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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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DiplodocidsNomenclaturePaleontologists Behaving BadlyRantsShiny Digital FutureScienze della Terra e dell'AmbienteInglese
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Autore Matt Wedel

I wasn’t going to write about this, partly because it’s so darn depressing, but mostly because in the wake of this comment it seemed like the “Amphicoelias brontodiplodocus” paper was being withdrawn, and to quote something Mike said off-list, I was happier about the retraction than I was sad about the implied revisionism.

ApatosaurusBarosaurusDiplodocidsDiplodocusNomenclatureScienze della Terra e dell'AmbienteInglese
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Well, this is frustrating.  Over on the VRTPALEO mailing list, all the talk at the moment is of the new paper by Henry Galiano and Raimund Albersdörfer (2010), describing their rather comically named new species Amphicoelias brontodiplodocus .  And to be fair, the material they’re describing is sensational, and the photographs in the paper are pretty good.

CartilageStinkin' Appendicular ElementsScienze della Terra e dell'AmbienteInglese
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Isn’t it funny how often an idea seems to pop up all over the place at about the same time?  The classic example is the independent and more or less simultaneous invention of calculus by both Isaac Newton and Wilhelm Leibniz, but similar kinds of things seem to happen quite often. And there’s something similar going on right now.

DiplodocidsRoadside DinosStinkin' MammalsStinkin' TheropodsTravelScienze della Terra e dell'AmbienteInglese
Pubblicato
Autore Matt Wedel

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CamelCervicalMountsNecksOther Long-necksScienze della Terra e dell'AmbienteInglese
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Welcome to post four of what seems to be turning out to be Camel Week here on SV-POW!.  As it happens, I spent last Friday and Saturday in Oxford, for a meeting of the Tolkien Society, and I had three hours or so to spend in the wonderful Oxford University Natural History Museum. In a completely ideal world, I would have been able to play with a sequence of camel cervicals;

CamelCervicalDiplodocidsDiplodocusMountsScienze della Terra e dell'AmbienteInglese
Pubblicato
Autore Matt Wedel

Suddenly it’s camel season here at SV-POW! In the last post, Mike was having some doubts about how far back camels could get their heads. That got me curious, so here are the results of 45 minutes worth of Google Image Search.

100% Totally RealCamelCervicalGoofyLiesScienze della Terra e dell'AmbienteInglese
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I’m just back from SVPCA 2010 (the Symposium of Vertebrate Palaeontology and Comparative Anatomy), and what an amazing meeting it was.  I think it was the best I’ve been to.  That’s partly because I understand more of the talks these days — it’s the first time I’ve ever listened to every single talk, even all the mammal-tooth and fish-skull talks — and I learned something interesting and new from almost every one of them.

NomenclatureOff TopicStinkin' MammalsScienze della Terra e dell'AmbienteInglese
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A bit frightening to realise it’s been more than a month since the last SV-POW! post.  We have some excuse for that: I am just back from a fortnight’s holiday with my family, and shortly before that Matt was at a conference in Uruguay.  Still, a whole month? And this post is going to be disappointingly short and off-topic — it’s just a bit of housekeeping really.