Tuesday, December 30, 2014

Yearly Science Roundup: 2014

It's that time again. Time to do the impossible and select my top five science stories of the year. After much deliberation, I've settled on the following:


5. A Swimming Dinosaur


Credit: Mike Bowler.

Spinosaurus splashed into headlines this year, when new research indicated that its skeleton had limbs suited for swimming. Most of this dinosaur was lost to science for almost a century, but then new fossils were found in Morocco that gave paleontology a more complete picture of this animal. This is the first time a non-avian dinosaur has been shown to have adaptations for a semi-aquatic lifestyle, and that earns it a place in my Top 5. For more information, check out my SVP blogpost from a few weeks ago.


4. Earth Is Not Alone

Enceladus. Credit: NASA.

The more we learn about space, the more we find we have in common with other worlds. In 2014, we learned Enceladus, a moon of Saturn, has oceans of water below its surface. We also learned that Europa--a moon around Jupiter that we've known to have liquid water under its surface--also has tectonic plate movements. It's the first body beyond Earth to demonstrate these! Meanwhile, Curiosity found the building blocks of life on Mars, and we finally found a rocky exoplanet that's in the Goldilocks zone of another star (where it's not too hot or too cold for liquid water) and is similar to the size of Earth. Wow!

Every single one of these things deserves its own post, but I only have 5 slots, so I was forced to clump them together. Regardless, if we learned all of this in 2014, I can't wait to see what we learn about space in 2015.


3. Ebola Outbreak

Ebola virus, color-enhanced. Credit: T.W. Geisbert.

There's no nice way to put this. Over 6,000 people died this year from Ebola, and over 17,000 were infected.

Past outbreaks had deaths numbering in the dozens, and more rarely, the hundreds. This outbreak was like nothing ever seen before, and most of it can be attributed to poor health care methods. There is no real cure for this virus other than helping a patient through their symptoms, which means assisting patients at their most contagious stages. Healthcare providers rapidly became patients themselves this year. There is an intense effort now to find treatments and vaccinations to prevent this type of outbreak from ever happening again, and to continue to find better ways for workers to aid patients without risking infection themselves. Hopefully, some of these problems will be solved by medical science in the near future so I'll never have to write another post like this again.


2. We Landed on a Comet, and Avoided Another!


Cheers upon hearing of Philae's landing. Credit: ESA.

In 2014, we landed scientific equipment on a comet, and saved other scientific equipment from getting beaned by one. I think that's pretty great, which is why it's so far up on my list.

On November 12th, Philae touched down on Comet 67P, making the ESA's Rosetta Mission a success. Thanks to this mission, we've learned that at least on this type of comet, the frozen water it carries is a different form than the kind found on Earth. This makes it unlikely that these comets were the depositors of the initial water on our planet, which is pretty big news. We also got to hear what a comet's magnetic field sounds like, which is just plain awesome.

Meanwhile, a few weeks earlier than Philae's touchdown, Mars was dodging the bullet of Comet Siding Spring. Five satellites had to be moved to avoid the debris this comet would bring as it sailed within 87,000 miles of the surface of Mars, including the new MAVEN and MOM missions. Mars survived, our equipment survived, and here on Earth, some people took some pretty great pictures.


1. Half of All Wildlife Dead


We're doing this.
And for one last, sobering entry, we have this news. According to the latest research and counts from the World Wildlife Fund, over 50% of all wildlife has died in the last 50 years. That's not an exaggeration. This is the reality we're living in. Please let that sink in. Half of all wild things have died in less than a single human lifetime.

It is up to us to make the changes necessary to slow this decline.
“High-income countries use five times the ecological resources of low-income countries, but low income countries are suffering the greatest ecosystem losses,” said Keya Chatterjee, WWF’s senior director of footprint. “In effect, wealthy nations are outsourcing resource depletion.”
This isn't an issue for future generations. This is happening now. By us. In 2015, make it a resolution to do something about this. I won't pretend to tell you what you should do, other than to please not forget that our world is in our hands, and we are letting it slip away. I know I post a lot about great space stuff, but I never lose sight of the most important planet: ours. It's why it's the back drop for my entire blog.

Please. In 2015, make it a personal goal to be a better tenant of Planet Earth. I'll leave my blog posts of 2014 on that note.

