Ben Creisler
Some recent items:
Society of Vertebrate Paleontology 2019 meeting abstracts book is now posted as Âfree pdf online.Â
NOTE EMBARGO:
"SVP has an embargo in place on discussing presentations until the beginning of the talk or poster session. Please do not discuss presentations until this time if you do not have the authorsâ permission to do so. This embargo exists to protect the authors"
http://vertpaleo.org/Annual-Meeting/Annual-Meeting-Home/SVP-Program-book-v5_w-covers.aspx
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The Triassic Period: the rise of the dinosaurs
Paleontologists set out to find source of dinosaur tracks in Tibet
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A Âfollow-up to a story posted on the DML a few weeks back...Â
How German paleontologists dug up a Cretaceous dinosaur bonebed "graveyard" (mainly Edmontosaurus) on private land in Wyoming to extract multiple rectangular Âblocks of solid rock containing fossils to be shipped via container ship back to the Senckenberg Naturmuseum in Frankfurt where they'll be studied in detail for environmental clues and prepared in public view (with photos and video) (in German)
Earlier story (already posted on DML)Â from National Geographic:
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Dinosaur fossils from Argentina have global importance with the largest and the earliest known dinosaurs (in Spanish)
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Dissorophid temnospondyls from Asia and Russia
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Videos:
Dinosaurs, Asteroids, and Climate Change | Page Quinton
TEDxSUNYPotsdam
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Recommended Reading: 2019!
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Videos with Anusuya Chinsamy-Turan from University of Cape Town:
Dinosaur Palaeontologist Emil Krupandan on the early diversification of dinosaurs
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Geologist/paleaontologist Roger Smith on the Permian mass extinction event!
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Palaeobotanist John Anderson on Permian and Triassic plant and insect fossils
Dr Mike Day on the Guadalupian extinction event, 8 million years before the Permian mass extinction!
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Palaeontologist Rob Gess on a Preserved fossil ecosystem, just before the Devonian extinction event
Dr Tetsuto Miyashita explains the early radiation of vertebrates and the development of jaws
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In Korean (no English translation)
The reason why we are still on the age of dinosaurs | Yuong-Nam Lee