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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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ApatosaurusBarosaurusBrachiosauridsCervicalCross SectionsSciences de la terre et de l'environnementAnglais
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Auteur Matt Wedel

I drew a couple of these a while back, and I’m posting them now both to fire discussion and because I’m too lazy to write anything new.

BrachiosauridsCervicalCTPneumaticityStinkin' MammalsSciences de la terre et de l'environnementAnglais
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Last week, for the first time ever, I spent the entire working week on palaeo.  I took a week away from my job, and spent it staying in London, working on the Archbishop at the Natural History Museum.

CervicalDorsalLife RestorationsSizeTitanosaurSciences de la terre et de l'environnementAnglais
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Auteur Matt Wedel

Get on over to Art Evolved and scope out the sauroponderous Sauropod Gallery. It’s brobdingnaginormous. I don’t want to seem biased, but there’s a lot of hot brachiosaurian action on display.

BrachiosauridsCollectionsDIYOff TopicSkeletal ReconstructionsSciences de la terre et de l'environnementAnglais
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I’m following up immediately on my last post because I am having so much fun with my wallaby carcass.  As you’ll recall, I was lucky enough to score a subadult male wallaby from a local farm park.  Today, we’re going to look at its feet. Wallabies are macropods;

BrachiosauridsBrachiosaurusCervicalCross SectionsCTSciences de la terre et de l'environnementAnglais
Publié
Auteur Matt Wedel

Earlier this month Daniela Schwarz-Wings and colleagues published the first finite element analysis (FEA) of sauropod vertebrae (Schwarz-Wings et al. 2009). Above is one of the figures showing some of their results. Following standard convention, stresses are shown on a gradient with cooler colors indicating lower stresses and hotter colors indicating higher stresses.

MYDDOpen AccessSizeTitanosaurSciences de la terre et de l'environnementAnglais
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At the 2007 SVP meeting in Austin, Texas, I noticed that the suffix “-ass” was ubiquitiously used as a modifier: where an Englishman such as myself might say “This beer is very expensive”, a Texan would say “That is one expensive-ass beer” — and the disease seemed to spread by osmosis through the delegates, so that by my last day in Austin is was seemingly impossible to hear an adjective without the “-ass” suffix.

BrachiosauridsCaudalCervicalCollectionsGiraffatitanSciences de la terre et de l'environnementAnglais
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Auteur Matt Wedel

UPDATE December 3, 2009 I screwed up, seriously. Tony Thulborn writes in a comment below to correct several gross errors I made in the original post. He’s right on every count. I have no defense, and I am terribly sorry, both to Tony and to everyone who ever has or ever will read this post.

CaudalCervicalDorsalNigersaurusNomenclatureSciences de la terre et de l'environnementAnglais
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After a completely barren 2008, this year is turning out to be a good one for me in terms of publications.  Today sees the publication of Taylor (2009b), entitled Electronic publication of nomenclatural acts is inevitable, and will be accepted by the taxonomic community with or without the endorsement of the code — one of those papers where, if you’ve read the title, you can skip the rest of the paper.

BrachiosauridsDIYField PhotosGoofyLazySciences de la terre et de l'environnementAnglais
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I made brachiosaur sand-sculptures. (And yes, it’s that Daniel Taylor, the author of Taylor 2005 — a copy of which apparently hangs on the wall of the Padian Lab.) But wait!  Is the brachiosaur truly asleep, as it seems, or is it actually the victim of a mighty hunter?