Monday, December 29, 2014

New Novel Update #2: First Draft COMPLETE

A couple of weeks ago, I finally finished the first draft of my work in progress, "DW". Cue party noises and bad dancing:

Yeah, that's right. I am AWESOME.

YEAH! FIRST DRAFT!

 YEAH! YEAH! --Okay, I'll stop.

 Ahem. Anyway.

I'd started drafting DW in 2012, then tried again in 2013, but didn't have a clear sense of where it was going until I did a pile of plotting work this past January. So the bulk of what ended up in the first completed draft happened in 2014, even though the idea has been in my head for far longer.

As it (always) turns out, I have a much better sense of my characters now that the story is on the page. So I've begun Draft 2, tearing things apart line by line. I'm fixing major plot holes and rewriting dialogue for basically everyone in the beginning. I'm combining scenes, switching segments around, hacking out extraneous blabbering, etc. All the typical things you do in the second go-around.

For once, I'm actually not overwhelmed at the revisions that need to be done re: the plot (seriously, my revisions usually involve MASSIVE plot overhauls). This time, in a bizarre twist, I'm feeling pressure because of what this story became thematically. It has a heart to it that I desperately don't want to screw up.

If you'd told me a year ago that my main concern about DW would be the theme and the character growth, I would've laughed in your face. The complex plot was all I could think about in 2014, and now that the bulk of that is sorted out, I have fallen in love with my characters and can only think about doing them justice in future drafts. Funny how that happens.

And now, for a pretty lame attempt at cleverness: DW is a complex beast, and Draft 1 is just the bare bones of this story. The skeleton, essentially. I hope Draft 2 will bring it to life.

(...Maybe someday, when this story is published, people will read the end of this old blog post and smile. Or maybe they'll just wonder how I managed to get published with lines like those.)

Sunday, December 14, 2014

I hated being a girl.

This might be my most personal blog post ever, but I want to talk about why I've made the choice to have girls as the protagonists of my novels.

Growing up, I loved adventure stories. I was obsessed with Star Wars, could recite Jurassic Park front to back, plowed through every fantasy book series I could get my hands on, and daydreamed about the day I'd get to go on my own epic quest. I listened to John Williams soundtracks on repeat, and when Harry Potter hit, I dived into that with wild abandon.

The stories that meant the most to me all had male leads. Girls had varying degrees of prominence, but were almost always there to supply a romantic interest for one of the main male characters. None of them were ever the focus of the adventure. They were never the "chosen one". Never the central character who everyone rallied around. They just weren't. 

As I was internalizing the female role of being a sidenote to the male, I was barreling through my teenage years, being told I needed to start wearing makeup and sexier clothes because getting a boy's attention was of top priority. My nerdy side was not attractive, and as I was reminded over and over, I needed to hide what I was really interested in if I ever wanted a date.

But I didn't want a date, I wanted an adventure! The combination of societal pressures and the fictional worlds I practically lived in told me that I was supposed to want romance. Duh, I was female, that's our entire focus, right? But this just confused the hell out of me. I couldn't bring myself to care about any of the things I was meant to care about, and no amount of faking it could hide the real me.

On top of not caring that much about boys, I hated shopping, I hated smelly fragrances, I hated dresses, and I hated gossip. And I decided girls who DID like these things were the problem. Because of them, I had the entire world telling me I was supposed to be someone I just wasn't.

I put girls in a box. All of them. "Girl" became a label that meant something flighty, stupid, and shallow. I was furious when someone would try to label me as one. It got to the point in college that I refused to call myself a girl. Flat out refused. Being a girl was the most insulting thing I could think of to be. It disgusted me. Girls were the root of all of my problems. I wished they didn't exist.

I literally wanted to erase my sex from the planet.

When I began to seriously consider what this meant for me, I realized that while I claimed to wish I'd been born a boy, I wasn't interested in actually being a boy. I didn't feel like I was male deep down. This isn't a story about a trans discovery. What I was deep down was female, it felt female, it just wasn't what I'd internalized "female" to mean. I was better than "female".

And when I hit upon that realization, I felt sicker than ever.

What's wrong with being female? What? Why did it have such a negative connotation to me? Why was so I nauseated by my own sex?

It's still a work in progress, but from that moment on, I've begun to reclaim that identity. I am female. I'm a girl. I'm a woman. And I'm a pretty awesome person. Those shouldn't be exclusive!

