Wedel’s Theorem: freezer full of interesting dead animals + great anatomy student who actually wants to get up on Saturday morning and dissect = happiness The rhea has been the gift that keeps on giving.
Wedel’s Theorem: freezer full of interesting dead animals + great anatomy student who actually wants to get up on Saturday morning and dissect = happiness The rhea has been the gift that keeps on giving.
Matt recently told us how to get ideas for papers, but if you’ve not previously published, you may be wondering how you get from idea to actual manuscript. I’ve written about twenty palaeontology papers now, not counting trivial ones like encyclopaedia entries and corrections (plus a few in computer science).
Over at his truly unique blog Paleo Errata , Jeff Martz is claiming that Stereopairs Are Cool. This assertion he supports with the following figure that he put together, showing a set of five stereopairs of a Longosuchus braincase: Unfortunately, I am one of those who can’t “see” stereopairs, so these images are uninformative to me — or, at least, no more informative than your average inch-wide braincase photo.
Last time around, I referred in passing, rather flippantly, to what I called Tutorial n: how to become a palaeontologist . Since then, I realised that actually I could write a tutorial on this, and that it could be surprisingly short and sweet — much shorter than it would have needed to be even a few years ago. So here it is: how to be a published palaeontologist.
Since I started taking photographs of sauropod vertebrae back in 2004, I’ve got much, much better at it, and for the last few months I’ve been meaning to write an article about what I’ve learned along the way.
I hope you have a pair of 3D glasses. If you do, then check this baby out: Brachiosauridae incertae sedis NHM R5937, "The Archbishop", damaged cervical vertebra S in right posterolateral view; red-cyan 3D anaglyph. This image and others of the same specimen copyright the NHM since it's their specimen.
Trying two new things this morning: grilling a turkey, and live-blogging on SV-POW! I like to grill. Steak, chicken, kebabs, yams, pineapple, bananas–as long as it’s an edible solid, I’m up for it. But I’ve never grilled a turkey before. Neighbor, colleague, fellow paleontologist and grillmeister Brian Kraatz sent me his recipe, which is also posted on Facebook for the edification of the masses.
I’m following up immediately on my last post because I am having so much fun with my wallaby carcass. As you’ll recall, I was lucky enough to score a subadult male wallaby from a local farm park. Today, we’re going to look at its feet. Wallabies are macropods;
This is part 3 of an emerging and occasional SV-POW! series: part 1 was the pig skull, and part 2 was the lizard feet (though not advertised as such because I couldn’t resist the sauropod pun). Bennett's wallaby, right lateral view Today, we’re going to be taking a wallaby apart.
I made brachiosaur sand-sculptures. (And yes, it’s that Daniel Taylor, the author of Taylor 2005 — a copy of which apparently hangs on the wall of the Padian Lab.) But wait! Is the brachiosaur truly asleep, as it seems, or is it actually the victim of a mighty hunter?