Ben Creisler
Some recent items:
Abstract onlyÂfor now
[Note that some journals have now adopted policies against publishing research based on Burmese amber because of human rights and other issues surrounding the mining and sale of the amber.]
Lida Xing, Jingmai K. O'Connor, Kecheng Niu, Pierre Cockx, Huijuan Mai and Ryan McKellar (2020)
A new enantiornithine (Aves) preserved in mid-Cretaceous Burmese amber contributes to growing diversity of Cretaceous plumage patterns.
Frontiers in Earth Science (abstract only)
doi: 10.3389/feart.2020.00264
https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/feart.2020.00264/abstract
Recent discoveries of enantiornithine birds trapped in amber have increased the lower size limit of members of this clade, increased their morphological diversity, and provided significant new data regarding their plumage. Here we describe a new specimen that consists of the distal extremities of both forelimbs and hindlimbs. Size and morphology suggest the specimen represents an immature individual. Although the skeletal morphology is poorly preserved, the new specimen most probably represents a member of the Enantiornithes based on the sum of its preserved morphologies, including its small size, elongate penultimate pedal phalanges, and large recurved unguals. Based on the lengths of the metatarsals, the new specimen is even smaller than previously described enantiornithines that preserve these elements; however, the forelimb elements are longer than those in the only other specimen preserving comparable overlapping skeletal material. This is suggestive of a diversity of limb proportions in the Burmese enantiornithine fauna, similar to that observed in the Jehol avifauna, in which intermembral indices range from approximately 1 to 1.5. The wing appears to consist of eight primaries, less than that of neornithines, contributing to mounting data that suggests the flight apparatus of enantiornithines was unique from that of other basal birds and neornithines. The well-preserved flight feathers are ornamented with pale basal bands, further adding to the diversity of Cretaceous plumage patterns revealed by Burmese amber specimens.
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Here's exactly how T. rex grew from a slender tot into a massive carnivore, with Thomas Carr
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The Lost Landmass Under Our Feet: Uncovering the Dinosaurs of Appalachia
Chase Brownstein
Yale Peabody Museum of Natural History (video)
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Predatory dinosaur Spinosaurus: Not just a pretty face
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Irritator skull and neuroanatomy
(in German)ÂÂ
https://www.uni-greifswald.de/universitaet/information/aktuelles/detail/n/futtervorlieben-des-dinosauriers-irritator-challengeri-durchleuchtet-67065/
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Raptors May Have Hunted In Packs In Hollywood, Just Not In Real Life, interview with Joseph Frederickson
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Borealopelta last meal, CBC radio interview (audio) with Caleb Brown
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Biggest dinosaur, Maraapunisaurus (in Finnish)
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Heaviest titanosaur... (paywalled)
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The Unnecessary Death of Steneosaurus (Mickey Mortimer)
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Magallanodon, gondwanatherian from Chile
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De La Beche Society at Imperial College to be renamed because De La Beche was aÂslaveowner
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Field Museum layoffs in Chicago
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Cleveland Museum of Natural History layoffs
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Ranger Rick's Dinosaur Book
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More videos:
RTMP Behind the Scenes with Donald Henderson: Evolution of Flight
Royal Tyrrell Museum of Palaeontology
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RTMP Behind the Scenes with Femke Holwerda: Mosasaurus
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Non-dino:
The terrible fossil record of sea otters, part 2: un-fantastic otter fossils and where to find them
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Ice Age Mammals of Alberta [Paleo Talks EP 10] Dr. Chris Jass
ETSU Natural History Museum & Gray Fossil Site (video)