No, girls never got to be the action heroes (unless they knew five martial arts, slept with a million guys and broke all their hearts, and wore skin-tight black catsuits--none of which remotely described me). Girls were scarcely in adventure stories at all, except for the token few there to provide a romantic side story. But WHY NOT?

I grew up learning that unless it was a romance story, main characters were boys. What did that say about me--the main character of my OWN life? As someone who wasn't that interested in romance, I identified with the action heroes who were always male. And this fed into my twisted view of girls, and caused a lot of self-loathing through my teens and early twenties.

That's not okay.

ANYONE should be able to see themselves of the hero of the story, without having to change a basic aspect of their identity. When I started writing seriously, I focused on the fictional girls who drove this point home. Hermione. Polgara. Mara Jade. But even they were only there as side characters.

So I made the choice to make my main characters girls. Sometimes people tell me that my writing is more of a classic "boy adventure" mold, and I should consider that in my protagonist choice.

...Trust me. I have.

That's pretty much the entire point.

Nowadays, we are getting more True Adventures starring girls, which is great. But we've got a long, long way to go. We've barely made a dent in the male-dominated hero world. Until things are 50/50, it's not good enough.

If I can save any other young girl from the deep self-hatred I felt, I feel like I owe it to her. I wish I could go back in time and tell myself that being a girl is just as cool as being a boy, but I can't.

This is why my protagonists are girls. And this is why I'm not backing down from that.

Tuesday, December 9, 2014

The Casual Enthusiast's Guide to SVP 2014


Between November 5th and November 8th, I listened to over 120 talks about the latest research in paleontology. I was at the Society of Vertebrate Paleontology's 74th Annual Meeting in Berlin, Germany. Below is a highlights reel of what I learned at this year’s conference.

Evolution of Flight
 
A major theme of this year’s talks was figuring out how the modern suite of features seen in birds came into existence. We know birds branched from the theropod dinosaur lineage, thanks to feathered fossils such as Archaeopteryx, but the details are still being sorted out as to how each step of the transition occurred. The most famous specimen of Archaeopteryx is housed at Berlin’s Museum für Naturkunde, hence the focus of this year’s conference on this issue.

Previously held beliefs are being overturned. For example, a mouthful of teeth was not a hindrance to flying—plenty of dinosaurs in the fossil record had toothed jaws (rather than beaks) and had a skeleton fully capable of flight. Likewise, not having teeth (having a beak instead), does not seem to indicate any improvement in the skeleton for flight. So while changing from a toothed mouth to a beak would certainly lighten up a skull for flying, the initial teeth-to-beak change may have been diet-related, and certainly did not predate flight.

Modern birds have shortened tails, while early birds did not. For a long time, paleontologists assumed long tails meant an animal was not a great flyer. However, new studies have shown that long tails can help with flight stabilization, and that wide long tails are quite useful in lift. Long tails remained “in vogue” for millions of years during the evolution of flight, and were possibly related to the launching mechanism of early birds. 

The idea above has a lot of punch because the back legs of ancient birds were not necessarily well developed for launching birds into the air. In fact, in many cases, the hind limbs were actually used in flying—as wings. There is a case to be made that having four wings is actually ancestral to having two. That is, birds evolved from four-winged ancestors, and their back legs eventually lost their flight capabilities in favor of other uses, such as helping with bipedal gripping in trees, hunting/fighting, and eventually, launching birds from the ground up. 

Along this line of thought, a great deal of research suggests Archaeopteryx was transitional, not just between non-avian dinosaurs and birds, but between four-winged fliers and two-winged fliers. There are feathers on its hind limbs that resemble flight feathers, but would not be strong enough for serious use. On its forelimbs, the feathers are not stable enough for sustained flight by themselves, though they are better than what is found on the hind limbs. One speaker suggested a “parkour” model for how Archaeopteryx got around. It could launch itself and move short distances in the air, but it was not going to fly for long periods of time. It had perhaps secondarily lost its ability to fly. However, this loss of flying ability freed up its back legs, which eventually helped its descendants become better flyers.

A final note of controversy to all of this: a new study showed that Archaeopteryx was much slower growing than modern birds, and took over a full year to mature. All the specimens we have are from young individuals, and therefore there is a chance that, just like a fledgling bird today, perhaps the Archaeopteryx skeletons on record only appear to belong to poor flyer because they had yet to fully mature.


