Geobulletin alpha
News from the Geoblogosphere
New from Snet: Lithologs, a new tool to create lithological/sedimentological logs online..
Sunday, 04 December 2022
Just to wash our mouths out after all the theropod-related unpleasantness yesterday: What we’re seeing here, in glorious 3D, is the 7th cervical vertebrae of BYU 1252-18531. This is an apatosaurine at the Brigham Young University Museum of Paleontology which the museum has catalogued as “Apatosaurus excelsus” (i.e. Brontosaurus excelsus), and which Tschopp et al.
Editor’s Note: Look to the skies as HMNS Astronomer James Wooten explains the sky happenings for the month of December, including the science behind our winter solstice. Jupiter is still in the evening sky; look for it in the south at nightfall. Jupiter is brighter than any star we ever see at night. Saturn remains […]
The post Winter Solstice | December 2022 Sky Happenings first appeared on
As usual mimic is closed for the weekend. The morning maps show the 40 below air glacier snagged on Hudson Bay. You can see it on the wind map.The heat pouring out of the bay disturbs the laminar wind [...]
The late Hettangian ammonite fauna from Taseko Lakes is diverse and relatively well‐preserved. Over three field seasons from 2001-2003, thirty-five taxa from the Mineralense and Rursicostatum zones were [...]
It was well-known that Ammie was constantly subsidized by the increasing stock price. This is Ponzi Froth. Whether it is a Ponzi Scheme is totally defined on the extent of the 'retrenchment', from 20% to [...]
I've realized over the past few years that part of my blogging slowdown can be blamed on having a job that leaves not much time for research, but also, I slowed down when I began posting on twitter - twitter [...]
Ads: