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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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CamarasaursCC BYCC BY-NCCeratopsiansCreative CommonsCiências da Terra e do AmbienteInglês
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Step 1: Include the Share-Alike provision in your Creative Commons license, as in the mysteriously popular CC BY-SA and CC BY-NC-SA. Step 2: Listen to the crickets. You’re done. Congratulations! No-one will ever use your silhouette in a scientific paper, and they probably won’t use your stuff in talks or posters either.

CollectionsDiplodocidsDorsalGiant Oklahoma ApatosaurinePneumaticityCiências da Terra e do AmbienteInglês
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Anterior view. Dorsal is to the upper right. The neural spine and left transverse process are missing. Here’s a closeup of the condyle. The outer layer of cortical bone is gone, allowing a glimpse of the pneumatic chambers inside the vert.

LiesOwlStinkin' TheropodsCiências da Terra e do AmbienteInglês
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Here is your occasional reminder of how very misleading feathers can be in understanding the true shape of an animal. An owl: And the same owl showing a bit of leg: And here are the two photos side by side: We’ve often told you here on SV-POW! that necks lie. But legs lie, as well.

Open AccessSSRNStinkin' PublishersCiências da Terra e do AmbienteInglês
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This tired old argument came up again on Twitter this evening, in light of Elsevier’s me-too announcement of a preprint archive: Brian Nosek‏: Elsevier enters the biology #preprints space: https://www.elsevier.com/solutions/ssrn/biorn Me: KILL IT WITH FIRE Brian Lucey‏: I’ve used SSRN from its inception. Never ever felt it as anything but useful. That’s not changed with Elsevier.

CC BYOpen AccessCiências da Terra e do AmbienteInglês
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For a long while, there has been a lot of anger among researchers and academic librarians towards the legacy publishers: the big corporations that control access to most of the world’s scholarly output. But what exactly is the problem? Let’s briefly consider several possibilities, and see if we can figure out which ones really matter.

BrachiosauridsCervicalDiplodocidsGaleamopusOpen AccessCiências da Terra e do AmbienteInglês
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The best-preserved presacral vertebra of Vouivria damparisensis (Mannion et al. 2017: fig. 10). New goodies out today in PeerJ: Tschopp and Mateus (2017) on the new diplodocid Galeamopus pabsti , and Mannion et al. (2017) redescribe and name the French ‘Bothriospondylus’ as Vouivria damparisensis . C7 of Galeamopus pabsti (Tschopp and Mateus 2017: fig.

AMNHApatosaurusBrontosaurusDiplodocidsDIYCiências da Terra e do AmbienteInglês
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Turns out that if Mike and I don’t post about sauropods for a while, people start doing it for us! This very interesting project by Tom Johnson of Loveland, Colorado, first came to my attention when Tom emailed Mark Hallett about it and Mark kindly passed it on to me. I got in touch with […]

Moral DimensionsOpen AccessPeer ReviewCiências da Terra e do AmbienteInglês
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This morning, I was invited to review a paper — one very relevant to my interests — for a non-open-access journal owned by one of the large commercial barrier-based publishers. This has happened to me several times now; and I declined, as I have done ever since 2011. I know this path is not for everyone.

AquilopsArtBrian EnghJames HerrmannLife RestorationsCiências da Terra e do AmbienteInglês
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Cryptic Aquilops , by Brian Engh. Available as a poster print – see below. One of the many nice things about getting to help name new taxa is that once you let them out into the world, other people can unleash their considerable talents on ‘your’ critters.