Colors in Dinosaurs


Possible fossil melanosomes. Credit: Holly Barden.
Finding evidence of color in feathers is one of the most exciting things to have happened in paleontology in recent years. However, fossil melanosomes (which are what tell us about color of feathers) can easily be confused with fossil bacteria (which would have moved in when the animal died, and have nothing to do with the color). The shapes are very similar, so appearance alone would not be enough to distinguish them. But what else is there to go on when all we have are the fossil impressions?

One talk at the conference proposed a solution to this problem: look at the matrix that the fossils are embedded in. Beta keratin, another structure found in feathers, can survive extreme degradation, and actually outlast melanosomes in the decaying process. Meanwhile, bacteria survive on biofilm, which is visually distinct from beta keratin. If we can detect beta keratin in the sediment matrix, we can be reasonably assured we are looking at melanosomes. If we just have a mess of biofilm, and no beta keratin, there is zero chance melanosomes have survived, and therefore the structures must be bacterial. 


Spinosaurus

Drawings of the destroyed bones. 1915.

This giant theropod dinosaur is famous for its sailed back and tragic history (also its questionable role in Jurassic Park III). The lower jaw and tall spines of its back were discovered in the early 20th century and sent to Munich to be stored in the Barvarian State Collection Museum. This museum was demolished in WWII by allied bombing, and Spinosaurus was lost to science.

In 2008, a century after its initial discovery, some fossil fragments were found—including the trademark spines. These fragments were shown to Dr. Ibrahim by a random man in a desert town in Morocco. Years later, an Italian fossil collector contacted Dr. Ibrahim with a whole slew of bones that were quickly shown to also be Spinosaurus. They were similar in their matrix sediments to the fragments Dr. Ibrahim had been shown before, and had been bought through some sketchy black market trades from an “unknown” collector. Dr. Ibrahim put two and two together. Clearly, the mystery man from Morocco knew where to find Spinosaurus, but no one knew where to find him. Dr. Ibrahim spent months going from tiny town to tiny town trying to track this man down, but the only clue he had was that this man had a mustache—which didn’t really narrow down the search in Morocco.

At lunch with colleagues, planning the details for his flight back home and regretting that he would have to give up the search, Dr. Ibrahim saw a familiar looking face walk by. It was the mystery man! Long story short, the man agreed to show them to the site where he’d been digging up bones, and Ibrahim’s team found the rest of what remained of Spinosaurus.
  
This discovery showed that not only is Spinosaurus the longest known predatory dinosaur (at 15 meters), it is also possibly semi-aquatic. Its limb proportions are similar to that found in modern-day semi-aquatic animals, and its wide flat feet indicate it could have used them for swimming. Also, its bones have condensed cross sections, much like penguins have. Its teeth and jaw were shaped for catching and eating fish, and it probably ate really big fish. This is the first evidence of a non-avian dinosaur having adaptations for the water!


Did Giant Kangaroos Hop or Walk?

In what might be the silliest sounding debate in paleontology, we have this question. Giant Pleistocene Kangaroos reached sizes over 500lbs, and the debate is as to whether or not they could have hopped at this extremely large size without breaking their legs. The stress on the bones is super high in these larger animals, but by looking at modern kangaroos, it turns out that the time of the stride matters more than the mass of the animal in terms of hopping abilities. So if this kangaroo moved fast enough, it could, conceivably, hop. It has the proper limb ratio to allow for hopping, after all. However, its robust hips, knees, and ankles suggest it could have walked around as other animals do, supporting its weight on one limb at a time. Did it walk all the time? Did it hop only at fast speeds? How would it build up to that? This is a fantastic, ongoing debate that I cannot wait to see discussed further.

Dinosaur Parenting

Oviraptors, once thought to be egg-stealing predators, are actually great parents. They have been found near eggs because they guard their eggs. This has been known for quite some time, but what isn’t known is what their brooding behavior was like, or if they were even true brooders.

In modern birds and crocodilians, eggshells are porous in nests that are covered, but have low porosity in nests that are open-air and brooded by parents. All oviraptor species tested have low-porosity eggs, which indicates their eggs were kept in open-air nests and that the dinosaurs likely brooded. The small-to-medium sized species had eggs that could withstand their parents’ body mass (at least when that mass is spread over the full clutch of eggs), but some oviraptor species were large enough to squash their eggs. So how could they possibly brood?

