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Sauropod Vertebra Picture of the Week

SV-POW! ... All sauropod vertebrae, except when we're talking about Open Access. ISSN 3033-3695
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Open AccessOpportunitiesStinkin' PublishersEarth and related Environmental Sciences
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The speed that things are happening at the moment is astonishing. Whenever we talk about the economics of open access — when I argue that it costs the community eight times as much to publish a paywalled article with Elsevier as it does to publish it as open access with PLoS ONE — I always hear the same argument in response.  And it’s a good argument.

BrachiosauridsBrachiosaurusGoofyMountsRoadside DinosEarth and related Environmental Sciences
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Author Matt Wedel

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Open AccessOpportunitiesStinkin' PublishersEarth and related Environmental Sciences
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These are worrying days for barrier-based publishers.  In the few days since I posted part 2 of this series, we have yet another major development in the Open Access world: UK Science Minister David Willetts’ announcement that “we will make publicly funded research accessible free of charge to readers”.

"Morosaurus"ManusEarth and related Environmental Sciences
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Probably everyone who reads SV-POW! already knows that the manus, or forefoot, or sauropods was very distinctive.  The metacarpal bones, rather than being splayed out horizontally as in the forefeet of most animals, were arranged more or less vertically in a horseshoe shape, hence the characteristic shape of sauropod manus prints.

I'm StupidNavel BloggingOpen AccessShiny Digital FutureEarth and related Environmental Sciences
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Open AccessOpportunitiesStinkin' PublishersEarth and related Environmental Sciences
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It seems the world is conveniently arranging itself for the benefit of this occasional series.  Every time I am about to post an installment, something apposite happens out there.  Just as I was preparing part 0, Bernstein Research’s investment report Is Elsevier Heading for a Political Train-Wreck? came out; just before part 1, Elsevier decided that the solution to their problems was to hire a PR guy;

ApatosaurusDiplodocidsDorsalGiant Oklahoma ApatosaurineSizeEarth and related Environmental Sciences
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Author Matt Wedel

Something I’ve always intended to do but never gotten around to is posting on some of the immense Apatosaurus elements from the Oklahoma panhandle. Here’s one of the most impressive, OMNH 1670, an isolated dorsal.