Talks this Week
For any New Mexico readers, there are a couple of lectures coming up this week that would be of interest to the paleontology-minded:
The NM Friends of Paleontology are meeting Monday, Nov. 17 at 7:00pm at the New Mexico Museum of Natural History and Science. This month’s meeting includes a talk by Larry Rinehart on some of the recent work he’s done on the allometry, growth, dimorphism and population structure of Coelophysis bauri from Ghost Ranch. The NMFOP meetings are free and open to the public.
On Thursday the 20th, geologist David Love and paleontologist Gary Morgan will be giving a talk on a 10 million year old oreodont recently unearthed at the Bosque del Apache Wildlife Refuge. The talk will begin at 3:30pm in the Macey Center auditorium at New Mexico Tech in Socorro (admission $5). More info about this find is online here.
—Matt Celeskey.
File under: Dinosaurs, Mammals, Neogene, Recent Discoveries, Triassic.
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Critters with great big claws on their fingers
You could almost say, “Critters whose great big claws are their fingers”:
—Matt Celeskey.
File under: Cretaceous, Dinosaurs, Mammals, Neogene.
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Schematic drawing of hypothesized trends in hair evolution from a synapsid-scaled integument
I couldn’t improve upon the existing caption to this intriguing image, which accompanies this intriguing article.
Albardi, L. 2004. Comparative aspects of the inner root sheath in adult and developing hairs of mammals in relation to the evolution of hairs. Journal of Anatomy 205: 3, pp. 179-200.
—Matt Celeskey.
File under: Mammals, Rogaine, Synapsids.
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On the Lore and Effectiveness of Ruminant Hairballs in the Neutralization of Toxins