Bad drawings by me.
The answer lies in their nest design. A study comparing the inner diameter to the outer diameter of nests showed that small-to-medium sized oviraptors packed their eggs in close, while larger oviraptors had a large central open space in their nest, so the parent could hang out in the middle without squashing anyone. This shows that oviraptors had behavioral differences to ensure they could brood, indicating how important this practice was to them.

And for the first time, there is nearly indisputable evidence that some dinosaurs used the same nesting site from year to year. Troodontids—related to oviraptors—had clutches of eggs nearly on top of one another. Each clutch was successfully hatched, and the incredibly close proximity suggests that it was the same parent using the site again and again. Other dinosaurs have been shown to reuse nesting grounds, but until now it was never clear if it is the same individuals reusing the site, or others of that species reusing the site. This dedication to a single nest might also indicate that mated pairs stayed together for longer than one season, since this is the kind of behavior seen in many birds who “mate for life”.


Environmental Changes and Animal Response

The fossil record is incredibly useful for understanding the link between animals and their environment. This is of particular importance in today’s modern world, as humans continue to change habitats globally.

Amphibians are great indicator species for climate change. My favorite talk that demonstrated this was a study on fossil tiger salamanders. They were shown to be less neotonic during glacial periods, and more likely to exist in their metamorph forms during interglacial periods, when the environment was less predictable. This can now be used in looking out how tiger salamanders respond to changes in the world today.

A study also looked at the timing and circumstances of the extinction of the giant shark “Megalodon” (Carcharocles megalodon) to better understand what is happening to the large shark die-off happening today. Megalodon did not appear to be increasing in size leading to its extinction, so growing “too big for its britches” was not what did it in (as has been suggested before). The extinction seems to have taken place around 2.5 million years ago, and coincides with the extinction of much of its smaller bodied prey and migration of other kinds of ocean predators. This demonstrates an ancient food chain collapse, and predicts what will happen in our modern oceans today.

On the flip side, not all extinctions can be linked to rapid environmental change. European apes went extinct around 9 million years ago, and for a long time their extinction has been connected to a “cooling crisis” that rapidly shifted the environment from forests to grasslands. However, a new study found that grasslands did not increase in these areas during this time, and temperatures did not drop nearly as drastically as previous studies had shown. So this extinction remains a mystery.

In fact, in some cases, animal extinctions may trigger changes in the environment, rather than the other way around. This was the case when mastodons died off at the end of the Pleistocene. At this time, hardwood trees made a huge comeback and forests increased, since their biggest “predator” was extinct.

Finally, it may be time to rethink how and why animals diversify. The leading mentality behind diversification has always been that a new innovation will drive the origination of new species, such as the origin of feathered flight causing the explosion of bird species that we see today. However, looking closer, it becomes clear that while innovations help species survive extinction events, it is only after the extinction event that true diversification occurs. To state this even more simply: extinction drives speciation and innovation merely sets the stage.

Along these lines, the “Out of Tibet” hypothesis is gaining traction. Before the big Pleistocene Ice Age, the Tibetan Plateau was a “training ground” for cold-adapted features on animals. Due to its high elevation, living on the Tibetan Plateau is like living in the arctic, and once the Ice Age hit and the environment changed, animals already cold-adapted had a field day (while others around the world died off). For example, it’s well known that the Woolly Rhino definitely migrated out of Tibet during the Ice Age. Now there is new evidence that the ancestors of artic foxes, bighorn sheep, and even bison may have done so as well. Meanwhile, there is also new fossil evidence of snow leopards and blue sheep on the Tibetan Plateau. Their descendants still exist there today, and this traces their predator/prey relationship back millions of years—an extremely rare connection to be able to make.


Other Exciting Finds
  • A new protocetid (ancient whale) from Egypt that may show some of the transition between foot powered swimming to tail powered swimming.
  • A new theropod dinosaur, Tachiraptor, is Venezuela’s second-ever discovered dinosaur.
  • Fossil adult tiger salamanders were found in a mammoth tusk—they were possibly using it as a shelter!
  • A pregnant mare of an ancient horse species (Eurohippus messelenses) was found in the Messel Pit in Germany, with soft tissue impressions left on the fossil, including the broad ligament, uterus, and placenta.
  • A new dinosaur was found in Antarctica! It looks related to the Iguanodon clade, but is still being described and has no name yet. Only four named species of dinosaur have ever been found in Antarctica.
  • A new early ceratopsian (relative of Triceratops) from China will shed light on that whole group’s evolution.
  • A new ichthyosaur from the Jurassic of Germany suggests that shorter, broader flippers may have been the evolutionary direction this lineage was heading in.
  • And finally, there is something super cool that I have been sworn to secrecy on—sorry! Hopefully I'll get to blog about this one later.

