Ben Creisler
Some recent items:
First tyrannosaur embryo fossils revealed
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Was T. rex feathered? (in Czech)
https://veda.instory.cz/zeme-priroda/1390-vedci-se-konecne-blizi-k-definitivni-odpovedi-na-otazku-zda-byl-t-rex-opereny.html Â
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Niebla, the "old" abelisaurid
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Spinosaur diversity on the Iberian Peninsula (in Spanish)
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Titanosaur had diseased bones with parasites (in Portuguese)
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Terrible Lizards podcast:
TLS02E06 Dinosaur locomotion
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Dinosaurs: Warm-Blooded or Cold-Blooded? (podcast)
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Jucha, long-necked plesiosaur found in Ulyanovsk region of Russia (in Russian)
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Triassic Reptiles of the Dolomites (in Italian)
I Rettili Triassici delle Dolomiti (200-250 milioni di anni fa)
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Weird World of the Triassic
Nick Fraser, Head of the Department of Natural Sciences, National Museums Scotland
Nigel Trewin Memorial Lecture 2020 -
Edinburgh Geological Society (video)
53 min
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Paleonerds Podcast Episode #15Â
Sleeping Through Extinction with Christian Sidor
Dr. Christian Sidor (Burke Museum) talks about the ancestry of mammals, including a little creature that hibernated through the Permian-Triassic extinction, allowing reptiles to branch off and evolve into mammals.
https://www.paleonerds.com/podcast/christiansidor
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Permian-Triassic Mass Extinction: Evolutionary Arms Race
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The youngest dinosaur tracker
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Geologist eager to examine 'spectacular' fossilized Early Permian tracks found on Prince Edward Island, Canada
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Fossil Hunting in the Footsteps of Mary Anning
Dean Lomax (video)
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Podcast: Dinosaurs, the Second Chapter: Part 4 (The Impossible Knot)
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Not yet mentioned
Women in Vertebrate Paleontology video interviews in connection with recent book "Rebels, Scholars, Explorers: Women in Vertebrate Paleontology"
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Also, coming soon...
Philip J. Currie Dinosaur Museum Virtual Talk
Yan-Yin Wang
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Uncinate in Archosaurs, a Tale of Captain Hook in the Fossil Record
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 30, 2020 3:00 PM
https://dinomuseum.ca/events/virtual-speaker-series/The data we have been collecting from North American and Chinese archosaurs suggest that uncinate is likely a feature shared by many if not all archosaurs.
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Non-dino:
The world's earliest 'babies' were Devonian fish from Orkney in Scotland