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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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Navel BloggingShiny Digital FutureWhat Counts?Earth and related Environmental Sciences
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TL;DR : This blog now has an ISSN (3033-3695), and each new post gets a DOI, usually a day or two after it’s published. Read on for the details. Over the years, we and others have cited a lot of SV-POW! posts in the formal literature. To quote from a sampling in a long-delayed in-press manuscript: I’ve been pleasantly surprised at how little pushback I’ve had from editors when citing SV-POW! posts.

Navel BloggingEarth and related Environmental Sciences
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It’s pretty amazing to realise we’ve been running SV-POW! for nearly seventeen years now, since 1st October 2007. And it’s astonishing, and gratifying, and even a tiny by humbling, to see how popular it’s been in its niche.

CaudalDiplodocidsHousekeepingNavel BloggingPneumaticityEarth and related Environmental Sciences
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Author Matt Wedel

BYU 11505, a caudal vertebra of a diplodocid from Dry Mesa, in posteroventral view. Note the paired pneumatic foramina on the ventral surface of the centrum. If you want to find the paleontology and anatomy videos that Mike and I have done (plus one video about open access), they have their own sidebar page now, for your convenience and for our own. It’s, uh, just to the right of where your eyes are pointing right now.

ConferencesDorsalHaplocanthosaurusMorrison FormationNAPC 2024Earth and related Environmental Sciences
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Author Matt Wedel

Skeletal inventory of the Haplocanthosaurus bones found at Dry Mesa Dinosaur Quarry. Boisvert et al. (2024: fig. 2). This morning saw the publication of my new paper with Colin Boisvert, Brian Curtice, and Ray Wilhite: Boisvert, Colin, Curtice, Brian, Wedel, Mathew, & Wilhite, Ray. 2024. Description of a new specimen of Haplocanthosaurus from the Dry Mesa Dinosaur Quarry. The Anatomical Record, 1–19.

CaudalCervicalDiplodocidsDorsalFibulaEarth and related Environmental Sciences
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Author Matt Wedel

To answer Mike’s question from the last post, here’s a nice dorsal of Jimbo. All the material’s from the same quarry and has consistent preservation, and this dorsal is a monster. I didn’t try to measure it through the glass. Hey guess what? It’s gonna be another really short photo post. Here are some pix of the Jimbo material on display at the Wyoming Dinosaur Center.

BrachiosauridsBrachiosaurusConferencesDiplodocidsDiplodocusEarth and related Environmental Sciences
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Author Matt Wedel

I gave my keynote talk last evening at the 28th Annual Tate Conference. I also passed out the handout shown above so people could have a handy reference for sauropod biology while I was talking. I have a link to a PDF version at the bottom of this post if you’d prefer it that way.

ConferencesDebateOpen AccessSSPStinkin' PublishersEarth and related Environmental Sciences
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In opposition to my speech supporting the motion “the open access movement has failed”, here’s what Jessica Polka said in opposition to the motion.   The open access movement has not failed. It is in the process of succeeding. Indeed, over 50% of papers are now open access.

ApatosaurusBrontosaurusBYU Museum Of PaleontologyCervicalCervical RibsEarth and related Environmental Sciences
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Author Matt Wedel

With my boy Colin Boisvert at BYU. He successfully defended his MS thesis, now he’s bound for OSU-Tulsa for doctoral work. You’ll hear more about his exploits reeeeaaaal soon. Fossil vending machine in the BYU Museum of Paleontology. All casts, except for the shark teeth and pieces of Campo del Cielo meteorite. They also have bigger casts for sale in the back. My brothers Venmoed me money for my birthday. BYU takes Venmo for fossil casts.