Other New Studies

  • A look at the inner ear of snakes has scored points for the hypothesis that they came from terrestrial ancestors who likely tunneled in the earth, rather than from ancestors evolving to fit an aquatic habitat. Both have been leading hypotheses in why snakes lost their legs.
  • Looking at the inner ear of sauropod dinosaurs (long-necked dinosaurs) shows an evolutionary trend towards sweeping neck movements rather than raising their necks up and down. This has implications on their feeding behaviors.
  • Pinning down the origin of sea turtles has always been difficult, but a new study suggests they came from a single lineage in the Late Jurassic, and later developed into giant-sized species multiple times, independently (through convergent evolution).
  • Around 35 million years ago, many species managed to cross the Tethys Sea to colonize Africa from Asia. The most common of these were anthropoid primates and hystricognathian rodents. In fact, some of these species then also went on to colonize South America from Africa. This shows that these cross-sea colonizations were non-random, and that certain species managed them repeatedly. What these species have in common are small body sizes, climbing skills, and group life, which supports the rafting hypothesis of colonization. (Animals clung to clumps of vegetation that moved across the sea after being swept out in a major storm.)
  • Growth patterns on Titanoboa bones show that it grew faster than other snakes, and for a longer time than other snakes. A double whammy to explain its huge size.
  • Ankylosaurs had a bony hyobranchium (part of the neck region), rather than a cartilaginous one. This makes for stronger muscle attachments for the tongue, and indicates some sort of specialized food processing technique not seen in other animals. The question remains: what?
  • Tiktaalik had reduced skull movements in feeding, intermediate between the stiff skulls of tetrapods and the bendy/mobile skulls of fish. Which makes beautiful sense, given its placement as a transitionary animal!
  • The switch to breathing with lungs rather than gills may have less to do with transitioning to non-marine habitats, and more to do with surviving in marine habitats that occasionally experienced hypoxic conditions. 
  • Plesiosaur taxonomy (relationships) may need to be re-thought, because no one has taken into account that plesiosaurs gave live birth and therefore had dimorphic pelvic bones. What some people are calling different species might just be different sexes of the same species!

There were also tons of talks on methodology, new fossil localities, mammalian evolution (my personal favorite), and much more. I have copious notes beyond what is presented here, so feel free to contact me if you have further questions. To anyone whose research I presented: I tried to only present talks that did not request social-media-silence. If you see something here you would like corrected or removed, please contact me! If I did not present your research and you would like me to in the future, also feel free to contact me. The summary above is not meant to slight anyone's work, and is only meant to translate a few tidbits for non-academic audiences. Also, keep in mind that certain topics and talks I am saving for future posts where I can delve into them in more detail.




CITATIONS

Barnosky, A., Lindsey, E., Villavicencio, N., Marshall, C. FOSSIL EVIDENCE FOR LASTING ECOLOGICAL TRANSFORMATION AS A RESULT OF DEFAUNATION. Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology, Program and Abstracts, 2014, Page 85.

Barrett, P., Milner, A., Hooker, J. A NEW ORNITHOPOD DINOSAUR FROM THE LATEST CRETACEOUS OF THE ANTARCTIC PENINSULA. Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology, Program and Abstracts, 2014, Page 85.

Beard, K., Coster, P., Marivaux, L., Salem, M., Chaimanee, Y., Jaeger, J. NONRANDOM BUT UNPARSIMONIOUS PATTERNS OF MAMMALIAN DISPERSAL BETWEEN ASIA AND AFRICA DURING THE LATER PALEOGENE. Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology, Program and Abstracts, 2014, Page 87.

Brocklehurst, N. INNOVATION, EXTINCTION AND RATES OF CLADOGENESIS IN EARLY AMNIOTES. Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology, Program and Abstracts, 2014, Page 98.

