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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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Anatomical DiscoveriesDissectionHands Used As Scale BarsOstrichPneumaticitySciences de la terre et de l'environnementAnglais
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Auteur Matt Wedel

[This post received first place in the 2024 Blog Extravaganza at Adam Mastroianni’s Experimental History. Many thanks, Adam!] I first had this thought in 2019, and I started this draft in early 2020, but…you know how that particular story turned out.

3D PrintsCaudalCross SectionsFreakin SharksHaplocanthosaurusSciences de la terre et de l'environnementAnglais
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Auteur Matt Wedel

Trunk vertebra of a tuna ( Thunnus ), OMNH RE 0042, showing paired bony spinal cord supports Here’s a grab-bag of follow-up stuff related to our new paper on neural canal ridges in dinos (Atterholt et al. 2024, see the previous post and sidebar page). Neural canal ridges, or bony spinal cord supports? I got into the habit of calling the inwardly-projecting bony prominences in the neural canals of sauropods and other

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

Bony spinal cord supports (arrows) in caudal vertebrae of several specimens of Camarasaurus . (a) Right lateral view of neural canal with broken vertebral arch, clearly exposing a bony spinal cord support (MWC 5496). (b) Anterolateral oblique view of the neural canal of the third caudal vertebra (SUSA 515) with a broken vertebral arch displaying a bony spinal cord support.

Open AccessStinkin' PublishersSciences de la terre et de l'environnementAnglais
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Last time we talked about the evident hijacking of the PalArch Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology. No-one seemed to know what had happened or how. I managed to track down Andre J. Veldmeijer, who was involved with the PalArch journals a while back.

Stinkin' PublishersSciences de la terre et de l'environnementAnglais
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Back in our annus mirabilis of 2013, one of the Wedel-and-Taylor papers was Neural spine bifurcation in sauropod dinosaurs of the Morrison Formation: ontogenetic and phylogenetic implications (Wedel and Taylor 2013). We this published in PalArch’s Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology, which we chose because it was a small, open-access journal in our field that was […]

Navel BloggingShiny Digital FutureWhat Counts?Sciences de la terre et de l'environnementAnglais
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TL;DR : This blog now has an ISSN (3033-3695), and each new post gets a DOI, usually a day or two after it’s published. Read on for the details. Over the years, we and others have cited a lot of SV-POW! posts in the formal literature. To quote from a sampling in a long-delayed in-press manuscript: I’ve been pleasantly surprised at how little pushback I’ve had from editors when citing SV-POW! posts.

Navel BloggingSciences de la terre et de l'environnementAnglais
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It’s pretty amazing to realise we’ve been running SV-POW! for nearly seventeen years now, since 1st October 2007. And it’s astonishing, and gratifying, and even a tiny by humbling, to see how popular it’s been in its niche.

CaudalDiplodocidsHousekeepingNavel BloggingPneumaticitySciences de la terre et de l'environnementAnglais
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Auteur Matt Wedel

BYU 11505, a caudal vertebra of a diplodocid from Dry Mesa, in posteroventral view. Note the paired pneumatic foramina on the ventral surface of the centrum. If you want to find the paleontology and anatomy videos that Mike and I have done (plus one video about open access), they have their own sidebar page now, for your convenience and for our own. It’s, uh, just to the right of where your eyes are pointing right now.