Some recent items:
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"The Laramida Project: New Dinosaurs from the American West":
Joe Sertich, Curator of Dinosaurs at the Denver Museum of Nature and Science
Tate Geological Museum's Spring Lecture Series 1012: Cretaceous Dinosaurs (video)
website:
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Saint George Dinosaur Discovery Site - Full Museum Intro Video
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Not yet mentioned:
Deep Time Treks
Utah Friends of Paleontology
Some highlights:
The Dystrophaeus Project â It All Started in 1859
The History of the First Dinosaur Found in Utah
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Utahraptor
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Gastonia burgei, a Large Armored Dinosaur from Southeast Utah
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Utah Hiker Discovers a Giant Apatosaurus Femur â Citizen Science Benefits All
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Tyrannosaurus "Jane"
Philip J. Currie Dinosaur Museum
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FILIPPO BERTOZZO
PHD CANDIDATE â QUEENâS UNIVERSITY OF BELFAST, SCHOOL OF NATURAL AND BUILT ENVIRONMENT (IN NORTHERN IRELAND, UK) WITH THE PHILIP J. CURRIE DINOSAUR MUSEUM
âPATHOLOGIES OUT OF TIME â FOSSILISED LESIONS AND DISEASES IN HADROSAURS AND THEIR SIGNIFICANCEâ
SATURDAY, APRIL 24, 2021 12:00PM â STREAMING LIVE THROUGH THE PHILIP J. CURRIE DINOSAUR MUSEUM YOUTUBE CHANNEL
Filippo Bertozzo, MSc, is an Italian paleontologist. His fascination with the world of dinosaurs began early in the 1990s, thanks to watching the famous Italian documentary âPlanet of Dinosaursâ (Piero Angela, 1993). He received a BSc in Natural Sciences at the University of Bologna after studying the skeleton of the ornithopod Ouranosaurus nigeriensis, exhibited at the Museum of Natural Science in Venice. Then, during his Masterâs in Paleobiology at the Universitaet Bonn (Germany), he defended his thesis about paleohistological analysis of pneumatic bones in saurischian dinosaurs. Afterward, Filippo spent a research year at the Vrije Universiteit Brussel (Belgium), where he won a Marie SkÅodowska-Curie Ph.D. Fellowship at Queenâs University Belfast (Northern Ireland) to study the paleopathologies in ornithopod dinosaurs. His research activities focus on paleobiological reconstructions of plant-eating dinosaurs, especially derived ornithopods (iguanodontians and hadrosaurids). Filippo has done fieldwork in Portugal, Spain, UK, United States, Canada, and Far Eastern Russia. Â
Extracting reliable ecological and behavioural data from fossilized lesions and diseases is one of the major challenges in dinosaur paleopathology. To understand the aetiology and the development of such ailments, and therefore improve our pathological interpretations, first, we need to build a comparative database as comprehensive as possible. Hadrosauridae ranks among the most promising clades for such an endeavor, as this family of ornithischian dinosaurs shows one of the highest frequencies of preserved injuries in their bones. These dinosaurs represent thus an ideal starting point for such an investigation. What kind of pathologies can we find? How much do the frequencies of these pathologies vary between hadrosaurids and other ornithopods? What are their possible ecological implications?
Please join us as we bravely venture into the difficult times of the Mesozoic era to reconstruct the troubled lives of giants past!
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National Geographic: Tyrannosaurus rex, facts and photos
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Naturalis Biodiversity Center in the Netherlands sends a 3D printed Tyrannosaurus to Japan
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Way too long Seismosaurus (now Diplodocus hallorum) (in Czech)
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Yorkshire's 'largest ever dinosaur print' discovered on coast of England
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'Dinosaur dance floor' found in E. Chinaâs Fujian
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Niche separation in the fossil record
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More videos:
In Japanese:
[Chapter 7] Huge claws! Therizinosauria / "Hokkaido Dinosaurs" Dynaso Kobayashi's Gallery Talk
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[Chapter 8] I was also in Hokkaido! Tyrannosauroids / "Hokkaido Dinosaurs" Dynaso Kobayashi's Gallery Talk
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