Thanks to Ross Mounce for alerting me to this piece of news.
Yours sincerely, The Fossil Record Editors M. Aberhan, D. Korn, F. Witzmann
Thanks to Ross Mounce for alerting me to this piece of news.
Yours sincerely, The Fossil Record Editors M. Aberhan, D. Korn, F. Witzmann
I’m in Berlin. I’ve just managed to find a chicken donner kebab, and am pausing research briefly to write this. I’m currently on leave from London, with a ridiculously hectic couple of months ahead: I’ve just been to Munich to see a dwarf crocodile specimen, Alligatorellus beaumonti (from Bavaria), which conveniently happened to coincide with Oktoberfest, and am now here to visit another specimen, Theriosuchus ibericus, from Spain. Preliminary glances at the material in Berlin makes me think the Spanish material may be a new genus altogether (whatever that actually means), and another broken up specimen of Alligatorellus might be a new species, based on what I can tell from it’s body armour (yeah, these crocs were awesome!)
Well, according to Sesame Street, all you need to do is sing the palaeontologist theme song!
So forget studying, research, and years of training. Actually, it is pretty cool – it does show this; all you need to do to become a palaeontologist is have a fascination for the natural world, and get your hunting hat on!
Found at: http://koprolitos.blogspot.it/2013/09/sesame-street-paleontologist-theme-song.html
Some dinosaurs were utterly bizarre. You may have heard of them before, but one particular group called therizinosaurs belonged to the meat-eating theropod dinosaurs (those that led to birds), were really awesome. However, they actually at some point made a conscious evolutionary decision to stop being badasses, and become Cretaceous-cauliflower* munching pansies.