[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index][Subject Index][Author Index]
New issue of Palaeontologia Electronica
There is a new issue of Palaeontologia Electronica published today:
Palaeontologia Electronica Vol. 13, No. 2, 29 July 2010
http://palaeo-electronica.org/index.html
it has some *Plateosaurus*, lots of invertebrates, a paleofodder
paper, and news on a placodont.
CONTENT:
Commentary
The State of Paleontology in New Zealand 13.2.4A
James S. Crampton and Roger A. Cooper
Research Articles
Discrimination of Fenestrate Bryozoan Genera in Morphospace 13.2.7A
Steven J. Hageman and Frank K. McKinney
The Digital Plateosaurus I: Body Mass, Mass Distribution, and Posture
Assessed by Using CAD and CAE on a Digitally Mounted Complete Skeleton
13.2.8A
Heinrich Mallison
Microconchid-Dominated Hardground Association from the Late Pridoli
(Silurian) of Saaremaa, Estonia 13.2.9A
Olev Vinn and Mark A. Wilson
Moncharmontzeiana: New Name for Pytine Moncharmont Zei and Sgarella,
1978 Non Fortey, 1975 13.2.10A
R. Timothy Patterson
Benthic Foraminifera from the Diatomaceouis Mud Belt Off Nambia:
Characteristic Species for Sever Anoxia 13.2.11A
Carola Leiter and Alexander V. Altenbach
A Guide to Late Albian-Cenomanian (Cretaceous) Foraminifera from the
Queen Charlotte Islands, British Columbia, Canada 13.2.12A
R. Timothy Patterson , James W. Haggart, and Andrew P. Dalby
Seasonal Environmental and Chemical Impact on Thecamoebian Community
Composition in an Oil Sands Reclamation Wetland in Northern Alberta)
13.2.13A
Lisa A. Neville, Francine M.G. McCarthy, and Michael D. MacKinnon
Ecology of Paleocene-Eocene Vegetation at Kakahu, South Canterbury,
New Zealand 13.2.14A
Mike Pole
New Interpretation of the Postcranial Skeleton and Overall Body Shape
of the Placodont Cyamodus Hildegardis Peyer, 1931 (Reptilia,
Sauropterygia) 13.2.15A
Torsten M. Scheyer
BOOK REVIEWS
Smithsonian's Prehistoric Pals Series 13.2.3R
Dawn Bentley, Ben Nussbaum, and G.B. McIntosh
Reviewed by Elisabeth Marcot, Jonathan Marcot, and Karen Sears
_____________________________________________________
Why publish in PE?
1. You can publish full colour figures, videos and three-D animations
with no charge
2. PE is truly open-access, with no charge to authors or to readers,
and it is fully electronic. PE is read all over the world; even by
colleagues and students who lack adequate libraries or funding
3. PE is listed in ISI and is rapidly growing in readership and impact factor
4. PE meets the requirements for publication of new zoological and
botanical taxa
5. PE is supported by the Palaeontological Association, the
Paleontological Society, and the Society of Vertebrate Paleontology
I'll post the abstract of the sole dinosaur paper separately, so you
all can pile on your comments on my latest blunders.
FULL DISCLAIMER:
I am the author of one of the papers
I am a style editor with the journal
____________________________
:) Heinrich