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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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"Angloposeidon"ConferencesSVPCAEarth and related Environmental Sciences
Published

Sorry to you all for the recent radio-silence here on SV-POW!. Matt and I are hard at work preparing our presentations for SVPCA 2019, which will take place on the Isle of Wight next week. Delightfully, not only will Matt be joining us this year, but so will his wife, forensic anthropologist celebre Vicki;

100% Totally RealBig Tough Sauropodologists Throwing Away Their DignityCamarasaursGoofyStinkin' HeadsEarth and related Environmental Sciences
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Left: Homo sapiens , head, neck and upper trunk in right lateral view (unprepared specimen). Right: Camarasaurus sp., skull in left lateral view. Photograph at the Natural History Museum of Utah, Salt Lake City, Utah. 2016.

BarosaurusCervicalCoracoidDiplodocidsDorsalEarth and related Environmental Sciences
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And so the series continues: part 9, part 10 and part 11 were not numbered as such, but that’s what they were, so I am picking up the numbering here with #12. If you’ve been following along, you’ll remember that Matt and I are convinced that BYU 9024, the big cervical vertebra that has been […]

BrontosmashArtEarth and related Environmental Sciences
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Darren Naish, the silent third partner in SV-POW!, alerted me to this piece by palaeoartist Steve White: In his own words, this piece is “Not what I set to do but was an interesting excercise”. I for one am glad it came out the way it did! I’m loving the gnarliness of the necks.

Stinkin' Every Thing That's Not A SauropodStinkin' HeadsStinkin' SalamandersEarth and related Environmental Sciences
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Author Matt Wedel

Last September I spent a day in the LACM Herpetology collections with Jessie Atterholt, looking at weird features in crocs, lizards, snakes, and salamanders. I’ll have more to say about the specific things we were looking for in a month or so, after Jessie’s given her talk at SVPCA. This was just an incidental hit.

Open AccessRecycledShiny Digital FutureThings I Should Have Posted A Year AgoEarth and related Environmental Sciences
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I’m a bit shocked to find it’s now more than five years since Robert Harington’s Scholarly Kitchen post Open Access: Fundamentals to Fundamentalists. I wrote a response in the comments, meaning to also post it here, but got distracted, and then half a decade passed. Here it is, finally.

Human AnatomyNervous SystemEarth and related Environmental Sciences
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Author Matt Wedel

The image I put together explaining the new discovery. Modified from Staples et al. (2019: fig. 6). Today sees the publication of a new paper, “Cutaneous branch of the obturator nerve extending to the medial ankle and foot: a report of two cadaveric cases,” by Brittany Staples, Edward Ennedy, Tae Kim, Steven Nguyen, Andrew Shore, Thomas Vu, Jonathan Labovitz, and yours truly.