waiting in some undiscovered cave. It may have been made in a material that just couldn’t survive the passage or time, or in a bad spot for preservation. We do not have surviving art old enough in North America to capture the most spectacular of cats, the Smilodons, but we have evidence that Neanderthals lived alongside Homotherium, and Homosapiens would have encountered them, even if rarely. So why no art? These are the questions that keep me awake at night!
Back to the art, most of these were quick scribbles and shouldn’t be taken too seriously, but the skulls at the top I at least I tried to make fairly accurate, and used cat scans and x-rays of living felines to try to reconstruct the soft tissue of the three main sabertooth families, and our current living sabertooth. What did I find? It was actually pretty easy to cover the teeth without ridiculous exaggeration in most cases, and the canines of the clouded leopard actually seem equa or maybe longerl (in my very inexpert opinion) relative to it’s skull to Homotherium’s, yet show no signs of visible teeth, so I think it’s very possible that Homotherium had no visible teeth (much to my own disappointment, I love these cats). It’s hard to tell for certain as nearly all paleoart reconstructs sabertooths as snarling/hissing/roaring, but I feel in general there is also a tendency also to give sabertooths minimal lip; because we gotta show off those sabres! As a side note I’ve apparently always drawn sabers with more then average lip, which I guess is cool. Does this really change anything for me? Not really. Until we find a frozen sabretooth there’s no way to tell for certain how their mouths were, but it wouldn’t be the first time we got something completely wrong! What I wouldn’t give to see the past!
TL;DR - Hel is really fascinated by nature and overthinks everything (even if they rarely write it down).
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Comments: 14
comixqueen [2018-02-18 07:03:19 +0000 UTC]
I think you might have drawn a Thylacosmilus instead of a Barbourofelis.
This is a Barbourofelis skull: www.geol.umd.edu/~jmerck/natur…
This is a Thylacosmilus skull: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thylacos…
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ElementalSpirits In reply to comixqueen [2018-02-18 11:39:53 +0000 UTC]
Oh gosh I'm not sure, but you might be right! I think I was referencing more this skull: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Barbouro…
but I know I wasn't trying to reference any particular species and I could have confused fricki with Thylacosmilus when I was googling it.
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celdragon [2018-02-17 21:17:41 +0000 UTC]
the few cave paintings that have any big cats in them
thumbs-prod.si-cdn.com/WZlg0Xi…
and
i.telegraph.co.uk/multimedia/a…
beautiful sketches and I love that you kept the long nose, usually most artists forgets the length of the head for the fangs.
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ElementalSpirits In reply to celdragon [2018-02-17 21:37:29 +0000 UTC]
Yeah, the cave paintings are all believed to be cave lions to my knowledge and I think they are further evidence that the little stone sculpture is likely Homotherium as I see a lot of differences to the way are drawn (such as the tiny round ears and different shaped mouth).
Thank you! I tried to make them accurate as much as possible instead of just drawing a lion or tiger, although I really want to make some better studies. I'm actually working on some now using a new theory right now after learning clouded leopards teeth sink into their lower lip instead of just being covered by the upper lip. They're the only cat with that feature, and the only cat with sabre teeth, so I think they could be connected? (would also probably make it look even more like the statue I suspect)
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celdragon In reply to ElementalSpirits [2018-02-17 22:22:11 +0000 UTC]
Clouded leopard could really be a living relative of the sabre teeth.
Didnt realise how close they really look
i.pinimg.com/474x/76/e3/5c/76e…
i1.wp.com/farm9.staticflickr.c…
XD cant stop imagien fluffy big jaws on them now.
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ElementalSpirits In reply to celdragon [2018-02-17 22:47:26 +0000 UTC]
They really are! I didn't realise it either until I did this study and looked at a clouded leopard skull for comparison. I knew they were long, but I had no idea they were that long! It really made me rethink how we reconstruct some of the shorter toothed sabre cats because some are really comparable!
boneclones.com/images/store-pr…
boneclones.com/images/store-pr…
I'm really not sure what evidence we have to say some of these cats would have visible sabres looking at them, and I'm saying that as someone who adores their sabre cats and fully expected to find my reconstructions ridiculous looking. (Not that I plan to stop drawing big lovely teeth any time soon, but I find it fascinating to think about )
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Beledra [2018-02-17 10:32:29 +0000 UTC]
I really like the way you have drawn those creatures ^_^
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Leonca [2018-02-09 04:19:24 +0000 UTC]
Cool. The lack of artistic representation of saber-toothed cats has bothered me for a long time.
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ElementalSpirits In reply to Leonca [2018-02-11 23:58:59 +0000 UTC]
To be fair that could probably be argued for any extinct species (although I've been very excited about all the dinosaur discoveries lately!) People tend to see one popular idea and copy it without much thought to whether it's correct or not, or what else might be a reasonable extrapolation. I guess that's what makes these kinds of studies fun! (plus I love pondering how wrong we could be)
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AnonymousLlama428 [2018-02-08 21:16:14 +0000 UTC]
Nice studies! Those seem like some of the most plausible-looking lips I've seen.
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ElementalSpirits In reply to AnonymousLlama428 [2018-02-08 21:31:33 +0000 UTC]
Thanks! The art feels a bit cringe worthy now but I think I recall drawing it late at night. I don't get why people would draw such silly lips for their theory. I can't think of any wild animal with lips like that.
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