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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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GoofyXenoposeidonYeryüzü ve ilgili Çevre Bilimleriİngilizce
Yayınlandı

I knew that Xenoposeidon is awesome. But I wasn’t prepared for the fact that the rest of the world seems to realise this, too. I got up at 4:45 this morning to get a train into London to do, as I thought, a brief bit of film for ITN about the new dinosaur. But I kept on — and on — getting calls from other media outlets wanting a piece of the hot Xenoposeidon action.

DorsalWealdenXenoposeidonYeryüzü ve ilgili Çevre Bilimleriİngilizce
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Today is an exciting day here at SV-POW! Towers, with the publication of the new dinosaur Xenoposeidon proneneukos , based on — you guessed it — a sauropod vertebra. The reference is: And what a vertebra it is! Let’s take a look: Here we see the vertebra from both sides: on the left side, we see it in left lateral aspect, and on the right, in right lateral.

CollectionsDiplodocidsSacralYeryüzü ve ilgili Çevre Bilimleriİngilizce
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I see now that Mike has beaten me to the punch in providing your at-least-weekly dose of sauroponderous vertebrawesome. And a nice job it is. Still, I feel funny about you not getting a new picture (ahem), so I’m posting my late entry anyway. For some reason, despite–or perhaps because of–my ardent devotion to cervicals, I have taken it on myself to push the anatomical boundaries of SV-POW! again.

BrachiosaurusCervicalTutorialYeryüzü ve ilgili Çevre Bilimleriİngilizce
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For the first time in SV-POW! history, a full week has passed between successive posts — well, at least we didn’t actually fail with the “of the week” part, even if it was a close thing. It’s been a busy week, for reasons that will soon be apparent;

PneumaticityTutorialYeryüzü ve ilgili Çevre Bilimleriİngilizce
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It’s come up here a few times already–it’s hard to talk about sauropod vertebrae without bringing it up–but now it’s time to get it out in the open. In almost all sauropods, and certainly in all the ones you learned about as a kid, at least some of the vertebrae were pneumatic (air-filled). Now, this is a very strange thing.

DorsalWealdenYeryüzü ve ilgili Çevre Bilimleriİngilizce
Yayınlandı

Here is another beautiful but (so far) unidentifiable isolated dorsal vertebra from the Wealden Supergroup. Rather than the usual orthogonal views (anterior, posterior, lateral) this is in an oblique view: right anterolateral. This vertebra is one of two that, together, make up the specimen BMNH R90. For my own convenience I have assigned them lower-case latters so each can be referred to individually. I call this one R90a.

CaudalTitanosaurWealdenYeryüzü ve ilgili Çevre Bilimleriİngilizce
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Yazar Darren Naish

Welcome to another SV-POW! world first: the first ever outing (to my knowledge) of a photo of BMNH R5333, an articulated set of two-and-a-bit titanosaur caudal vertebrae. These vertebrae come from the famous Wessex Formation of the Isle of Wight: they are from the Lower Cretaceous, and specifically from the Barremian.

BrachiosauridsCervicalCollectionsGoofySauroposeidonYeryüzü ve ilgili Çevre Bilimleriİngilizce
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Figure 1. Sauroposeidon proteles , eighth cervical vertebra (top) and posterior portion of seventh cervical (bottom). Mike Taylor (left) and Matt Wedel (right) for scale.

CaudalDiplodocidsYeryüzü ve ilgili Çevre Bilimleriİngilizce
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We promised non-presacrals and non-brachiosaurids, so here’s a diplodocid caudal vertebra in right lateral view. Most of the neural spine is blown off. The huge hole in the side of the vert is legit, though. That’s a pneumatic foramen (literally, air hole), through which air-filled tubes connected to the respiratory system entered the bone–just like in birds. More on that later.

BrachiosauridsBrachiosaurusDorsalYeryüzü ve ilgili Çevre Bilimleriİngilizce
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In the last post, Matt promised you non-brachiosaurs, sacrals and caudals. And so I bring you the gift of … brachiosaur dorsals! Feast your eyes, gloat your soul, on the last four presacral vertebrapresacral vertebrae 4-7 of the Brachiosaurus altithorax holotype FMNH P25107.  [My mistake — for some reason, I called these the last four when I originally wrote this post.

BrachiosauridsBrachiosaurusMountsYeryüzü ve ilgili Çevre Bilimleriİngilizce
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This one’s not about the morphology of the vertebrae, but rather their cumulative effect. The subject is the mounted Brachiosaurus outside the Field Museum in Chicago. The picture was taken in July 2005 by me or by Mike; we had two Nikon Coolpix cameras going and just pooled the photos. We’ll get you some sacrals, caudals, and non-brachiosaurids one of these days. We swear.