In our 165th episode, we got to chat with Dr. Andrew Farke and Gabriel-Philip Santos, from the Raymond M. Alf Museum of Paleontology.

Andy is a paleontologist and Augustyn family curator and the director of research and collections, and he is on the science faulty for the Webb Schools (the Alf Museum is on The Webb Schools campus, and is the only nationally accredited museum in the U.S. on a high school campus). He’s also a PLOS Paleo Community Editor. His research focuses on Cretaceous ecosystems in North America, especially ceratopsians.

Andy also blogs about beer, at andybrews.com! And you can find him on Twitter @AndyFarke.

Gabe is the Collections Manager at the museum, where he catalogs, organizes, and cares for the museum’s growing collection of fossils. and he works on a number of insanely cool projects, including Cosplay for Science, on Instagram @cosplayforscience and Twitter @Cosplay4Science, and Paleontology Education. Gabe’s research focuses on marine mammals.

You can also find Gabe on Instagram @paleoparadox and on Twitter @PaleoParadoX.

And last, you can learn more about the Alf Museum on Instagram @alfpaleo, on Twitter @alfmuseum, and on Facebook @AlfMuseum.

The Alf Museum also hosts discovery days, and the next one is February 10 for Women in Paleontology!

Episode 165 is also about Gojirasaurus, a carnivore whose name means “Godzilla lizard.”

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In this episode, we discuss:

News:

The dinosaur of the day: Gojirasaurus

Coelophysoid that lived in the Triassic in what is now New Mexico Name means “Godzilla Lizard” Named after Gojira (the Japanese name for Godzilla) Gojira is a combination of the Japanese words for gorilla (gorira) and whale (kujira) There is a Godzillasaurus, in the Heisei era of Godzilla films (a political period of Japan) Type species is Gojirasaurus quayi Quayi refers to Quay County, New Mexico, where the holotype was found Found in the Cooper Canyon Formation in 1981 Described in 1997 by Kenneth Carpenter May be a dubious genus Fossils of the first specimen found include a serrated tooth, some ribs, vertebrae, chevron right pubis, left tibia, and metatarsal However, in 2007 Nesbitt and others found that the vertebrae were actually of Shuvosaurus, and the pubis and tibia came from other coelophysoid, (too large to be its close relative Coelophysis), which made Gojirasaurus a dubious genus Nesbitt and others also said that the tibia was what distinguished Gojirasaurus as its own genus (more robust that Coelophysis) In 2012 Mortimer said that the more robust tibia may just be size-related, and not a distinguished feature Another specimen was referred to Gojirasaurus in 1994, but it was only a pubis Adrian Hunt described the pubis in an unpublished thesis, and named it Revueltoraptor lucasi, but it’s now considered to be a nomen nudum As a coelophysoid, it was bipedal, terrestrial, and carnivorous One of the largest carnivores from the Triassic About 18 ft (5.5 m) long and estimated to weigh 330-400 lb (150-200 kg) Carpenter thought the holotype was a juvenile, so it may have grown bigger Specimen is now in the University of Colorado Museum in Boulder, Colorado (in the collections)



Fun Fact:

Radar is an acronym for Radio Detection And Ranging. Lidar is a portmanteau of light & radar, although sometimes people make the backronym Light Detection And Ranging. The Arkansas tracksite was measured with LIDAR for a good reason, it had recently rained and photogrammetry wouldn’t work (radar wouldn’t either) but the green-laser light worked through the water.

Sponsor:

This episode is brought to you in part by TRX Dinosaurs, which makes beautiful and realistic dinosaur sculptures, puppets, and exhibits. You can see some amazing examples and works in progress on Instagram @trxdinosaurs.