[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index][Subject Index][Author Index]
Dinofest98: list of symposium papers (LONG)
GSP wrote:
> There will be no presentation on this subject at Dinofest III. How do those
> wacky paleorumors start?
Apologies in advance if this post doesn't format-out properly
(it was originally in html).
Here is the latest schedule of papers to be presented at Dinofest98 (as
of 12/20/97...subject to change, of course):
[April 17-19, 1998]
SYMPOSIUM Paper Titles
In alphabetical order by author
HUNTING MIDDLE ASIAN DINOSAURS & OTHER VERTEBRATES
IN
THE KYZYLKUM DESERT OF UZBEKISTAN
J. David Archibald, Department of Biology, San
Diego
State University, San Diego, CA 92182
COMO CARNIVORES: CARCASS DISMEMBERMENT, HABITAT
CHOICE,
AND FOUR-DIMENSIONAL COMPLEXITY IN THE LATE
JURASSIC
Robert T. Bakker, Vertebrate Paleontology
Laboratory,
Tate Museum, Casper College, 125 College Drive,
Casper,
WY 82601
EVOLUTION OF METABOLIC AND GROWTH RATES IN
PTEROSAURS
S. Christopher Bennett, Natural History Museum,
University of Kansas, Lawrence, KS 66045
THE ALLOSAURUS "BIG AL": ITS PLACE IN TIME AND
SPACE
Brent H. Breithaupt, Geological Museum,
University of
Wyoming, Laramie, WY 82071-3006.
PROTOFEATHERS: WHAT ARE WE LOOKING FOR?
Alan H. Brush, The Academy of Natural Sciences,
Philadelphia and 92 High Street, Mystic, CT.
ON THE PHYLOGENY AND ORIGINS OF SNAKES
Michael W. Caldwell, Department of Biological
Sciences,
University of Alberta, Edmonton, Alberta, Canada
T6G
2E9
BRINGING DINOSAURS BACK TO LIFE
George Callison, Dinamation International Corp.,
2247
Codels Canyon Drive, Grand Junction, CO 81503-1197
HOW TO FOSSILIZE A DINOSAUR
Kenneth Carpenter, Dept. of Earth Sciences, Denver
Museum of Natural History, 2001 Colorado Blvd.
Denver,
CO 80205
USING MODERN TECHNOLOGY IN THE ANALYSIS OF
FUNCTION IN
DINOSAURS
Ralph E. Chapman, Applied Morphometrics
Laboratory, ADP
EG-15 NHB: MRC 136, National Museum of Natural
History,
Smithsonian Institution, Washington, DC 20560
REASSESSMENT OF PROCOMPSOGNATHUS SKULL
Sankar Chatterjee, Museum of Texas Tech
University,
Lubbock, TX 79409-3191
THE BONE MICROSTRUCTURE OF EARLY AVIAN THEROPODS
Anusuya Chinsamy, University of Cape Town, Zoology
Department, Rondebosch, 7700; South African
Museum,
Cape Town, 8000 SOUTH AFRICA.
ENTERTAINMENT OR EDUCATION: THE EVOLUTION OF A
DINOSAUR
EXHIBIT
Jeff Crewe, The Academy of Natural Sciences, 1900
Benjamin Franklin Parkway, Philadelphia, PA
19103-1195
DINOSAURS AND CRUSTAL PLATES
Edwin H. Colbert, Curator Emeritus, The American
Museum
of Natural History, New York, Professor Emeritus,
Columbia University in the City of New York,
Honorary
Curator, The Museum of Northern Arizona, 3101 N.
Fort
Valley Road, Flagstaff, Arizona, 86001
A REVISION OF LIFE RESTORATIONS OF STEGOSAURS
Stephen A. Czerkas, The Dinosaur Museum,
Blanding, UT
84535
CONTINUING DISCOVERIES OF DINOSAURS AND ASSOCIATED
FAUNA, LATE CRETACEOUS OF MADAGASCAR
Peter Dodson1, Catherine A. Forster2, Scott D.
Sampson3, Florent Ravoavy4 and David W. Krause2
A MORPHOMETRIC ANALYSIS OF TOROSAURUS
Andrew A. Farke, 39083 284th Street, Armour, SD
57313-6500
AN ORNITHOLOGICAL SQUINT AT THREE-TOED DINOSAUR
FOOTPRINTS
James O. Farlow, Department of Geosciences,
Indiana-Purdue University, 2101 Coliseum Boulevard
East, Fort Wayne, IN 46805
DENTAL MICROWEAR IN THE SAUROPOD DINOSAURS
CAMARASAURUS
AND DIPLODOCUS AND THE ROLE OF EATING IN
DETERMINING
SOCIAL BEHAVIOR
Anthony R. Fiorillo, Dallas Museum of Natural
History,
P. O. Box 150349, Dallas, TX 75315
THE SURFING NODOSAUR OR RIDING UP THE PACIFIC
PLATE
Tracy L. Ford1, J. I. Kirkland2, W. P. Elder3
1P. O. Box 1171, Poway CA, 92074
2 Dinamation Int'l Society, 550 Jurassic Court,
Fruita,
CO 81521
3California Academy of Sciences, Golden Gate
Park, San
Francisco, CA 94118-9661
WHEN IS A DINOSAUR NOT A DINOSAUR?
