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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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NomenclatureEarth and related Environmental Sciences
Published

I have just made a series of fairly major edits to the in-progress Checklist for new zoological genera and species, and wanted to explain what’s changed and why. The important change is that the Checklist no longer attempts to encompass the creation of families, nor of all genus-group and species-group names — only genera and species.

NomenclatureEarth and related Environmental Sciences
Published

Sorry to bump Matt’s awesome Rhea -neck post off the top of the SV-POW! home page, but I have news of the rapidly developing checklist for new zoological names.  As well as many, many minor and not-so-minor edits — and thanks to everyone who’s participated in this process — I have made a major structural change. The list has been broken into two, first enumerating Requirements and then describing Best Practice.

ApatosaurusBasementBrachiosauridsCervicalCollectionsEarth and related Environmental Sciences
Published
Author Matt Wedel

{.aligncenter .size-full .wp-image-3402 loading=“lazy” attachment-id=“3402” permalink=“http://svpow.com/2011/02/12/things-to-make-and-do-part-7-fun-with-rhea-necks/2006-12-13-rhea-019-disgust/” orig-file=“https://svpow.wordpress.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/02/2006-12-13-rhea-019-disgust.jpg” orig-size=“1200,900” comments-opened=“1”

BonitasauraCervicalDorsalNeural SpineNomenclatureEarth and related Environmental Sciences
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As we all know, the International Code of Zoological Nomenclature is a large and intimidating document.  As a result, zoologists naming new animals often do not read it in its entirety (I know I haven’t).  It’s probably because of this that many of the more avoidable nomenclatural mistakes occur.

Guest PostEarth and related Environmental Sciences
Published

We’ve been running SV-POW! for three and half years now; in all that time we’ve never featured a guest post, because we think it’s better to keep a blog tight and focussed.  In general, that remains our policy. But today, first the first and maybe only time, we present a guest post.

CamarasaursCross SectionsDiplodocusGiraffatitanI'm StupidEarth and related Environmental Sciences
Published

For reasons that will soon become apparent (yes, that’s a teaser), Matt and I wanted to figure out how heavy Camarasaurus was.  This is the story of how I almost completely badgered up part of that problem.  I am publishing it as a cautionary tale because I am very secure and don’t mind everyone knowing that I’m an idiot.

I'm StupidLazyThe ArchbishopEarth and related Environmental Sciences
Published

By a curious coincidence, today’s Bob The Angry Flower cartoon is all about the Archbishop description. Enjoy. But, hey, at least I got my confession in early — I was officially the first participant to fail the 2010 Paleo Project Challenge. THIS year, for sure!

Open AccessRantsShiny Digital FutureEarth and related Environmental Sciences
Published

In most journals, in-line citations are by author and year.  So, for example, if someone writes “ Haplocanthosaurus has been recovered as a non-diplodocimorph diplodocoid (Wilson 2002)”, you know that the paper that recovered Haplo in that position was, well, Wilson 2002.  And everyone who works on sauropods is familiar with Wilson 2002.

DorsalSupersaurusEarth and related Environmental Sciences
Published

I recently stumbled across this rather good photograph of the holotype vertebra of our old buddy “ Ultrasauros ”, thanks to Wikipedia contributor Ninjatacoshell, and thought you’d like to see it: {.alignnone .size-full .wp-image-2933 loading=“lazy” attachment-id=“2933” permalink=“http://svpow.com/2010/12/22/the-ultrasauros-holotype-vertebra/supersaurus_vivianae_dorsal_vertebra/”