Summary

  • Larson's love of science allows him to even find the funny side of fossils.
  • The Far Side shows scientists messing with dinosaur bones, mysterious disappearances around a T-Rex skeleton, and the tragic fate of the Flintstones.
  • Don't forget to vote in our reader poll to decide which of these strips is officially The Far Side's funniest fossil comic.

Gary Larson's Larson has plenty of hilarious dinosaur comics, he also specifically focused on the surprisingly hilarious potential of their remains.

Screen Rant has collected the 10 funniest Far Side comics about fossils, along with some extras to showcase Larson's funniest themes and major obsessions. Don't forget to vote in our end-of-article poll for the funniest Far Side comic about fossils.

10 In the Chicken Museum

This Far Side Strip Is a Successful Take on Larson's Biggest Flop

far side comic in the chicken museum
Custom Image by Robert Wood (from Gary Larson)

Larson uses several types of animals again and again across The Far Side's run. Cows are the most famous, but Larson also often used chickens, insects, and giant squid in his gags. Clueless, silly, and doomed, chickens are a perfect target for Larson's mix of belly-laugh humor and morbid fascination with death, offering up protagonists who are painfully aware they're going to be eaten but with no real plan to avoid it.

In the case of the chicken museum, Larson actually depicts some poultry who aren't destined to be eaten by humans, including details like models of saber-toothed chicken ancestors and one chicken checking the museum floor map in confusion. The idea of animals having their own equivalent of a human concept is the same basic idea as in Larson's 'Cow Tools' comic, however with a far more successful execution.

far side comics cow tools
Custom Image by Robert Wood (from Gary Larson)

As Larson has explained multiple times, the gag of cow tools is simply the surreal idea of what bovine tools would even look like - something he describes in The Prehistory of The Far Side: A 10th Anniversary Exhibit as an "exercise in silliness." However, when the comic was published, readers didn't get the gag. Countless readers wrote to their local newspapers asking to have the joke explained, but since The Far Side was a syndicated strip, the people they were ing didn't have any direct connection to Larson and didn't know themselves. The confusion was so widespread that Larson's 'Cow Tools' debacle actually made headlines. Thankfully, the chicken museum pays off the gag in a clearer way,

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9 Museums of the Future

In a Weird Gag, Larson Kind of Predicted the Future

far side comic set in a futuristic museum
Custom Image by Robert Wood (from Gary Larson)

In another gag rooted in surreal equivalence, Larson imagines a futuristic society that looks back on modern technology in the same way we look back at the distant past. Larson pictures everyday technology out on display with cod Latin/Greek names that evoke species of dinosaur. Of course, this being The Far Side, all the names are also puns on what the devices were used for.

While Larson's image of a future museum is funny, it also somewhat predicted how quickly modern gadgets would be replaced and forgotten. While toasters, laundry machines and blenders are still in use, objects like floppy discs actually have fallen out of use and now occupy a strange place in culture - in many cases, the symbol to save a document uses the image of a floppy disc, despite the fact that an increasingly large number of people have never used one. It's therefore not difficult to imagine some version of Larson's comic playing out in the real future.

8 Fossilized Footprint

Larson Loves the Image of People Getting Stepped On

far side comic about a fossilized footprint
Custom Image by Robert Wood (from Gary Larson)

Humans being crushed underfoot by large animals is a bizarre recurring image in Larson's comics, but this is the best version of the gag simply because of the paleontologist's absolute joy at the discovery. It's been said that "comedy equals tragedy plus time," and Larson essentially proves this true, as what should be a tragic image - a person being crushed underfoot by a dinosaur - is a subject of joy for both the scientists and the reader.

far side mammoth steps on a caveman
Custom Image by Robert Wood (from Gary Larson)

Given his love of science and the natural world, it's surprising that Larson would ever think to depict brachiosaurus and homo habilis as existing at the same time. In The Prehistory of The Far Side, Larson its that despite using the idea so often, he's always felt uneasy about depicting early humans interacting with dinosaurs. Larson writes:

I've always felt that I've committed some heresy by doing cartoons (like the ones above) that mixed dinosaurs with primitive people. I think there should be cartoon confessionals where we could go and say things like, "Father, I have sinned - I have drawn dinosaurs and hominids together in the same cartoon.

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7 Cub Scout Attire

In Another Timeline, Gary Larson Is a Great Horror Writer

far side comic where fossils are eating cub scouts
Custom Image by Robert Wood (from Gary Larson)

There's a thin line between horror and humor, especially since both hinge on turning everyday expectations and rules on their head. While Larson's comic turns the idea of a fossilized T-Rex secretly eating visiting kids into laughs, it's the kind of idea that Stephen King could easily turn into a horror masterpiece (as he's done for subjects as diverse as sentient trucks, cell phones and dancing clowns.) This may be why Stephen King is such a huge fan of The Far Side, naming a comic where a dog shows off its trophy kills as his favorite.

the far side stephen king favorite gary larson

In The Far Side Gallery 2, King sings the praises of Larson's humor. King particularly praises the cumulative effect of The Far Side's strips, and the way that their bizarre shared logic creates an alternate way of looking at the world. King writes of Gary Larson, "he does what artists and humorists are supposed to do: he sees what I could see if I could have his eyes. I don't have them, but thank God they are on loan."

