Palaeontological love

Palaeontological

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Examples

  • The Palaeontological Association (London), pp. 185-241.

    Biggest…. sauropod…. ever (part…. I) Darren Naish 2007

  • The Palaeontological Association (London), pp. 185-241.

    Archive 2007-01-01 Darren Naish 2007

  • The Palaeontological Association (London), pp. 242-309.

    Archive 2006-06-01 Darren Naish 2006

  • The Palaeontological Association Newsletter 61, 21-23.

    Archive 2006-06-01 Darren Naish 2006

  • The Palaeontological Association (London), pp. 185-241.

    Archive 2006-02-01 Darren Naish 2006

  • Copies of the book arrived from the Palaeontological Association (the publishers) on 11th July 2001 (the same day that I attended an [unsuccessful] job interview on the Isle of Wight), and at the time I thought that – excepting that brief mention in ‘Anon. undated’ – this was the first time the specimen had made it into print.

    ‘Angloposeidon’, the unreported story, part I Darren Naish 2006

  • Accordingly, when Paul Upchurch spoke about Wessex Formation sauropod diversity at the British dinosaurs Palaeontological Association Review Seminar in November 2003 (co-hosted by Dinosaur Isle Museum and the University of Portsmouth) he cautioned that diversity might have been over-estimated, and that titanosauriforms accounted for what diversity there was.

    Archive 2006-02-01 Darren Naish 2006

  • An article on British eagle owls has also recently appeared in The Palaeontological Association Newsletter (McGowan 2006) and several web sites, including those of the RSPB and World Owl Trust (WOT), have also provided new, updated information on this subject within recent months.

    Archive 2006-06-01 Darren Naish 2006

  • The Palaeontological Association (London), pp. 185-241.

    ‘Angloposeidon’, the unreported story, part I Darren Naish 2006

  • Copies of the book arrived from the Palaeontological Association (the publishers) on 11th July 2001 (the same day that I attended an [unsuccessful] job interview on the Isle of Wight), and at the time I thought that – excepting that brief mention in ‘Anon. undated’ – this was the first time the specimen had made it into print.

    Archive 2006-07-01 Darren Naish 2006

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