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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 AuthoringShiny Digital FutureVertebral OrientationSciences de la terre et de l'environnementAnglais
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Now that Matt and I have blogged various thoughts about how to orient vertebra (part 1, part 2, relevant digression 1, relevant digression 2, part 3) and presented a talk on the subject at the 1st Palaeontological Virtual Congress, it’s time for us to strike while the iron is hot and write the paper.

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

Click to embiggen. Trust me. Last year about this time I wrote: The museum I was thinking about more than any other when I wrote that is the Museum of Osteology in Oklahoma City. I don’t get there every year, but I stop in as often as possible, and I make it more years than not. And yet, looking back through the archives I see that almost all of my posts about the Museum of Osteology came in a brief flurry five years ago. Shameful!

AquilopsArtStinkin' HeadsStinkin' OrnithischiansSciences de la terre et de l'environnementAnglais
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Auteur Matt Wedel

Nothing really new here, not like a new skull recon or anything. The original version I did for Farke et al. (2014) had the jaw articulated and closed. Then in 2017 I posted a version with the lower jaw disarticulated. Obviously what was needed was one with the lower jaw articulated and open.

1st Palaeo Virtual CongressBrachiosauridsCaudalCervicalConferencesSciences de la terre et de l'environnementAnglais
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Auteur Matt Wedel

The 1st Palaeontological Virtual Congress is underway now, and will run through December 15. Mike and I have two presentations up: “What do we mean by the directions ‘cranial’ and ‘caudal’ on a vertebra?” by Mike and me, which consists of a video Mike made presenting a slide show that he put together.

DissectionEverything's Better Cut In HalfPeople We LikePigStinkin' Appendicular ElementsSciences de la terre et de l'environnementAnglais
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Auteur Matt Wedel

Here’s a frozen pig head being hemisected with a band saw. The head in question, and the other bits we’ll get to later on in this post, both came from Jessie Atterholt’s Thanksgiving pig.

ArtDorsalDull Analogue PastNot At All TimelyPapers By SV-POW!sketeersSciences de la terre et de l'environnementAnglais
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Matt’s drawn my attention to a bizarre fact: despite 17 separate posts about Xenoposeidon on this blog (linked from here and here), we’ve never shown a decent scan of Lydekker’s (1893) original illustration of NHMUK PV R2095, the partial mid-to-posterior dorsal vertebra that since Taylor and Naish (2007) has been the holotype specimen of Xenoposeidon […]

ArtBrian EnghMirarcePeople We LikeStinkin' MammalsSciences de la terre et de l'environnementAnglais
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Auteur Matt Wedel

Skeletal reconstruction of Mirarce by Scott Hartman (Atterholt et al. 2018: fig. 19). Recovered bones in white, missing bones in gray. The humerus is 95.9mm long. Today sees the publication of the monster enantiornithine Mirarce eatoni (“Eaton’s wonderful winged messenger”) from the Kaiparowits Formation of Utah, by Jessie Atterholt, Howard Hutchinson, and Jingmai O’Connor.