Nicholas C. Fraser, Virginia Museum of Natural
History,
1001 Douglas Avenue, Martinsville, VA 24112
DISCOVERING DINOSAURS: BEING TRUE TO THE
EXHIBITION
TITLE
Phelan R. Fretz, Ph. D., Vice President for Public
Programs, The Academy of Natural Sciences, 1900
Benjamin Franklin Parkway, Philadelphia, PA 19103
CRETACEOUS PARK: NEW JERSEY'S AMBER DEPOSITS
William B. Gallagher1, David C. Parris 1, Edward
Gilmore 2 and Ralph Johnson3
1 New Jersey State Museum, P.O. Box 530, Trenton,
NJ
08625-0530
2 Academy of Natural Sciences, 1900 Ben Franklin
Parkway, Philadelphia, PA 19103
3 Monmouth County Park System, Freehold, NJ 07728
THE MANUS IN PROSAUROPOD DINOSAURS AND OTHER
SAURISCHIA
Peter M. Galton, College of Naturopathic Medicine
and
College of Chiropractic, University of Bridgeport,
Bridgeport, CT 06601-2449
THE ROLE OF PALEONTOLOGISTS IN TEACHER EDUCATION
TODAY
Alan Goldstein, Interpretive Naturalist, Falls of
the
Ohio State Park, P. O. Box 1327, Jeffersonville,
IN
47131-1327
THE SKELETON OF MALAWISAURUS, AN EARLY CRETACEOUS
TITANOSAURID (SAUROPODA) FROM AFRICA
Elizabeth M. Gomani, Southern Methodist
University,
Dallas, TX 75275
SIZE AND SORTING IN EAST COAST DINOSAUR-BEARING
MARINE
DEPOSITS
Barbara Smith Grandstaff, New Jersey State
Museum, CN
530, Trenton, NJ 08625
STRONTIUM-ISOTOPE STRATIGRAPHY OF THE JURASSIC AND
EARLY CRETACEOUS
Darren R. Grocke1, Stephen P. Hesselbo1, Hugh
Jenkyns1,
Neil Parkinson2, Brian Challinor3
1Department of Earth Sciences, University of
Oxford,
Parks Road, Oxford OX1 3PR, United Kingdom
239 Sydney Road, Richmond, Surrey, TW9 1UB, United
Kingdom
3Department of Earth Sciences, University of
Waikato,
Private Bag 3105, Hamilton, New Zealand
MARINE AND NON-MARINE CHEMOSTRATIGRAPHY OF
JURASSIC AND
EARLY CRETACEOUS SEDIMENTARY SEQUENCES
Darren R. Grocke, Hugh C. Jenkyns, Stephen P.
Hesselbo,
Department of Earth Sciences, University of
Oxford,
Parks Road, Oxford OX1 3PR, United Kingdom
AN AUTODIASTYLIC CHONDRICHTHYAN FROM THE
MISSISSIPPIAN
BEAR GULCH LIMESTONE OF MONTANA (USA), THE
RELATIONSHIPS OF THE HOLOCEPHALI, AND COMMENTS ON
SUSPENSORIAL EVOLUTION
Eileen D. Grogan1 and Richard Lund2
1St. Joseph's University, City Avenue,
Philadelphia, PA
19131
2Adelphi University, Garden City, NY 11530
MESOZOIC BREATHING: COMPARING THE PROGRESS OF
NORTH AND
SOUTH AMERICAN THEROPODS
Richard Hengst, Biological Sciences Department,
Purdue
University, North Central Campus, Westville, IN,
46391
MEXICO: A RICH DINOSAUR COUNTRY
Rene Hernandez-Rivera, Dpto. De Paleontologia,
Instituto de Geologia, U.N.A.M., Circuito Ext. de
C.U.