Casanovas, V., Kimura, Y., Flynn, L., Alba, D., Pilbeam, D., Moya-Sola, S. THE END OF THE MIOCENE HOMINOID RADIATION IN EURASIA: NEW INSIGHTS PROVIDED BY STABLE ISOTOPE ANALYSIS OF TOOTH ENAMEL IN MUROID RODENTS. Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology, Program and Abstracts, 2014, Page 105.

Clement, A., Ahlberg, P. BUCCAL-PUMP AIR GULPING IN DEVONIAN LUNGFISHES (SARCOPTERYGII; DIPNOI): INSIGHTS FROM TOMOGRAPHIC DATA. Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology, Program and Abstracts, 2014, Page 110.

Cook, J., Attard, M., Krall, P., Wroe, S. COULD THE GIANT KANGAROO HOP? Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology, Program and Abstracts, 2014, Page 112.

Dyke, G., Cau, A., Naish, D., Brougham, T., Godefroit, P. ARCHAEOPTERYX AND PARAVIAN PHYLOGENY: THE ENIGMA OF BALAUR. Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology, Program and Abstracts, 2014, Page 123.

Erickson, G., Rauhut, O., Roeper, M., Lochner, E., Norell, M. LONG BONE HISTOLOGY, GROWTH, AND THE 'BLOOD' OF ARCHAEOPTERYX. Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology, Program and Abstracts, 2014, Page 126.

Franzen, J., Aurich, C., Habersetzer, J. A PREGNANT MARE WITH FETUS OF EUROHIPPUS MESSELENSIS (MAMMALIA, PERISSODACTLYA, EQUIDAE) FROM THE EARLY MIDDLE EOCENE OF MESSEL PIT (GERMANY). Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology, Program and Abstracts, 2014, Page 132.

Gingerich, P., Antar, M., and Zalmout, I. SKELETON OF A NEW PROTOCETID (CETACEA, ARCHAEOCETI) FROM THE LOWER GEHANNAM FORMATION OF WADI AL HITAN IN EGYPT: SURVIVAL OF A PROTOCETID INTO THE PRIABONIAN LATE EOCENE. Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology, Program and Abstracts, 2014, Page 138.

Habib, M. RECONSTRUCTING LOCOMOTOR PERFORMANCE IN ARCHAEOPTERYX. Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology, Program and Abstracts, 2014, Page 143.

Hill, R., D’Emic, M., Bever, G., Norell, M. THE MOST COMPLETE, OSSIFIED HYOBRANCHIAL APPARATUS OF A FOSSIL DINOSAUR: IMPLICATIONS FOR ONTOGENY AND FUNCTIONAL ANATOMY Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology, Program and Abstracts, 2014, Page 147.

Ibrahim, N., Maganuco, S., Sereno, P., Dal Sasso, C., Keillor, T., Martill, D., Zouhri, S., Fabbri, M., Auditore, M. ASSOCIATED REMAINS OF SPINOSAURUS AEGYPTIACUS, AN ENORMOUS PREDATORY DINOSAUR WITH SUBAQUATIC ADAPTATIONS. Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology, Program and Abstracts, 2014, Page 151.

Janis, C., Kuchenbecker, K., Figueirido, B. LOCOMOTION IN EXTINCT GIANT KANGAROOS: WERE STHENURINES HOP-LESS MONSTERS? Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology, Program and Abstracts, 2014, Page 153.

Lemberg, J., Ross, C., Shubin, N., Daeschler, E. FUNCTIONAL IMPLICATIONS OF PLATYROSTRAL SKULLS FOR FEEDING IN WATER WITH INSIGHTS INTO THE CRANIAL MORPHOLOGY OF TIKTAALIK ROSEAE. Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology, Program and Abstracts, 2014, Page 168.

Longrich, N. PRIMITIVE FEATHER ARRANGEMENT IN ARCHAEOPTERYX LITHOGRAPHICA SHEDS LIGHT ON THE ORIGIN AND EVOLUTION OF BIRDS. Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology, Program and Abstracts, 2014, Page 170.

Maxwell, E., Fernandez, M., Larsson, H., Schoch, R. A NEW ICHTHYOSAUR FROM THE MIDDLE JURASSIC OF GERMANY PROVIDES INSIGHTS INTO THE ASSOCIATION BETWEEN LIMB FORM AND FUNCTION. Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology, Program and Abstracts, 2014, Page 183.

