#Azhdarchids, a brief thread concentrating on my involvement with this amazing group of #pterosaurs. Azhdarchids have to be regarded as the most distinctive and unusual of pterosaur groups, and views on how they might have lived have varied considerably... (images by @MarkWitton)
In 2008, @MarkWitton and I examined the skeletal proportions, cranial anatomy and sedimentological setting of #azhdarchids and concluded that they were strongly adapted for quadrupedal walking in terrestrial settings....
They were likely striding predators of small and mid-sized prey, analogous to ground hornbills. We termed this the ‘terrestrial stalking’ model. See our #OA@PLOSONE paper A Reappraisal of Azhdarchid Pterosaur Functional Morphology and Paleoecology journals.plos.org/plosone/articl… cont...
In 2013, I and colleagues described a new azhdarchid – the relatively small Eurazhdarcho langendorfensis Vremir et al., 2013 – represented by cervical vertebrae and part of the wing skeleton... #azhdarchids
The specimen is represented by adult remains and is not a juvenile of the much larger Romanian azhdarchid Hatzegopteryx. The presence of both of these #azhdarchids in the same geological unit (the Sebeş Formation of the Transylvanian Basin) is significant because... #pterosaurs
... it indicates that niche partitioning might have been present in sympatric #azhdarchids (egret/heron photo by @eawilloughby). We noted the presence of locations worldwide where sympatric azhdarchids occur, these taxa differing in size and hence in ecology and habits...
Eurazhdarcho is another taxon discovered by Mátyás Vremir (who died in 2020). This paper was #OA in @PLOSONE... A New Azhdarchid Pterosaur from the Late Cretaceous of the Transylvanian Basin, Romania: Implications for Azhdarchid Diversity and Distribution journals.plos.org/plosone/articl…
The ‘terrestrial stalker’ model was challenged in 2013 by A Averianov who argued that the depositional settings of azhdarchid fossils were inconsistent with our proposal, that big theropods made our proposal problematic, and that #azhdarchids were more likely ‘scoop-netters’...
@MarkWitton and I published a response. We re-examined the environmental context in which #azhdarchids have been discovered and showed that the evidence was consistent with their being animals of continental settings. We also...
... looked at the behaviour and ecology of those theropod contemporaneous with #azhdarchids to see if they would really present the problem which Averianov argued they would, and examined his ‘scoop-netting’ idea in order to test its viability....
This paper - Azhdarchid pterosaurs: water-trawling pelican mimics or “terrestrial stalkers”? - is also #OA in Acta Pal Pol and is available here: app.pan.pl/archive/publis…
The view that #azhdarchids were essentially all alike in proportions and hence similar in lifestyle was later shown by myself and @MarkWitton to be incorrect via our analysis of cervical vertebrae belonging to the giant Late Cretaceous Romanian azhdarchid #Hatzegopteryx...
We showed that the neck of this animal was broad and thick relative to that of other giant #azhdarchids and mechanically able to resist substantial loads. This view is consistent with the absence of large predators (like theropods) from the same region... (image by @MarkWitton)
.... and suggests that #Hatzegopteryx was a predator of animals that could have weighed tens of kilos. This study is consistent with previous proposals that some other, smaller #azhdarchids (like R.2395 - shown here - described in 2015) were relatively short-necked...
Yes, it's time another #TetZoocryptomegathread. In previous megathreads, I've covered several #LochNessMonster photos, including Hugh Gray's from 1933, Peter O'Connor's of 1960, and the Shiels 'muppet' of 1977. Time for another one!
Yes, you've heard of the #LochNessMonster, but maybe you don't know that a key piece of evidence long used to support its reality was a grainy bit of cine film, taken in 1960 by an aeronautical engineer from Reading in southern England…
This thread might be the longest and most complex so far, so hold tight. As ever, remember that I cover both sceptical and 'pro-monster' takes on the case concerned. The case I'm referring to concerns Tim Dinsdale's Foyers Bay footage of April 1960...
For something like four decades, Dr Alan Feduccia of the University of North Carolina has been arguing that everyone is wrong about #dinosaurs. His newest book is Romancing the Birds and Dinosaurs: Forays in Postmodern Paleontology. Here's a quick thread on its contents... 1/n
The book - RTBAD from hereon - is not an instruction manual for palaeozoophiles (art by @Book_Rat), nor does it include homage or reference to the 1984 movie Romancing the Stone. Rather, it’s composed of 23 essays on the state of dinosaur science as Feduccia sees it today... 2/n
@Book_Rat Early parts of RTBAD express Feduccia's disapproval of the power-hungry, juvenile popularists of our age. Some "have Twitter accounts with large followers [sic], dealing with everything from paleontological discoveries to sports and politics!" I'm among this awful lot ... 3/n
Welcome to a somewhat overdue (mega)thread devoted to the @AppleTV / @bbcstudios series #PrehistoricPlanet season 2 (#prehistoricplanet2 if you will), streaming NOW, and specifically to the first episode: ISLANDS...
Islands is one of my favourite episodes of #PrehistoricPlanet2. We knew early on that we’d cover stories relevant to the Late Cretaceous island faunas of Romania and Madagascar (since both places have revealed numerous amazing Late Cretaceous island-dwelling animals), but…
... what else could we show? The producer for this episode – Paul Stewart – worked really hard to find appropriate stories, and succeeded in focusing on amazing animals doing interesting things…
If you're interested in science you're familiar with Piltdown man, formally named Eoanthropus dawsoni in 1912 but shown to be hoaxed in 1953. What you may not be familiar with is the DUALIST CONTENTION, and here's a thread on it...
Yes, the one thing that every single person who’s heard of Piltdown man knows is that it was eventually determined to be a hoax. What’s discussed less frequently is that early 20th century views on Piltdown man were -far more complex- than popularly portrayed...
Acceptance of Eoanthropus as a valid proto-human (as per the Margaret Flinsch illustration here) might have been the 'mainstream' view that made it into textbooks and encyclopedias, but it certainly wasn’t the only one, nor was this acceptance wholesale or uncontroversial...
In 1967, the #DSRV#Alvin was attached by a #swordfish at a depth of c 600m. The swordfish charged the vessel at speed and got virtually the whole of its rostrum embedded in Alvin's hull. The fish survived ascent to the surface but was killed and eaten. Cont...
#Swordfish (and other billfishes) have often rammed large objects at speed - their broken rostra have been recovered from ship hulls, turtle shells and baleen whale heads. In 2016, one rammed a diver doing maintenance on a Brazilian oil platform and impaled his air tank...
A 2021 study by Patrick Jambura et al. described a case in which a dead Bigeye thresher shark was discovered with a partial #swordfish rostrum embedded in its gill region. You can read that study here... link.springer.com/article/10.100…