Amelia R. Zietlow 🦎 Profile picture
Aug 29, 2022 β€’ 6 tweets β€’ 5 min read β€’ Read on X
Happy #MosasaurMonday!
Last week, #Thalassotitan was making news for exemplifying what mosasaurs did best: killing anything & everything that lived alongside them! 🦎πŸ”ͺ
A 🧡 of fossil evidence for murder by mosasaur jaws...
🎨 @MarkWitton
#paleontology #scicomm #fossils Image
First, let's talk about the new kid on the taxonomic block: Thalassotitan! It belongs to a group of mosasaurs called Prognathodontini, all bruisers with insanely powerful jaws & massive, serrated conical teeth - NOT adaptations for making friends!
🎨@AndreyAtuchin Image
Next, there is *abundant* evidence of facial biting among mosasaurs. Several Thalassotitan fossils possess bite marks, but perhaps the best example in any mosasaur is this 0.8m long Tylosaurus skull @FHSU_Paleo that is covered in deep gouges, while also having a broken neck. ImageImageImageImage
In fact, there is not a single group of animals that lived in the sea alongside them that has not had fossils of it found as mosasaur gut contents. This Tylosaurus was found with a plesiosaur inside, *and,* at another museum...
πŸ“· @NMNH Image
...a different Tylosaurus was found with the remains of MULTIPLE other vertebrates as gut contents, including fish, a plesiosaur, a bird, & another mosasaur! Like Thalassotitan, Tylosaurus has large, sometimes serrated teeth that helped it rip apart large prey.
πŸ“·@SDSMT_GeoMuseum ImageImage
At the end of the day, there is no such thing as a 'gentle giant' mosasaur - there are even whispers of an unpublished specimen with not one, but MULTIPLE other mosasaur skulls preserved inside of it, including the first confirmed instance of cannibalism.
🎨D. Varner Image

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More from @TyrantLzrdQueen

Jan 29
Happy #MosasaurMonday!
For an animal as common in museums as mosasaurs (> 4,000 specimens in N.A. alone), you may be surprised to hear that there are still 2 *fundamental* unanswered questions about them: what are they, & how many times did they become marine?
a #scicomm 🧡... Image
We know that mosasaurs are lizards, & everyone agrees that within lizards, they're non-iguanian toxicoferans. Beyond that, however, there are 2 leading hypotheses: mosasaurs are either most closely related (1) snakes OR (2) monitor lizards. The root cause of this ambiguity...
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...is that lizard relationships have historically been hard to pin down. This is in part because of their extreme range of anatomical diversity. E.g., while snakes are the most popular example, lizards have lost their legs AT LEAST 26 *SEPARATE* TIMES, if not more! This means... Image
Read 19 tweets
Nov 21, 2022
Happy #MosasaurMonday!
While I'm 'celebrating' by making final tweaks to the ND critter manuscript, it occurred to me that there's something very important we don't actually talk much about in paleo social media circles: how *do* you describe a new species, anyway?
Time for a 🧡! A disarticulated skull of a...
Perhaps unsurprisingly, properly identifying & diagnosing extinct species is incredibly tricky! For starters, because they are, necessarily, dead & gone, we cannot use many of the same species concepts we use for living animals (e.g., whether individuals interbreed)
🎨F. Matthews Grayscale artwork by F. Mat...
For most fossil taxa, we aren't lucky enough to have the DNA nor soft tissue, & so we are left with 🦴the b o n e s🦴.
Not only that, but we are only left with the bones that *fossilize* AND *are collected*! Most fossils in collections aren't perfect skulls - most look like this The holotype of Tylosaurus ...
Read 12 tweets
Aug 28, 2022
Undergrads & new grad students - NOW is the time to start thinking about applying for the @nsf GRFP!
A thread of advice I've accumulated on how to write a successful application...🧡
#AcademicChatter #phdchat #NSFfunded #STEM #scicomm #sciencetwitter #NSFGRFP
1/20
I applied to the NSF GRFP twice, & was successful the 2nd time; I chalk up that success to my advisors at RGGS, Carthage, & Marquette, & so most of the advice below comes from them.
2/20
First, what is the GRFP? Put simply, it's a competitive fellowship funded by the @NSF that replaces or supplements your graduate stipend & provides some funding to your institution. It is open to US citizens who are, or will be, grad students (MS & PhD) in #STEM fields.
3/20
Read 20 tweets

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