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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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Artificial IntelligenceLLMSciences de la terre et de l'environnementAnglais
Publié

A few days ago I got a sensationally stupid email from one of those websites that most of us probably have a subscription to, but which I will not give the oxygen of publicity by linking to[1]. The subject line was: Your paper “NEURAL SPINE BIFURCATION…” is now an analogy. No; no, it’s not.

Blood VesselsIchthyornisJanavisNew PapersPeople We LikeSciences de la terre et de l'environnementAnglais
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Auteur Matt Wedel

New paper out this week, open access like usual, go get it for free: Atterholt, Jessie; Burton, M. Grace; Wedel, Mathew J.; Benito, Juan; Fricano, Ellen; and Field, Daniel J. 2025. Osteological correlates of the respiratory and vascular systems in the neural canals of Mesozoic ornithurines Ichthyornis and Janavis. The Anatomical Record. http://doi.org/10.1002/ar.70070.

AMNHArtDenver Museum Of Nature And ScienceDinosaur Journey Museum Of Western ColoradoPoetry For PaleontologistsSciences de la terre et de l'environnementAnglais
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Auteur Matt Wedel

Midnight in the museum In the yawning resonance Of empty space The great xylophone skeletons Play the lonely strains of Time Like cathedral organs Heralding the ends of ages.     Time rushes on The final predator Implacable Like Dinichthys Cruising the crinoid beds Sounding one note: Everything dies.

DiplodocidsNavel BloggingPapers By SV-POW!sketeersSciences de la terre et de l'environnementAnglais
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One of the things that comes up over and over — on this blog, at conferences like DinoCon, on Q&A websites — is how to become a palaeontologist. As I’ve said before (at some length) the way to become a published palaeontologist is to publish papers about palaeontology.

Alex PritchardAquilopsArtCeratopsiansConferencesSciences de la terre et de l'environnementAnglais
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Auteur Matt Wedel

Very nice photo of Alex Pritchard’s Aquilops skeleton from DinosaurSkeletons.co.uk. I am often so far down the rabbit holes of my own work (and given that I work mostly on pneumaticity and weird stuff in neural canals, they are literally holes) that I do a very poor job of keeping up with what’s going on in the broader dinosphere.