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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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BrachiosauridsBrachiosaurusMountsSciences de la terre et de l'environnementAnglais
Publié
Auteur Matt Wedel

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Open AccessPeerJPLoSStinkin' PublishersSciences de la terre et de l'environnementAnglais
Publié

A while back, Elsevier launched its journal finder, tagged “Find the perfect journal for your article”. Since our priorities in choosing a journal are a bit different from Elsevier, here is the SV-POW! journal finder. (That’s version 2, by the way.

ArtBrachiosaurusBrontosaurusHelp SV-POW!Sciences de la terre et de l'environnementAnglais
Publié

In a paper for which we’re currently handling the revisions, I and Matt cite several pieces of artwork, including Knight’s classic Brontosaurus and Burian’s snorkelling Brachiosaurus . All we have for the references are: Knight CR (1897) Restoration of Brontosaurus . Burian Z (1941) Snorkelling Brachiosaurus . But a reviewer asked us: I don’t really have any idea what the right way is to cite artwork — does

Stinkin' HeadsStinkin' MammalsStinkin' TheropodsSciences de la terre et de l'environnementAnglais
Publié
Auteur Matt Wedel

I know it’s been quiet around here for a while. Mike and I have both been on vacation, and before that, we were both up to our necks in day-job work, and after we get back, we’ll be up to our necks in revising accepted manuscripts.

ArtBrachiosauridsGoofyIt Came From Brian Engh's Friend Kate's Coffee TableLife RestorationsSciences de la terre et de l'environnementAnglais
Publié
Auteur Matt Wedel

Last Sunday I got to hang out with Brian Engh and some of his friends in LA. You may remember Brian from this, this, this, this, and, most notoriously, this. We got to drawing dinosaurs, naturally. Now, for me to try to draw dinosaurs next to Brian is more than a little intimidating. I really felt the need to bring my A-game. So this is what I came up with.

Peer ReviewStinkin' PublishersSciences de la terre et de l'environnementAnglais
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Last October, we published a sequence of posts about misleading review/reject/resubmit practices by Royal Society journals (Dear Royal Society, please stop lying to us about publication times; We will no longer provide peer reviews for Royal Society journals until they adopt honest editorial policies; Biology Letters does trumpet its submission-to-acceptance time;

PneumaticityRebbachisauridsSciences de la terre et de l'environnementAnglais
Publié

Here is Tataouinea , named by Fanti et al. (2013) last week — the first sauropod to be named after a locality from Star Wars (though, sadly, that is accidental — the etymology refers to the Tataouine Governatorate of Tunisia). {.size-full .wp-image-8706 aria-describedby=“caption-attachment-8706” loading=“lazy” attachment-id=“8706”

ConferencesHow The Sausage Is MadeScience CommunicationThings I Should Have Posted A Year AgoTutorialSciences de la terre et de l'environnementAnglais
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As the conference season heaves into view again, I thought it was worth gathering all four parts of the old Tutorial 16 (“giving good talks”) into one place, so it’s easy to link to. So here they are: Part 1: Planning: finding a narrative Make us care about your project. Tell us a story. You won’t be able to talk about everything you’ve done this year. Omit much that is relevant. Pick a single narrative. Ruthlessly prune.

EducationJust Plain WrongOpen AccessRantsStinkin' HistoriansSciences de la terre et de l'environnementAnglais
Publié

Robin Osborne, professor of ancient history at King’s College, Cambridge, had an article in the Guardian yesterday entitled “Why open access makes no sense”. It was described by Peter Coles as “a spectacularly insular and arrogant argument”, by Peter Webster as an “Amazingly wrong-headed piece” and  by Glyn Moody as “easily the most arrogant &