The pre-history of the earth in 4 sentences. Talk about concision. Of course, he’s ‘borrowed’ the style from the films of the last 30 years, but the other kids will remember those names and that drawing long after they forget the class.
The #1 thing wrong with the report is that Triceratops was herbivorous, so eating part of a Pterodactyl wouldn’t have been of interest.The #2 thing wrong is that gas tank contents mostly came from vegetative matter, not dinosaurs. Dinos would make lousy motor fuels, which need to start with mostly carbon and hydrogen. Vegetative matter also has sulfur, which can be removed in refining, and nitrogen which mostly escapes during the compression-and-breakdown process. Dinos contained sulfur and nitrogen, plus calcium, phosphorus and smaller amounts of other elements, all of which don’t belong in gasoline.
I feel lots of people should feel hit by the “largely empty pickup truck” thing, watching from Europe it is incomprehensible why so many in the US voluntarily drives something that is essentially clumsy and wasteful, when they could be driving something much better for less money.
With all its faults, every kid in the room understands the underlying message. “What’s my Slurpee worth?” and wondering what kind of sound system the truck has.
Have you ever wondered how an animal as huge as a brontosaurus, diplodocus, stegosaurus, or other gigantic herbivores could ingest enough food through that relatively tiny mouth to grow and then maintain that body? There is (AFAIK) not another modern creature with anything close to that dis-proportion of head-to-body.
“68 MILLION YEARS FROM NOW YOU WILL BOTH SHARE A GAS TANK, PROPELLING A LARGELY EMPTY PICKUP TRUCK TO A CONVENIENCE STORE.” – that pretty much sums it up.
Wait. No one’s going to comment on the great Ken Kesey quote? He was a visionary and a loon, and not necessarily in that order. A Holy clown, if you will.
Never mind the nitpicking about prehistoric anachronisms and the science of petrification, what about the the pictorial brilliance on display in the lower left-hand corner of the scene, which is shown at two overlapping points in time through a chronosynclastic window? Jef Mallett doesn’t just break the “fourth wall,” he makes the fourth dimension transparent!
JWilly has it right about dinosaurs and petroleum, though the interesting question remains, where did that stuff come from? Coal pretty obviously from plants, but . . . ?
allen@home about 2 years ago
I really like this kid.
sandpiper about 2 years ago
The pre-history of the earth in 4 sentences. Talk about concision. Of course, he’s ‘borrowed’ the style from the films of the last 30 years, but the other kids will remember those names and that drawing long after they forget the class.
JWilly48519 about 2 years ago
The #1 thing wrong with the report is that Triceratops was herbivorous, so eating part of a Pterodactyl wouldn’t have been of interest.The #2 thing wrong is that gas tank contents mostly came from vegetative matter, not dinosaurs. Dinos would make lousy motor fuels, which need to start with mostly carbon and hydrogen. Vegetative matter also has sulfur, which can be removed in refining, and nitrogen which mostly escapes during the compression-and-breakdown process. Dinos contained sulfur and nitrogen, plus calcium, phosphorus and smaller amounts of other elements, all of which don’t belong in gasoline.
Doug K about 2 years ago
Science Fiction or Pure Fantasy?
newsbb about 2 years ago
I feel lots of people should feel hit by the “largely empty pickup truck” thing, watching from Europe it is incomprehensible why so many in the US voluntarily drives something that is essentially clumsy and wasteful, when they could be driving something much better for less money.
GrayOld Dave about 2 years ago
The real issue is that this is all way too much fun.
rogerd.parish about 2 years ago
Most oil (and therefore gasoline) was formed during the Permian Period, 290-248 million years ago, pre-dating the Dinos by a whole bunch.
jcwrocks69 about 2 years ago
Sounds like a quote embraced by both Faux News and News Max, as well as #45.
lagoulou about 2 years ago
Great graphics today!
Tigrisan Premium Member about 2 years ago
Except the Pterodactyls sort of evolved and now wander through my yard every day in the form of Sandhill Cranes which are really amazing creatures.
Ignatz Premium Member about 2 years ago
Why would Mrs. Olsen have a problem with this? This gets a “A.”
Interventor12 about 2 years ago
The highest DNA from a T Rex is found in chickens. Which can be found in a bucket, deep fried.
RitaGB about 2 years ago
But the pterodactyl’s descendants are everywhere — winner!
gduncan58 about 2 years ago
Know why you never hear a Pterodactyl urinate? The P is silent. Thanks, you’ve been great! I’ll be here all week!
Tallguy about 2 years ago
Fake but accurate? No wonder we’re so screwed.
Jhony-Yermo about 2 years ago
Jef. Thank YOU for this brilliant cartoon commentary. Bravo, well done. 4.0 A+
jessegooddoggy about 2 years ago
Brilliant.
goboboyd about 2 years ago
With all its faults, every kid in the room understands the underlying message. “What’s my Slurpee worth?” and wondering what kind of sound system the truck has.
Lambutts about 2 years ago
Always on killjoy in the crowd, lol
oish about 2 years ago
I believe the preferred the term is Transgender-Saurus
FGWaiss about 2 years ago
Have you ever wondered how an animal as huge as a brontosaurus, diplodocus, stegosaurus, or other gigantic herbivores could ingest enough food through that relatively tiny mouth to grow and then maintain that body? There is (AFAIK) not another modern creature with anything close to that dis-proportion of head-to-body.
kv450 about 2 years ago
“68 MILLION YEARS FROM NOW YOU WILL BOTH SHARE A GAS TANK, PROPELLING A LARGELY EMPTY PICKUP TRUCK TO A CONVENIENCE STORE.” – that pretty much sums it up.
Caldonia about 2 years ago
I guess if you have a pickup truck you’re a jerk whenever you drive without cargo. Even if you’re only going to a nearby convenience store and back.
rama88 about 2 years ago
Wait. No one’s going to comment on the great Ken Kesey quote? He was a visionary and a loon, and not necessarily in that order. A Holy clown, if you will.
edrorie723 about 2 years ago
Never mind the nitpicking about prehistoric anachronisms and the science of petrification, what about the the pictorial brilliance on display in the lower left-hand corner of the scene, which is shown at two overlapping points in time through a chronosynclastic window? Jef Mallett doesn’t just break the “fourth wall,” he makes the fourth dimension transparent!
AndrewSihler about 2 years ago
Third trip to the convenience store, in fact.
JWilly has it right about dinosaurs and petroleum, though the interesting question remains, where did that stuff come from? Coal pretty obviously from plants, but . . . ?
dunsmuirwill about 2 years ago
“It’s the truth even if it didn’t happen.” Ahem
Anvan Premium Member about 2 years ago
Especially terrific today – and that time-bending non-inset inset pulling it all along. Made my Sunday morning – thank you!
thedogesl Premium Member about 2 years ago
You know, most of the comment threads on GoComics are remarkably good at killing a joke. Just saying.
Night-Gaunt49[Bozo is Boffo] about 2 years ago
You wish it were the truth beyond being on paper or in this case a chalk board.
DaBump Premium Member about 2 years ago
Nope, Ken Kesey was wrong, also.
harebell about 2 years ago
Jef, take notes on JWilly’s comment….
CamiSu Premium Member about 2 years ago
Kids learned something for sure