tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4675540394850433221.post3486294107144551719..comments2024-03-24T00:30:26.338-07:00Comments on Waxing Paleontological: Monkey Lizards of the TriassicZachary Millerhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05035947146927565746noreply@blogger.comBlogger12125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4675540394850433221.post-51449752933598576302022-03-14T02:56:01.325-07:002022-03-14T02:56:01.325-07:00Dating for everyone is here: ❤❤❤ Link 1 ❤❤❤
Dire...Dating for everyone is here: ❤❤❤ <b><a href="http://fez.zerr.icu/cc.php?q=nkq6M7" rel="nofollow">Link 1</a></b> ❤❤❤ <br><br /><br />Direct sexchat: ❤❤❤ <b><a href="http://fez.zerr.icu/cc.php?q=nkq6M7" rel="nofollow">Link 2</a></b> ❤❤❤ <br><br /> CP . Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4675540394850433221.post-48758709193199814242022-03-14T02:55:40.987-07:002022-03-14T02:55:40.987-07:00Dating for everyone is here: ❤❤❤ Link 1 ❤❤❤
Dire...Dating for everyone is here: ❤❤❤ <b><a href="http://fez.zerr.icu/cc.php?q=nkq6M7" rel="nofollow">Link 1</a></b> ❤❤❤ <br><br /><br />Direct sexchat: ❤❤❤ <b><a href="http://fez.zerr.icu/cc.php?q=nkq6M7" rel="nofollow">Link 2</a></b> ❤❤❤ <br><br />gL... Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4675540394850433221.post-52367693330844976792018-07-09T05:56:50.734-07:002018-07-09T05:56:50.734-07:00We don't have Triassic mantids, however, we ha...We don't have Triassic mantids, however, we have titanopterans which are WAY cooler.Sage Balsyshttps://www.blogger.com/profile/07886871086088419144noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4675540394850433221.post-28570596353216343062016-01-02T01:26:33.847-08:002016-01-02T01:26:33.847-08:00Please keep in mind that Drepanosaurus head is so ...Please keep in mind that Drepanosaurus head is so far unknown, thus maybe its diet may well have been different, Possibly the new US drepanosaurs of North America will shed new light on this aspect, and other ones as well.<br />Looking forward to see them published.<br /><br /><br />Silvio RenestoSilvioRhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/17878540663855717939noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4675540394850433221.post-31122934057072919442015-12-30T12:16:24.730-08:002015-12-30T12:16:24.730-08:00Thanks for the kind words, Nathan! And yes, I hope...Thanks for the kind words, Nathan! And yes, I hope to be both more productive in 2016 and attract more readers. As for the Secret Project, I'll probably have more to share in the coming months. I don't want to show my hand too soon, is all. :-)Zachary Millerhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/05035947146927565746noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4675540394850433221.post-46032792845961668282015-12-29T20:12:13.902-08:002015-12-29T20:12:13.902-08:00Hi Zach - I just wanted to leave another complimen...Hi Zach - I just wanted to leave another compliment on the blog, from another humanities grad with a life-long interest in paleo.<br /><br />You're doing something really interesting with your writing: not JUST the smart syntheses about obscure, fascinating groups, making the scientific literature accessible through great framing narratives and authorial voice - which reminds me of the stars at Tet Zoo or SV-POW - but also how you bring your personal story into it a bit as well. You might be right not to make it TOO much about yourself, but the hints about your medical saga, life in Alaska, etc., are something I haven't seen much of yet around the paleo blogosphere. If you took it to a logical extreme, it might look something like New Journalism, but for paleo outreach. Long story short: I'm a fan.<br /><br />It's great to see you attracting so many heavy hitters in your comments, and hopefully even more people will discover you in 2016. Also - since you teased it in your very first post, and keep dropping mentions like it's the secret, overarching story of the whole blog - is this the year you reveal the Secret Project??Nathanhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/03014686878991518798noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4675540394850433221.post-8178911916967732642015-12-27T22:58:01.288-08:002015-12-27T22:58:01.288-08:00And then there is the new Saint and Sinners depran...And then there is the new Saint and Sinners depranosaur that Chure et al talked about at the SVP.Unknownhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/05478968436185821864noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4675540394850433221.post-42803567871367528562015-12-27T10:26:56.496-08:002015-12-27T10:26:56.496-08:00Nice to see another devotee of the bizarre drepano...Nice to see another devotee of the bizarre drepanosaurs. FYI. there are several additional and significant records for drepanosaurs in North America. You may have missed them as they are only in the form of published abstracts over the last 4 years or so for the SVP annual meetings. A couple involve multiple 3D preserved skeletons from the eolian Nugget Sandstone in NE Utah (Chure and colleagues), one on a partial skull (Pritchard and colleagues, and one on hundreds of isolated drepanosaur bones from the Late Triassic in Texas (Chatteerjee and colleagues I believe). There is also a reputed primitive form from Siberia (partial skeleton) but the jury is still out as to whether or not that creature actually belongs to this group. Land of the Deadhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/08332147478540009694noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4675540394850433221.post-36195260108557703532015-12-26T20:54:13.756-08:002015-12-26T20:54:13.756-08:00I’d like to know what kinds of insects were bark-b...<i>I’d like to know what kinds of insects were bark-burrowers in the Triassic</i><br /><br />It looks like no modern wood-boring insect families were around in the Triassic (siricoid wood-wasps, for instance, turn up in the Jurassic). There is preserved evidence of borings in wood from that time, but these were likely to have been made in dead, decaying wood and may have been made by non-insects such as oribatid mites. There are a number of insect groups in the Triassic that were likely to have laid their eggs in gymnosperm cones, such as miomopterans (which may have been basal holometabolous insects) and obrieniids (which were kind of Triassic pseudo-weevils), and I suppose drepanosaurids may have been breaking open cones to get at larvae within.<br /><br />Mantids, offhand, don't turn up until the early Cretaceous.Christopher Taylorhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/11075565866351612441noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4675540394850433221.post-43841133999894026352015-12-26T13:49:20.672-08:002015-12-26T13:49:20.672-08:00I've already found some edits I need to make, ...I've already found some edits I need to make, so I will add that cervical info--thanks! Zachary Millerhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/05035947146927565746noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4675540394850433221.post-21212816039257325222015-12-26T03:45:27.552-08:002015-12-26T03:45:27.552-08:00Cool, thanks!!Cool, thanks!!Duane Nashhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/14467779935085970909noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4675540394850433221.post-70850651292597461902015-12-26T02:32:40.725-08:002015-12-26T02:32:40.725-08:00Great post.
Pisanosaurus was recently shown to ...Great post. <br /><br />Pisanosaurus was recently shown to be a silesaurid (Agnolin, 2015).<br /><br />I think you dropped the ball by saying Megalancosaurus' cervicals are "otherwise normal" besides their elongation. They are heterocoelous like derived birds (front end is saddle-shaped) and have huge hypapophyses projecting backwards (ventral midline processes). No doubt this was for their head-lunging habit.<br /><br />I agree re: the sexual dimorphism thing, btw.Mickey Mortimerhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/08831823442911513851noreply@blogger.com