jptaphonomy.blogspot.com
TAPHOS Lab at UWO: TAPHOS Lab - The New Face of JPTaphonomy
http://jptaphonomy.blogspot.com/2013/11/taphos-lab-new-face-of-jptaphonomy.html
Current research in vertebrate paleontology in the TAPHOS Lab at the University of Wisconsin Oshkosh, focusing on research endeavors in experimental taphonomy, paleoecology, and paleobiology. Friday, November 29, 2013. TAPHOS Lab - The New Face of JPTaphonomy. I've kept up on that one! However, in seeing the work that colleagues around the world have been doing, following their progress through blogs, and seeing the benefits of branding your lab, I've been more than inspired. View my complete profile.
jptaphonomy.blogspot.com
TAPHOS Lab at UWO: November 2013
http://jptaphonomy.blogspot.com/2013_11_01_archive.html
Current research in vertebrate paleontology in the TAPHOS Lab at the University of Wisconsin Oshkosh, focusing on research endeavors in experimental taphonomy, paleoecology, and paleobiology. Friday, November 29, 2013. TAPHOS Lab - The New Face of JPTaphonomy. I've kept up on that one! However, in seeing the work that colleagues around the world have been doing, following their progress through blogs, and seeing the benefits of branding your lab, I've been more than inspired. Subscribe to: Posts (Atom).
dinosaurpostcards.blogspot.com
Dinosaur Postcards: June 2015
http://dinosaurpostcards.blogspot.com/2015_06_01_archive.html
Tuesday, June 23, 2015. Hunting Dinosaurs on the American Prairie Reserve. With the critical details finalized and signed, I can finally reveal what my crew and I will be doing for this summer's fieldwork. Starting July 1st, we will be prospecting for dinosaur fossils on the American Prairie Reserve. An enormous expanse of land in. Northeastern Montana, dedicated to restoring the prairie ecosystem to as close to its original condition as possible. The reserve stretches over approximately. Land and so inv...
dinosaurpostcards.blogspot.com
Dinosaur Postcards: Another Morrison mystery: vintage photos of dinosaur digs from ~1912
http://dinosaurpostcards.blogspot.com/2014/11/another-morrison-mystery-vintage-photos.html
Monday, November 3, 2014. Another Morrison mystery: vintage photos of dinosaur digs from 1912. Okay, so I haven't got around to making a post on fieldwork yet, but I thought I would put together a quick post about some additional vintage Morrison Formation fieldwork images from 1912. Pictures with a story to tell. Fortunately, the seller included high-resolution photos of the cards, which depict some intriguing details. Here is the full set, and a view of the reverse sides (see later for closeups):.
dinosaurpostcards.blogspot.com
Dinosaur Postcards: Open Access, tired reviewers, and the free market: time for reviewer credit?
http://dinosaurpostcards.blogspot.com/2014/11/open-access-tired-reviewers-and-free.html
Saturday, November 29, 2014. Open Access, tired reviewers, and the free market: time for reviewer credit? There is an editorial in Nature this week which has attracted a lot of criticism on the internet. " Open access is tiring out peer reviewers. By Dr Martijn Arns suggests that a rise in scientific publications is due to increased numbers of manuscript submissions to open-access journals, and that this is placing increased pressure on peer-reviewers. Some researchers have said that they will simply ref...
dinosaurpostcards.blogspot.com
Dinosaur Postcards: Screenwashing, for victory!
http://dinosaurpostcards.blogspot.com/2015/07/screenwashing-for-victory.html
Thursday, July 23, 2015. Screenwashing, for victory! So if you followed the link from my previous post. Over to the Great Plains Dinosaur Museum Facebook page, you would have seen a photo of a cute little pachycephalosaur squamosal spike that we found in the first week. Pachycephalosaurs are the famous dome-headed dinosaurs that are often shown headbutting each other (although the evidence supporting this behavior is controversial). A braincase fragment from a theropod? Peter, Danny and Holley spent all ...
dinosaurpostcards.blogspot.com
Dinosaur Postcards: New juvenile Triceratops and pieces of theropods
http://dinosaurpostcards.blogspot.com/2015/07/new-juvenile-triceratops-and-pieces-of.html
Friday, July 17, 2015. New juvenile Triceratops and pieces of theropods. From a slow start. finally warming up. During our first week in the field we discovered many important microsites, but I was disappointed with the lack of sites yielding decent large material. However, in the past week we have started to find a few acceptable skeletal sites (and of course, even more microsites! Which is what I'll be reporting on here. I'm also going to try and blog a bit more often, but with shorter posts each time.
dinosaurpostcards.blogspot.com
Dinosaur Postcards: Hunting Dinosaurs on the American Prairie Reserve
http://dinosaurpostcards.blogspot.com/2015/06/hunting-dinosaurs-on-american-prairie.html
Tuesday, June 23, 2015. Hunting Dinosaurs on the American Prairie Reserve. With the critical details finalized and signed, I can finally reveal what my crew and I will be doing for this summer's fieldwork. Starting July 1st, we will be prospecting for dinosaur fossils on the American Prairie Reserve. An enormous expanse of land in. Northeastern Montana, dedicated to restoring the prairie ecosystem to as close to its original condition as possible. The reserve stretches over approximately. Land and so inv...
dinosaurpostcards.blogspot.com
Dinosaur Postcards: November 2014
http://dinosaurpostcards.blogspot.com/2014_11_01_archive.html
Saturday, November 29, 2014. Open Access, tired reviewers, and the free market: time for reviewer credit? There is an editorial in Nature this week which has attracted a lot of criticism on the internet. " Open access is tiring out peer reviewers. By Dr Martijn Arns suggests that a rise in scientific publications is due to increased numbers of manuscript submissions to open-access journals, and that this is placing increased pressure on peer-reviewers. Some researchers have said that they will simply ref...
dinosaurpostcards.blogspot.com
Dinosaur Postcards: July 2015
http://dinosaurpostcards.blogspot.com/2015_07_01_archive.html
Thursday, July 23, 2015. Screenwashing, for victory! So if you followed the link from my previous post. Over to the Great Plains Dinosaur Museum Facebook page, you would have seen a photo of a cute little pachycephalosaur squamosal spike that we found in the first week. Pachycephalosaurs are the famous dome-headed dinosaurs that are often shown headbutting each other (although the evidence supporting this behavior is controversial). A braincase fragment from a theropod? Peter, Danny and Holley spent all ...
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