Blog Carnival, Edition #4: Texas Troubles, Big Dinosaurs, and a Danny McBride Interview
Name that Fossil! Dinochick challenges readers to identify this specimen found in central Tennessee. Smart money suggests that it’s either a Cruziana or Larry King.
Lone Star Dispute: Bob’s Dinosaur Blog reports that the official state dinosaur of Texas is experiencing an identity crisis. “According to the University of Minnesota’s Peter Rose…the current Texas state dinosaur, Pleurocoelus, has been misidentified.” Rose says the bones are different enough to merit their own genus, Paluxysaurus, named after the Paluxy River near Glen Rose, Texas. (Hey, be thankful it wasn’t found near the Devil’s River in Sonora.) Wikipedia has the complete list of official state dinosaurs.
All Dinosaurs Great.… One of the Everything Dinosaur members of staff was asked the other day: “how big is Brachiosaurus and why when I look this dinosaur up in two books, different size estimates are given”? Found out the answer over there.
…and Small: As we’ve noted before, the mighty T. rex had arms that were so small that some early theorists even suggested they were vestigial organs. To get a sense of just how small the T. rex forearms were, check out this photo of David Hone at Archosaur Musings, posing with the humerus (upper arm bone) of a Tarbosaurus, the Asian cousin of Tyrannosaurus and very similar in size and shape: “As you can see, it is essentially the same size as my own upper arm, yet I am notably not an 8 meter and 6 ton theropod dinosaur.”
Trilobytes: Flying Trilobite has joined the Twitter community, and he’s pondering ideas for new paleo-appropriate labels. Trilotwitobite or Twitobite? (Just a suggestion— you might consider an anagram of “Flying Trilobite Twitter,” such as “Be Loftier Trying Lit Twit”)
Pulp Fiction: Atomic Surgery has uncovered a Golden Age comic book that reveals what really killed the dinosaurs: Not enough meteorites!
Playing Hard to Get: Sci-Fi Wire has posted an interview with Danny McBride, one of the stars of the upcoming Land of the Lost movie, which will reportedly feature high-quality, CGI dinosaurs. Money quote:
How does it feel to see yourself running from dinosaurs?
McBride: It’s pretty weird. You know, I’ve never seen that before. No, that was really my main reason for wanting to do it. I was like, “I want to see what I look like being chased by a T-rex.” And it looks pretty cool. Yeah, I like it.
Read the Fine Print: How can you be sure that large law firms are carefully reading legal documents? One lawyer has a solution: When drafting the Force Majeure clause (better known as “Acts of God”) that excuses parties from liability, he lists war, earthquakes, floods…and “the return of predatory dinosaurs.”






I like anagrams, that’s pretty clever. And I like trying lit twit in my everyday life.
Perhaps there’s a literary term for words like trilobite & twitter that seem to share sounds and pair up so nicely.
Comment by Glendon Mellow — January 30, 2009 @ 8:47 pm
what exactly is the criteria to get in this carnival?
there are a few of us in the palaeo blogging sphere who were wondering, and are currently feeling a little left out…
there are many many many more palaeo blogs than currently appear in your sidebar (which i have noticed are the source of all your picks).
may i suggest you guys popping by my blog and check out my fairly extensive palaeo blog list. i add every new palaeo blog i encounter, and currently have over 40 blogs that relate to dinosaurs or palaeontology (of which you only have 14).
i mention this as it feels like your otherwise wonderful blog is shunning the rest of us who don’t make “the cut” of your sidebar.
Comment by Traumador the Tyrannosaur — January 31, 2009 @ 5:44 am