I know there are some readers of this blog who have patiently waited   and waited for pictures of beautiful Oligocene marine mammal fossils -   to you I say, sorry for the delay. I'm going to try and get several blog   posts written this weekend so I can post them incrementally. This one   will mostly be in 'slideshow' format.
I've been fairly busy  since  I got here, and I've bordered on stress trying to figure out 1)  where  all the eomysticetid specimens are in collections, 2) which  earbones  belong to which skull or skeleton (just taking a while to  become  familiarized with the specimen numbers), 3) trying to make some  sense  out of the earbones and trying to group them based on  consistently seen  characteristics (and I have made a bit of headway),  and 4) just  generally trying to figure out how many taxa I am dealing  with and thus  5) how many manuscripts/dissertation chapters this will  end up making.  Since I've finally made some headway and started  describing the first  material (a partial skull with earbones and a very  partial postcranial  skeleton), I've relaxed a bit and can allocate  time to other activities.  That being said, I'm also locked out of the  building for four days due  to construction/maintenance activities in  the building. Fortunately,  this will give me an opportunity to divert  some time to my Pelagiarctos  study with Morgan Churchill. Also, in  other news - I finally finished up  my massive manuscript describing an  entire marine mammal assemblage  from a locality in the Purisima  Formation, which resulted in being just  over 200 double spaced pages  long with 45 figures; Felix Marx graciously  offered to take a look, as  did  Ewan Fordyce. I have a bit of work  left cleaning up some  figures, but it should be submittable soon.

A spectacularly beautiful dalpiazinid dolphin! Look at those damn teeth! There's another specimen with even crazier incisors, and a full dentition, and jaw.
An archaic edentulous mysticete which may fall somewhere on the cetacean family tree near eomysticetids. This specimen will be part of my dissertation.
  The holotype skeleton of the giant moonfish Megalampris keyesi. This set of slabs is seriously about 15 feet long and about 8 feet wide. Described by Gottfried et al. 2006.
A disarticulated skeleton of a squalodelphinid dolphin. My labmate and office mate Yoshi Tanaka is studying squalodelphinids for his dissertation (although their skulls are in better shape than in this specimen).
A partial skeleton of the giant shark Carcharocles angustidens, 
described by Gottfried and Fordyce (2001). Believe it or not, this specimen was found above the dolphin and moonfish skeletons in the same quarry; the shark was found first, and underneath they ran into dolphin bones; below that, they started seeing fish bones (from what turned out to be a truly monstrous fish). They called the shark Carcharodon angustidens 
instead, 
as Mike Gottfried is in the Carcharodon camp; that's fine, we all get along pretty well. Mike will be visiting University of Otago for paleo research in May, which will be a great opportunity to catch up.
Detail of the big, beautiful teeth of Carcharocles angustidens.
Beautiful jaw fragment of the undescribed squalodelphinid from the block photographed above.
The skull of the "Shag Point Plesiosaur", now known as Kaiwhekea
. That's pronounced "Ky-feh-key-uh"; one Maori pronunciation is "wh" as an 'f'.
The holotype skeleton of Kaiwhekea
; yes folks, that's all one gigantic concretion that is ~20 feet long. It took a crew of 3-6 to collect those blocks over the course of a month (each day).More photos will be coming soon!
 
 
1 comment:
Well, everyone should own one, I mean. In all seriousness, I had originally typed out "my adviser" and accidentally left "my" in there when I changed it. Thanks for pointing that out!
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