This illustration by Richard H. Fay features the Late Cretaceous armoured dinosaur known as Ankylosaurus. Along with armour plates, this 6-8 metre long herbivore sported a knobbed tail that formed a formidable-looking club.
This original illustration by Richard H. Fay features the giant plant-eating sauropod dinosaur of the Late Jurassic known as Apatosaurus. Many people know this dinosaur by the moniker Brontosaurus, a name meaning “thunder lizard”.
This original illustration by Richard H. Fay features a Stegosaurus, a plated dinosaur that lived in North America during the Late Jurassic. The plates on its back, whose function remains a matter of debate, gave this dinosaur its name. Stegosaurus means “roof lizard”, a reference to those distinctive plates.
This original illustration by Richard H. Fay depicts the fleet-footed feathered Late Cretaceous theropod dinosaur known as Ornithomimus (“bird mimic”), one of the “ostrich mimics”.
A steam-powered mechanical dragon rears up and belches steam in this fantasy art by Richard H. Fay. This work originally appeared as a black and white line drawing in Issue 36 of Beyond Centauri.
This original illustration by Richard H. Fay features the fish-eating theropod dinosaur of Cretaceous North Africa known as Spinosaurus. Spinosaurus sported an array of long neural spines along its back which may have supported a sail used for thermoregulation and/or display.