i always listen to the minecraft ost while doing my geology homework so now i just permanently associate minecraft music with rocks
Utah Layering
When I say "Birds are Dinosaurs" and you say "No you know what I mean, when we say dinosaurs we mean Something Else" I think like... you don't know what I mean.
There's sort of a constructed category of dinosaurs as these scaly, powerful, outdated animals, and birds as these delicate modern animals, and I want you to understand that these ideas are based on outdated science and human biases. That birds can and have grown huge and predatory, that dinosaurs were a hugely diverse group that had grazers and small arboreal animals and fast intelligent ones.
Birds are a category of dinosaur, the only one we have left around. Appreciate them, demythologize dinosaurs, and destroy the boxes you put nature into.
ftr I am forever going to be bitter that the post I wanted to be "let's talk about extinct ecosystems and how cool they are!" got derailed into yet another post just talking about a single taxon like the millions of other posts on palaeoblr
It's not even clear here🥲🥲ðŸ˜
Let's look at this with a handful of dinosaurs:
Microraptor
Anchiornis
Vegavis
Titanis
Secretarybird
"Nonavi(la)an Dinosaur": Includes Microraptor. Does not include the rest.
"Non-Neornithine Dinosaur": Includes Microraptor and Anchiornis.
"Mesozoic Dinosaur": Includes Microraptor, Anchiornis, and Vegavis
"Extinct Dinosaur": Includes Microraptor, Anchiornis, Vegavis, and Titanis
"Living Dinosaur": Includes Secretarybird
"Neornithine Dinosaur": Includes Vegavis, Titanis, and Secretarybird
"Cenozoic Dinosaur": Includes Titanis and Secretarybird
"Avia(la)n Dinosaur": Includes Anchiornis, Vegavis, Titanis, Secretarybird
"Dinosaur that looks like a bird": literally all five of them
Utrecht University geologist Suzanna van de Lagemaat has reconstructed a massive and previously unknown tectonic plate that was once one-quarter the size of the Pacific Ocean. Her colleagues in Utrecht had predicted its existence over 10 years ago based on fragments of old tectonic plates found deep in the Earth's mantle. Van de Lagemaat reconstructed lost plates through field research and detailed investigations of the mountain belts of Japan, Borneo, the Philippines, New Guinea, and New Zealand. To her surprise, she found that oceanic remnants on northern Borneo must have belonged to the long-suspected plate, which scientists have named Pontus. She has now reconstructed the entire plate in its full glory. The work has been published in Gondwana Research.
Continue Reading.
One of my current professors was at the conference where plate tectonics was officially accepted as a real thing and witnessed two geologists almost get into a fist fight about it
Absolutely insane that plate tectonics was only really figured out in the 1960s. How the fuck did we make nukes and get to space and discover dna before we figured out how the fucking ground works
beautiful dendritic quartz | source
geology student 🪨 appreciation for igneous and sed rocks
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