Moyer, A., Zheng, W., Schweitzer, M. USING DEGRADATION EXPERIMENTS OF EXTANT FEATHERS TO ADDRESS THE PRESENCE OF MICROBODIES IN FOSSIL FEATHERS. Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology, Program and Abstracts, 2014, Page 192.

O’Conner, J. and Zhou, Z. EARLIEST STAGES IN THE EVOLUTION OF THE MODERN AVIAN SKELETON: ARCHAEOPTERYX AND THE JEHOL AVIFAUNA COMPARED. Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology, Program and Abstracts, 2014, Page 197.

Pimiento, C. EXTINCTION AND BODY SIZE PATTERNS OF THE GIANT SHARK CARCHAROCLES MEGALODON. Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology, Program and Abstracts, 2014, Page 205.

Rabi, M. ORIGIN AND EARLY EVOLUTION OF SEA TURTLES. Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology, Program and Abstracts, 2014, Page 210.

Rauhut, O. and Foth, C. NEW INFORMATION ON THE THEROPOD DINOSAURS FROM THE LATE JURASSIC LITHOGRAPHIC LIMESTONES OF SOUTHERN GERMANY. Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology, Program and Abstracts, 2014, Page 212.

Schmitt, A. ACCELERATING OUR UNDERSTANDING OF THE INNER EAR OF SAUROPODOMORPHA: FIRST GLOBAL, STATISTICAL ANALYSIS OF SEMICIRCULAR CANALS OF DIPLODOCID AND MACRONARIAN DINOSAURS AND ITS IMPLICATION FOR NECK-POSTURE. Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology, Program and Abstracts, 2014, Page 223.

Schumacher, B. PHYLOGENY AND POSITED DIMORPHISM OF POLYCOTYLID PLESIOSAURS, NEW INFORMATION FROM A NEARLY COMPLETE SKELETON OF POLYCOTYLUS LATIPINNIS FROM THE NIOBRARA FORMATION (EARLY CAMPANIAN) OF SOUTH DAKOTA, UNITED STATES. Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology, Program and Abstracts, 2014, Page 225.

Sellers, W. and Manning, P. THE APPLICATIONS OF EVOLUTIONARY ROBOTICS TO RECONSTRUCTING LOCOMOTION IN EXTINCT ANIMALS. Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology, Program and Abstracts, 2014, Page 227.

Tanaka, K., Zelenitsky, D., Lü, J., Yi, L, Pu, H., Chang, H., Xu, L., Li, H. NEST TYPE AND INCUBATION BEHAVIOR IN OVIRAPTOROSAURS IN RELATION TO BODY SIZE. Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology, Program and Abstracts, 2014, Page 238.

Varricchio, D., Jackson, F., Jin, X. LAY-BROOD-REPEAT: NESTING SITE FIDELITY IN ECOLOGIC TIME FOR TWO CRETACEOUS TROODONTID DINOSAURS. Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology, Program and Abstracts, 2014, Page 246.

Wang, X., Li, Q., Tseng, Z., Takeuchi, G., Deng, T. THE PLIOCENE TIBETAN PLATEAU AS A TRAINING GROUND FOR COLD ENVIRONMENT ADAPTATION AND ORIGIN OF HOLARCTIC MEGAFAUNA. Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology, Program and Abstracts, 2014, Page 251.

Werning, S., Head, J., Bloch, J. BONE HISTOLOGY AND GROWTH IN THE LARGEST KNOWN SNAKE, TITANOBOA CERREJONENSIS. Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology, Program and Abstracts, 2014, Page 254.

Yi, H. RESOLVING THE LOCOMOTORY ECOLOGY OF THE ANCESTRAL SNAKE: LISTENING TO WHAT THE EAR TELLS US. Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology, Program and Abstracts, 2014, Page 259.

Zhang, Z. and Hadly, E. LIFE HISTORY DYNAMICS OF THE TIGER SALAMANDER, AMBYSTOMA TIGRINUM, IN RESPONSE TO LATE PLEISTOCENE CLIMATE. Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology, Program and Abstracts, 2014, Page 260.

Zheng, W., Jin, X., Xu, X. A NEW BASAL NEOCERATOPSIAN (ORNITHISCHIA, CERATOPSIA) FROM THE LATE CRETACEOUS OF CENTRAL CHINA. Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology, Program and Abstracts, 2014, Page 260.