Mexico D.F. 04510
COPE AND MARSH: THE PHILADELPHIA ORIGINS OF THE
GREAT
FOSSIL FEUD
Thom Holmes, 721 Crestbrook Avenue, Cherry Hill,
NJ,
08003
EVIDENCE FOR THE PREDATORY NATURE OF
TYRANNOSAURUS REX
AND OTHER TYRANT DINOSAURS
Thomas R. Holtz, Jr., Department of Geology,
University
of Maryland, College Park, MD 20742
COLD-BLOODED, WARM-BLOODED OR BOTH? LETS HAVE
ANOTHER
LOOK AT DINOSAUR BONE HISTOLOGY
J. R. Horner, Museum of the Rockies, Montana State
University, Bozeman, MT 59717
LUNG STRUCTURE IN THEROPOD DINOSAURS AND EARLY
BIRDS:
IMPLICATIONS FOR PHYSIOLOGY AND PHYLOGENY
Terry D. Jones, John A. Ruben, Nicholas R. Geist,
Dept.
of Zoology, Oregon State University, Corvallis,
OR,
97331
A NEW THEORY ON MID CAUDAL FUSION IN SAUROPODS
Tom Kay, 404 Hillcrest Prospect Heights, IL 60090
GREAT EVENTS IN THE HISTORY OF NORTH AMERICAN
CRETACEOUS DINOSAUR FAUNAS
James I. Kirkland, Dinamation International
Society,
550 Jurassic Court, Fruita, CO 81521
AN EYEWITNESS ACCOUNT OF DISCOVERING DINOSAURS IN
THE
OLD WEST: THE FIELD JOURNALS OF ARTHUR LAKES
Michael F. Kohl, University Libraries, Special
Collections, Bo. 343001, Clemson, SC 29634-3001
ASTRODON REDISCOVERED: AMERICA'S FIRST SAUROPOD
Peter M. Kranz, Dinosaur Fund, 818 G Street SE,
Washington, DC 20003
INJURIES AND DEATH IN THE FAMILY SCAPHITIDAE OF
THE
LATE CRETACEOUS
Neal L. Larson, Black Hills Institute of
Geological
Research, Inc., P.O. Box 643, Hill City, SD 57745
THE REPRODUCTIVE SYSTEM OF NON-AVIAN THEROPODS
Peter L. Larson, Black Hills Institute of
Geological
Research, Inc., P.O. Box 643, Hill City, SD 57745
CRANIAL MORPHOLOGY, MECHANICS, KINESIS, AND
VARIATION
IN TYRANNOSAURUS REX
Peter L. Larson, Black Hills Institute of
Geological
Research, Inc., P.O. Box 643, Hill City, SD 57745
POPULATION AGE STRUCTURE AND PREFERED HABITAT IN
THE
HORNED DINOSAUR CHASMOSAURUS
Thomas M. Lehman, Department of Geosciences,
Texas Tech
University, Lubbock, TX 79409-1053
NOTEWORTHY SKIN STRUCTURES IN A LATE CRETACEOUS
DINOSAUR
Tyler R. Lyson1 and William R. Garstka2
1 PO Box 5, Marmarth, ND 58643
2 Department of Biological Sciences, University of
Alabama in Huntsville, Huntsville, AL 35899.
INFORMATION ON THE SOFT TISSUES OF DINOSAURS
Larry D. Martin, Museum of Natural History and
Department of Systematics and Ecology, University
of
Kansas Lawrence, KS 66045
THEROPOD DINOSAUR NESTING BEHAVIOR
Larry D. Martin and John Simmons, Museum of
Natural
History and Department of Systematics and Ecology,
University of Kansas, Lawrence, KS 66045
OWEN'S DINOSAURS: RIGHT FOR THE WRONG REASONS
Donald G. Mikulic, Illinois State Geological
Survey,
615 E. Peabody Dr., Champaign, IL 61820
A THREE DIMENSIONAL RECONSTRUCTION OF
COMPSOGNATHUS
LONGIPES
Bruce J. Mohn, 2311 3rd Avenue, Toms River, NJ
08753-6017
OBSERVATIONS ON THE POSSIBLE LIFESTYLES OF
COMPSOGNATHIDS
Bruce J. Mohn, 2311 3rd Avenue, Toms River, NJ
08753-6017
ENDOTHERMY IN DINOSAURS: WHEN DOES IT PAY AND
WHEN DOES
IT COOK?
Michael P. O'Connor1 and Peter Dodson2
THE CLIMATE & SETTING OF EARLY CRETACEOUS POLAR
SOUTHEASTERN AUSTRALIA
Thomas H. Rich1, Andrew Constantine2 & Patricia
Vickers-Rich2,3
DEFECTIVE DINOSAUR BONES: THE HOLE TRUTH
Bruce M. Rothschild, Arthritis Center of Northeast
Ohio, Youngstown, OH, 44512, Carnegie Museum of
Natural
History, Pittsburgh, PA, 15213, and Kansas Museum
of
Natural History, Lawrence, KS, 60645
DINOSAURIAN ENVIRONMENTS OF THE SAHARAN CRETACEOUS
Dale A. Russell, North Carolina State Museum of
Natural
Sciences, and Department of Marine, Earth and
Atmospheric Sciences, North Carolina State
University,
Raleigh, NC 27675-8208; Christopher R.
