Ciências da Terra e do AmbienteInglêsWordPress.com

Sauropod Vertebra Picture of the Week

SV-POW! ... All sauropod vertebrae, except when we're talking about Open Access. ISSN 3033-3695
Pagina inicialFeed AtomISSN 3033-3695
language
ApatosaurusBrontosaurusCervicalCervical RibsDiplodocidsCiências da Terra e do AmbienteInglês
Publicados

I don’t remember now when I first noticed bifurcated cervical ribs in apatosaurines. I imagine 2016 at the latest, because on our Sauropocalypse that year Mike and I saw examples at both BYU and Dinosaur Journey.

ApatosaurusBrontosaurusCarnotaurusCervicalCervical RibsCiências da Terra e do AmbienteInglês
Publicados

Here are some cervical ribs of sauropods that show a spectrum of morphologies, from a low dorsal process that makes an obtuse angle with the shaft of the rib in Dicraeosaurus (upper right), to one that makes a right angle in Brontosaurus (center), to a prominent spike of bone in Apatosaurus (bottom left), to a […]

ApatosaurusBrontosaurusCervical RibsPapers By SV-POW!sketeersCiências da Terra e do AmbienteInglês
Publicados

Everybody(*) knows that the turiasaurian sauropod Moabosaurus has bifurcated cervical ribs: it was all anyone was talking about back when that animal was described (Britt et al. 2017). We’ve featured the best rib here before, and here it is again: (*) All right, but you know what I mean.

ApatosaurusBrian EnghDiplodocidsGoofyIschiumCiências da Terra e do AmbienteInglês
Publicados

I haven’t blogged about blogging in a while. Maybe because blogging already feels distinctly old-fashioned in the broader culture. A lot of the active discussion migrated away a long time ago, to Facebook and Twitter, and then to other social media outlets as each one in turn goes over the enshittification event horizon.

ApatosaurusDavide BonadonnaDiplodocidsIschiumMorrison FormationCiências da Terra e do AmbienteInglês
Publicados

New paper out today in PeerJ: Lei R, Tschopp E, Hendrickx C, Wedel MJ, Norell M, Hone DWE. 2023. Bite and tooth marks on sauropod dinosaurs from the Morrison Formation. PeerJ 11:e16327 http://doi.org/10.7717/peerj.16327 This one had a long gestation.

BYU Museum Of PaleontologyManusMountsPrice Prehistoric MuseumStinkin' Appendicular ElementsCiências da Terra e do AmbienteInglês
Publicados

Utahraptor is a “giant” dromaeosaurid from Utah, described by Kirkland et al. (1993). Famously, its existence was part of the reason that the people making Jurassic Park felt at liberty to make their “Velociraptor” individuals not only much bigger than the turkey-sized Velociraptor proper, but also than than sheep-sized Deinonychus.

BrachiosaurusCiências da Terra e do AmbienteInglês
Publicados

As all good SV-POW! regulars will know, Elmer S. Riggs published the name Brachiosaurus altothorax in a short (but not trival) 1903 paper (Riggs 1903) and followed it up with a proper descriptive monograph (Riggs 1904) that had several useful plates. I’ve never seen a real copy of the latter (or indeed the former), so for the last quarter-century I’ve made do with various low-quality photocopies and scans.

OpossumStinkin' MammalsCiências da Terra e do AmbienteInglês
Publicados

Last night I took some boxes out to our recycling bin, and as I was walking along the back fence I did a double-take — I’d walked within a couple of feet of this opossum before I knew it was there. It was so close that if I hadn’t been worried about either scaring it or getting bitten, I could easily have reached out and petted it like a cat. We both froze, and I whipped out my phone and started taking pictures.

Carnegie MuseumCC BYConferencesDiplodocusPapers By SV-POW!sketeersCiências da Terra e do AmbienteInglês
Publicados

My talk (Taylor et al. 2023) from this year’s SVPCA is up! The talks were not recorded live. But while it was fresh in my mind, I did a screencast of my own, and posted it on YouTube (CC By). For the conference, I spoke very quickly and omitted some details to squeeze it into a 15-minute slot. In this version, I go a bit slower and make some effort to ensure it’s intelligible to an intelligent layman. That’s why it runs 21 minutes.