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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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BrachiosauridsBrachiosaurusCaudalDorsalGiraffatitanScienze della Terra e dell'AmbienteInglese
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Today sees the publication of the new Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology , and with it my paper on the two best-known brachiosaurs and why they’re not congeneric (Taylor 2009).  This of course is why I have been coyly referring to “Brachiosaurus” brancai in the last few months … I couldn’t bear to make the leap straight to saying Giraffatitan , a name that is going to take me a while to get used to. But before we

Off TopicOpen AccessShiny Digital FutureStinkin' OrnithischiansScienze della Terra e dell'AmbienteInglese
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Matt and I, working with Andy Farke (the Open Source Paleontologist) are delighted to announce a new project that we’re all very excited about.  Normally we wouldn’t talk about work that’s only just starting — we prefer to wait until a paper is out, or at least in review, before talking about it — but this one is different, because we want YOU to help write it. How can this be? Get yourself over to The Open Dinosaur Project and find out!

BrachiosauridsQiaowanlongScienze della Terra e dell'AmbienteInglese
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I know it’s a bit soon to follow up my own post, but I’ve been in correspondence with You Hai-Lu, lead author of the Proc. B paper describing the new putative brachiosaurid Qiaowanlong .  He’s been very gracious in response to my questioning the new taxon, and I wanted to pass on the fruits of that exchange.

CervicalFilthy LucreOpen AccessRantsShiny Digital FutureScienze della Terra e dell'AmbienteInglese
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UPDATE (from Matt): I also bring good news … and bad news. The good news is that the entire dinosaur issue of Anatomical Record is open access after all. So this post is mainly of historical interest now, and you should get on over to the page for this issue and download all the free dinosaurian goodness.

CervicalMass EstimatesSizeSkeletal ReconstructionsTitanosaurScienze della Terra e dell'AmbienteInglese
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Autore Matt Wedel

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Mystery VertebraUlterior MotivesScienze della Terra e dell'AmbienteInglese
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Autore Matt Wedel

Was this just a half-lame attempt to fulfill our titular mandate whilst plugging my new astronomy blog? Of course it was (and I just did it again!). Doesn’t mean you lot are off the hook for figuring out what it is. So here’s another image with more views. You have a week. Don’t let me down. Oh, and to sweeten the pot, 351 SV-POW!bucks to the person who first figures it out. UPDATE: Too late, suckers!

BrachiosauridsBrachiosaurusCervicalTutorialScienze della Terra e dell'AmbienteInglese
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We really should have covered this ages ago …  Here we are, blithering on about brachiosaurids and diplodocoids and all, and we’ve never really spelled out what these terms mean.  Sorry! The family tree of a group of animals (or plants, or fungi, or what have you) is called its phylogeny.  The science of figuring out a phylogeny is called systematics.

Mystery VertebraOff TopicScienze della Terra e dell'AmbienteInglese
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Autore Matt Wedel

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Skeletal ReconstructionsTitanosaurScienze della Terra e dell'AmbienteInglese
Pubblicato
Autore Matt Wedel

Back in 1999 or 2000 Jaime Headden sent me his skeletal reconstruction of what was then known as Titanosaurus colberti (Jain and Bandyopadhyay 1997), but which has recently been renamed Isisaurus colberti by Upchurch and Wilson (2004). Jaime’s skeletal reconstruction and life restoration are here. Somebody threw a skin over the recon to produce this life restoration.