Skip to content

When you choose to publish with PLOS, your research makes an impact. Make your work accessible to all, without restrictions, and accelerate scientific discovery with options like preprints and published peer review that make your work more Open.

PLOS BLOGS The Official PLOS Blog

Fossil Friday Roundup: August 9, 2019

Featured Image: Ngwevu intloko: a new early sauropodomorph dinosaur from the Lower Jurassic Elliot Formation of South Africa. From Chapelle et al. (2019).

Papers (All Open Access):

  • Synchronizing volcanic, sedimentary, and ice core records of Earth’s last magnetic polarity reversal (Science Advances)
  • Pliocene warmth consistent with greenhouse gas forcing (Geophysical Research Letters)
  • Early animal evolution: a morphologist’s view (RSOS)
  • Three-dimensionally preserved soft tissues and calcareous hexactins in a Silurian sponge: implications for early sponge evolution (RSOS)
  • Lower Jurassic corals from Morocco with skeletal structures convergent with those of Paleozoic rugosan corals (PalaeoE)
  • The appendicular morphology of Sinoburius lunaris and the evolution of the artiopodan clade Xandarellida (Euarthropoda, early Cambrian) from South China (BMC Evolutionary Biology)
  • Beetle borings in wood with host response in early Permian conifers from Germany (PalZ)
  • Late Ordovician trilobites from the Taimyr Peninsula, Arctic Russia (Journal of Systematic Paleontology)
  • Histological evaluation of five suture materials in the telson ligament of the American horseshoe crab (Limulus polyphemus) (PeerJ)
  • New species of Kromtitis Müller, 1984 (Decapoda: Brachyura: Dynomenidae) from the Eocene of Iberian Peninsula (PalaeoE)
  • A network of bivalve chronologies from semi-enclosed seas (PLOS ONE)
  • Anatomy and evolution of the first Coleoidea in the Carboniferous (Comm Biology)
  • Past aquatic environments in the Levant inferred from stable isotope compositions of carbonate and phosphate in fish teeth (PLOS ONE)
  • Dissorophid diversity at the early Permian cave system near Richards Spur, Oklahoma, USA (PalaeoE)
  • Permian metabolic bone disease revealed by microCT: Paget’s disease-like pathology in vertebrae of an early amniote (PeerJ)
  • Cranial ontogeny of Thamnophis radix (Serpentes: Colubroidea) with a re-evaluation of current paradigms of snake skull evolution (RSOS)
  • Palaeoepidemiology in extinct vertebrate populations: factors influencing skeletal health in Jurassic marine reptiles (RSOS)
  • Cretaceous Antarctic plesiosaurs: stratigraphy, systematics and paleobiogeography (Link)
  • Thyreophoran vertebrae from the Callovian (Middle Jurassic) of the Vaches Noires cliffs (Normandy, France), with remarks on the dinosaur assemblage from the Vaches Noires (Link)
  • Psittacosaurus amitabha, a new species of ceratopsian dinosaur from the Ondai Sayr locality, central Mongolia. (American Museum novitates)
  • Ngwevu intloko: a new early sauropodomorph dinosaur from the Lower Jurassic Elliot Formation of South Africa and comments on cranial ontogeny in Massospondylus carinatus (PeerJ)
  • Evidence for a giant parrot from the Early Miocene of New Zealand (Biology Letters)
  • Complementary approaches to tooth wear analysis in Tritylodontidae (Synapsida, Mammaliamorpha) reveal a generalist diet (PLOS ONE)
  • First record of a basal mammaliamorph from the early Late Triassic Ischigualasto Formation of Argentina (PLOS ONE)
  • A Nearly Complete Juvenile Skull of the Marsupial Sparassocynus derivatus from the Pliocene of Argentina, the Affinities of “Sparassocynids”, and the Diversification of Opossums (Marsupialia; Didelphimorphia; Didelphidae) (Journal of Mammalian Evolution)
  • Five new species of Arvicolinae and Myospalacinae from the Late Pliocene-Early Pleistocene of Nihewan Basin (Link)
  • A new kogiid sperm whale from northern Italy supports psychrospheric conditions in the early Pliocene Mediterranean Sea (APP)
  • Cave bear occupation in Schwabenreith Cave, Austria, during the early last glacial: constraints from 230Th/U‐dated speleothems (Link)
  • Causes and Consequences of Pleistocene Megafaunal Extinctions as Revealed from Rancho La Brea Mammals (Current Biology)
  • Ancient RNA from Late Pleistocene permafrost and historical canids shows tissue-specific transcriptome survival (PLOS ONE)
  • Mammal Biochronology (Land Mammal Ages) Around the World From Late Miocene to Middle Pleistocene and Major Events in Horse Evolutionary History (Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution)
  • Science–graphic art partnerships to increase research impact (Comm Biology)
  • Scientific Twitter: The flow of paleontological communication across a topic network (PLOS ONE)

PrePrints and PostPrints:

  • A ‘Giant Microfossil’ from the Gunflint Chert and its Implications for Eukaryote Origins (PaleorXiv)

Community Events, Society Updates, and Resources: 

 Meetings:

  • Cretaceous & Beyond: Paleo of Western Interior (Dickinson Museum), Dickinson, North Dakota, September 14–17 (Link)
  • Annual Meeting of the Paleontological Society (Paläontologische Gesellschaft), September 15–18, 2019, Munich (Link)

Society Announcements:

  • Geoscience Congressional Visits Day (Geo-CVD): Sept. 10-11, 2019 (Paleo Society)
  • The Paleontological Society is now accepting applications for two student members to participate in Geo-CVD 2019! (Paleo Society)
  • IGC Travel Grant and Mentoring Program 2020 (Paleo Society)

News and Views:

Animals and Anatomy, Fossils and Fossilization:

Featured Folks, Fieldwork, Museums, and Meetings:

  • The Great Female Scientists Of The Victorian Era (Letters From Gondwana)
  • Zoology Museum: Take 3 (What’s in John’s Freezer)
  • Paleontological Society/AGI Summer Intern Report, Part 2: Sophie Hanson (Paleo Society)
  • Field Museum’s Emily Graslie gets a national TV series: ‘Prehistoric Road Trip’ on PBS, produced in Chicago (Link)

Methods and Musings:

  • Why Does the U.S. Army Own So Many Fossils? (Atlas Obscura)
  • Applying to Grad School I: Paying for Your Graduate Degree (Time Scavengers)
  • The Future Geologist And The Anthropocene (Extinct)
  • Why we shouldn’t take peer review as the ‘gold standard’ (GTV)
  • True Grit: the PhD experience as a way of moving forward (PLOS ECR)
  • There are more and more options for non-exploitative publishers (SVPOW)
  • Vive la révolution! New ‘Science for Progress’ podcast (GTV)
  • This Mesozoic Month: July 2019 (LITC)
  • The Human Cost of Amber (Link)
  • Stardust Memories: Reading Evolution and Extinction in the Stars (Macroevolutionaries)
  • The First Year of Tetrapod Zoology Ver 4 (TetZoo)

Arts, Books, Culture, Fun:

  • Flesh To Stone To Flesh: The Tattoos Of Glendon Mellow (LITC)

Do you have some news, a blog, or something just plain cool you want to share with the PLOS Paleo Community? Email it to us at paleocommunity@plos.org, tweet it to us at @PLOSPaleo, or message us on Facebook.

Back to top