6 I Distinctly Yelled 'Second'

Gary Larson's #1 Obsession Returns

far side comic where a scientist is riding a fossil
Custom Image by Robert Wood (from Gary Larson)

While Gary Larson revisits a lot of themes in The Far Side, his #1 obsession is scientists behaving like little kids. Asked about the frequency of this idea in a 1987 interview with 20/20, Larson itted "It's the theme that occurs to me most frequently" while also professing to have a sense of reverence towards real-life scientists.

As funny as the visual of a scientist saddling up a fossilized dinosaur is, Larson's love of language comes through in the verbose way the characters argue over their silly hobby - having one scientist accuse the other of being facetious only enhances the humor of their behavior being so immature.

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5 Another Skull, Another Fortune

Larson Doesn't Settle for the Easiest Version of a Joke

far side comics where anthropologists studying skulls keep finding fortunes inside them
Custom Image by Robert Wood (from Gary Larson)

In another gag that could easily be a horror story if it was presented with a different tone, two anthropologists studying human fossil remains keep finding Fortune Cookie-style fortunes when they crack them open. Where Larson rises about his fellow comic strip writers is in sensing that while an anthropologist finding a fortune inside a hominid skull is funny, it's even funnier if we're seeing the second time it happened. A lot of The Far Side's genius comes from Larson finding a genuinely funny idea, then taking the time to make it even funnier.

4 Chicken Bones

The Far Side Loves Making Picnics as Weird as Possible

far side comic where fossils are chicken bones dropped by aliens
Custom Image by Robert Wood (from Gary Larson)

Chickens make a grisly return in this goofy comic, where a new 'theory' explains the existence of fossils. One of The Far Side's lesser-known themes, Larson loves depicting weird picnics, especially if the gag hinges on non-humans doing the most innocent human acts. The Far Side loves to show aliens, monsters and animals enjoying a picnic, sitting at the breakfast table, or arguing over a white picket fence, airdropping the weirdest possible characters into the most mundane situations, then finding the most bizarre way for them to interact.

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3 Fred and Wilma

Gary Larson Has It Out for The Flintstones

far side comic where archaeologists discover the flintstones' mail box
Custom Image by Robert Wood (from Gary Larson)

The Far Side's humor is famously timeless, with Larson only targeting pop culture or celebrities where he knows the references will be just as funny decades later. In this case, two paleontologists dig down through layers of fossils, discovering the remains of the Flintstones' home. It's a great gag that uses Larson's single- style to its maximum potential, presenting the funny context in a small box right at the bottom of the image to ensure that you fully take in the scene before discovering the detail that makes it funny.

As much sense as it makes for scientists to discover the town of Bedrock while looking for ancient remains, it does seem like Larson thought it was particularly funny to target the iconic cartoon, as this isn't the only strip where he finds the humor in Fred Flintstone's untimely ing.

the far side two sabretooth tigers eat flintstones
Custom Image by Robert Wood (from Gary Larson)
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2 Laid Yesterday

Larson Tells an Entire Story in a Single

far side comic where scientists are eaten by t-rex
Custom Image by Robert Wood (from Gary Larson)

While Gary Larson's comics are always funny, one of his most remarkable skills is telling a complete story in one image. Larson often finds the perfect 'moment' in a narrative to communicate the most information. In The Prehistory of The Far Side, he reveals that he uses short stories and preliminary sketches to decide where in the series of events to set a comic and even which character in it to follow. While The Far Side's contemporaries had multiple s to show a story unfolding, Larson had to both narratively and literally fit all the elements into a single image.

In this case - where two paleontologists have discovered an inexplicable surviving dinosaur, mistaking its eggs for fossils - the use of the dino's shadow tells readers exactly what's about to happen next. Larson has a ton of tricks for showing what's going on 'elsewhere' while still only using one (for instance, using the foreground or background to add new context), but this might be the best example of how masterfully he can make this split perspective seem totally natural. Few readers will consciously realize how effectively Larson has created space 'off-' and how this contributes to the narrative, but everyone who reads the strip instantly benefits from the effect.

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1 DO NOT TOUCH

One of Far Side's Best Comics

far side comic where a museum guest destroys the t-rex fossil
Custom Image by Robert Wood (from Gary Larson)

While 'Laid Yesterday' has a great grasp of narrative, it's way easier to imply what's about to happen than to create an incredibly clear sense of what just happened in a reader's mind. This strip creates a whole story about a curious museum-goer deciding to prod a T-Rex fossil only to bring it crashing down, solely by showing the aftermath. Imagining a more traditional comic where the perpetrator looks around in one , reaches out in the next, then causes the fossil's destruction shows just how much information Larson packs into a fun, immediately comprehensible gag.

Small touches like the billowing dust and the characters' comically understated reactions create an incredibly specific timeline of what just happened, and the posing of the fossils - utterly destroyed beyond belief, with the skull and leg making it clear what this display used to look like - makes a funny idea brilliant in execution. Larson's style is minimalist, but he never misses a detail that can actually make the joke better - for example, the slightly curled toes of the fossil emphasize the complete, comical destruction in a moment of physical comedy somehow performed by a shattered pile of dinosaur bones.

Those are the 10 funniest Far Side comics that take the millennia-old bones of ancient beings and somehow make them the subjects of brilliant comedy - be sure to vote below and have your say on the best comic on this list.