Messages de Rogue Scholar

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As he noted yesterday, Matt is out this week at the Tate conference, where he’ll be giving a keynote on the misleading patterns of sauropod taphonomy. But why am I not out there with him? We did start making tentative plans for a Wyoming Sauropocalypse centered on the Tate conference, but we couldn’t find a way to make it work for various reasons.

Here’s something I’m going to be yapping about in my keynote talk, “The sauropod heresies: evolutionary ratchets, the taphonomic event horizon, and all the evidence we cannot see”, at the 2024 Tate Geological Museum’s Annual Summer Conference (link): how the fossil record of sauropods is probably wildly at variance with standing populations in life, at least in terms of sizes and maturity of the individuals that got fossilized.

Yesterday, we looked at (mostly) the humerus of the Wealden sauropod “ Pelorosaurus becklesii , which you will recall is known from humerus, radius, ulna and a skin impression, and — whatever it might be — is certainly not a species of Pelorosaurus . Now let’s look at the radius and ulna.

It’s an oddity that in eight years of SV-POW!, we’ve never written about one of the best of all the Wealden-formation sauropod specimens: the forelimb and associated skin impression NHMUK R1870 that is known as “ Pelorosaurus becklesii . Let’s fix that.

Publié in Sauropod Vertebra Picture of the Week

If you’ll forgive me a rather self-indulgent post, the neck-anatomy paper that I and Matt recently had published in PeerJ is important to me for three reasons beyond the usual satisfaction of getting a piece of work out in a good journal. Taylor and Wedel (1023:figure 4). Extent of soft tissue on ostrich and sauropod necks.

Publié in Sauropod Vertebra Picture of the Week

A package!  A package has arrived! What can it be? All right !  Let’s get down to business? Now, where did I leave that monitor-lizard neck skeleton?  Ah yes … That’s what I’m talkin’ about. … Stay tuned for exciting news about turkey zygapophyses.