CLAWS, BEAKS, SCALES AND FEATHERS: THE
EVOLUTIONARY
IMPLICATIONS OF KERATIN PRESERVATION IN THE FOSSIL
RECORD.
Mary Higby Schweitzer, Dept. of Biology and
Museum of
the Rockies, Montana State University, Bozeman, MT
59717
PALEOECOLOGY OF DEINOSUCHUS RUGOSUS, A LATE
CRETACEOUS
GIANT CROCODILE
David R. Schwimmer, Department of Chemistry &
Geology,
Columbus State University, Columbus, GA 31907-5645
EXTRAORDINARY PRESERVATION OF DINOSAURS AND OTHER
FOSSILS, LIAONING PROVINCE, NORTHEASTERN CHINA
Joshua B. Smith1, Hailu You1 and Peter Dodson1,2
NEW DATA ON OVIRAPTOROSAURIAN THEROPODS FROM THE
CRETACEOUS OF WESTERN NORTH AMERICA
Hans-Dieter Sues, Department of Palaeobiology,
Royal
Ontario Museum, 100 Queen's Park, Toronto, ON M5S
2C6,
Canada, and Department of Zoology, University of
Toronto, Toronto, ON M5S 3G5, Canada
DINOSAURS AS AGENTS OF VEGETATION CHANGE IN
CRETACEOUS
COMMUNITIES -- INSIGHTS BASED ON ECOSYSTEM
RESPONSE TO
ABIOTIC DISTURBANCE
Ralph E. Taggart and Aureal T. Cross, Department
of
Geological Sciences, Michigan State University,
East
Lansing, MI 48854
MASS MORTALITY OF A HERD OF HADROSAURS: LANCE
CREEK
FORMATION, EAST-CENTRAL WYOMING
Lenore P. Tedesco1, Hal E. Halvorsen2 and Kent
Cooper2
1Department of Geology, IUPUI, 723 W. Michigan
St.,
Indianapolis, IN 46202 (ltedesco@iupui.edu)
2Earth Museum, 3730 Toledo Ave N., Robbinsdale, MN
55422 (halhalvor@aol.com)
COMPUTERIZED TOMOGRAPHY OF ASIAN ANKYLOSAUR
SKULLS:
DAMAGE AND REPAIR IN A TARCHIA SKULL
Tatyana Tumanova1, William B. Gallagher2, Peter
Dodson3, and Leon Axel4
ADAPTATIONS OF S.E. AUSTRALIAN DINOSAURS TO A
POLAR
ENVIRONMENT
Patricia Vickers-Rich1, Anusuya Chinsamy2, and
Thomas
H. Rich3
THE MEANING OF ARCHAEROPTERYX IN THE LIGHT OF NEW
DISCOVERIESOF THEROPODS AND EARLY BIRDS
Peter Wellnhofer, Bayerische Staatssammlung for
Palaontologie und historische Geologie,
Richard-Wagner-Str. 10, 80333 Munich, GERMANY
MORRIS THE SAURUS: A REAL RESEARCH PROJECT FOR
HIGH
SCHOOL STUDENTS
Jo Wixom, Director of Education, Museum of Western
Colorado, 248 S. Fourth Street, P.O. Box 20000,
Grand
Junction, CO 81502-5020
EGGS, EGGSHELLS, AND EMBRYOS FROM THE DEVIL'S
COULEE
NESTING SITE, SOUTHERN ALBERTA
Darla K. Zelenitsky, The University of Calgary,
Department of Geology and Geophysics, 2500
University
Drive N. W., Calgary, Alberta, Canada T2N 1N4
POSTER SESSIONS
DINOSAUR PARK, MARYLAND, U.S.A.
Peter M. Kranz, Dinosaur Fund, 818 G Street SE,
Washington, DC 20003
NEW INFORMATION ON THE OSTEOLOGY OF THE SKULL OF
TYRANNOSAURUS REX
Neal L. Larson, Robert A. Farrar, Larry Shaffer,
Black
Hills Institute of Geological Research, Inc.,
P.O. Box
643, Hill City, SD 57745
TOOTH REPLACEMENT IN THE LARGE THEROPOD,
ACROCANTHOSAURUS ATOKENSIS
Neal L. Larson, Black Hills Institute of
Geological
Research, Inc., P.O. Box 643, Hill City, SD 57745