Over recent years, myself and colleagues at the University of Southampton have published a series of studies on the spinosaurid theropods of the English Wealden Supergroup (Barker et al. 2021, 2022, 2023a). And we’ve succeeded in improving our knowledge of Wealden spinosaurid diversity. But wait — there’s more!
My Own Personal Dinosauroid
The Remarkable Basilisks
Way back in 2009 (the ScienceBlogs years) I published a Tetrapod Zoology article titled ‘Tell me something new about basilisks, puh-lease’ wherein I lamented the fact that people only ever say the same one thing about basilisks. Aware that there’s all too little squamate content here at Tetrapod Zoology ver 4, I here present a much augmented and updated version of that article…
News from the World of Ancient Sea Reptiles
Regular readers will be aware that my latest book – Ancient Sea Reptiles (Natural History Museum Publishing in the UK, Smithsonian Books in the US) – is now out and on sale…
The Discovery of the Okapi, Part 2
The Discovery of the Okapi, Part 1
Larks Part 2: of Subspecies and Brickbats for Carl
Piltdown Man and the Dualist Contention
Ancient Sea Reptiles Is Out Now
A History of Larks: Twists and Turns and Overlooked Convergence
A brain for Baryonyx: using CT-scanning to examine British spinosaurid brains
The 17th Year of Tetrapod Zoology: 2022 in Review
Pouches, pockets and sacs in the heads, necks and chests of baleen whales
Tet Zoo Reviews Zoos: Tripoli Zoo in Libya
The Tet Zoo Guide to the Creatures of Avatar, Updated for 2022
Robert Plot’s Lost Dinosaur Bone
The Ninth and Largest of the Tetrapod Zoology Conventions
Announcing Mesozoic Art, a Lavish New Volume on Modern Palaeoart
The giant, fantastically illustrated new volume Mesozoic Art: Dinosaurs and Other Ancient Animals in Art, edited and written by Steve White and myself and published by Bloomsbury Wildlife, is now on sale…
The Amazing Caecilians
I have elected to republish my articles on caecilians. (1) Because TetZoo always needs more amphibian coverage. (2) Because caecilians are awesome. The text you’re about to read - assuming you choose to continue - first appeared in 2008 (original here); I haven’t much updated it. Here we go…