Wheja's Sketchbook- Dracorex

I'll leave it to you if this is any good or not, but I was having a bad day, so I just sat down and cranked something out in fifteen minutes. And for that, I think it looks pretty good.

This is a side profile of Dracorex hogwartsia, one of the more recent and controversial unique specimens to come out of the Hell Creek Formation in Montana. It belongs to the family Pachycephalosauridae, characterized by its bizarre cranial ornamentation and relatively thick skull. The main consensus is that it was an herbivore, although recent findings suggest that it could also process meat at early ages.
The reason it remains suspect as a species is its concurrence in the same environment as two of its close relatives: Pachycephalosaurus wyomingensis and Stygimoloch spinifer. While we only have one complete skull specimen of Dracorex and, as such, can't analyze it in more in-depth methods as we can the other two dinosaurs, it has been put forth that all three Pachycephalosaurs are actually individuals of the same species. The differences in skull shape between the specimens may be due to ontological progression (difference in age) or sexual dimorphism (difference between genders). If wither hypothesis were true, the lack of Pachy's distinct skull dome would make this species one of the most extreme cases of either case found in any animal, living or dead.
Thankfully, Hell Creek is debatably the most productive fossil site around the world, and it doesn't seem to be slowing down any time soon. Who knows what animal's secrets could be found there?

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