I’ve been back in New Zealand
now for a week since my month-long trip to the US
ended. The primary purpose of the trip was to present some of my dissertation research
at the SVP conference (Society of Vertebrate Paleontology) in Los
Angeles. This was my ninth (!) meeting, and my seventh
time presenting research.
The day before the conference, I drove down from San
Francisco with my labmate Cheng-Hsiu Tsai, who had
been staying with me at my parents’ house. It’s about a 5 hour drive to
downtown LA, and with stopping time included, we did it in about 6 – and got
stuck in traffic on the 110 freeway shortly after turning off I-5; fortunately
we only had to go for a couple miles to get to the Westin Bonaventure. Several
years ago I decided never to stay outside the host hotel, unless there was a
cheaper hotel literally next door – a situation I took advantage of at the 2010
Pittsburg meeting. The Westin
Bonaventure hotel is pretty huge, and one of my first impressions upon entering
was a number of movie and TV show posters – apparently several movies including
Rain Man, Heat, and True Lies were filmed there – including the huge shoot out
following the bank heist in Heat (where the Val Kilmer and Dennis Haysbert
characters get shot). The conference hotel was great, although because of the
circular shape and symmetry of the lobby, it had a pretty confusing and
difficult to learn layout.
The first few days of the conference, as normal, didn’t have
a whole lot of talks I wanted to see, so I spent quite a bit of time networking
with colleagues, meeting with coauthors and potential future collaborators, and
catching up with old friends. Notable non-marine mammal talks and posters
included a great talk by Jim Parham (CSU Fullerton/Cooper Center) on fossil
leatherback sea turtles (Dermochelyidae) and a related poster by Katrina Awalt.
Dan Ksepka gave a talk on new sea birds from the late Oligocene of South
Carolina, including a gigantic new pelagornithid (bony toothed bird). Dan even
came up to me and jokingly apologized in advance; currently, the largest known
flying bird from North America is the Pelagornis sp. specimen I reported
on with N. Adam Smith in JVP in 2011, and this South Carolina specimen is
slightly larger, and will unseat my specimen from the record. N. Adam Smith and
a student of Dan’s had posters on osteohistology of modern and fossil
flightless birds including penguins and the extinct flightless auk Mancalla
(a subject I am increasingly more interested in for studying fossil marine
mammals). Gabe Santos (Cooper Center)
had a great poster on the taphonomy of the Eocene Talega Bonebed, a terrestrial
mammal accumulation that is slowly being prepared by folks at the Cooper
Center. Former Otago student (now
at Ashoro Museum of Paleontology in Hokkaido, Japan) Tatsuro Ando presented a
fascinating poster on the phylogenetic relationships of the extinct flightless
plotopterid birds, and whether or not they were closely related to penguins as
was recently proposed by Gerald Mayr.
Okay, this is out of order, but all of the photos I'm in were from the last night of the meeting. As usual, numerous Montana State kids are up in the front of the annual party photo... I promise, we actually do get some science done during this meeting! Photo courtesy Rebecca Hunt-Foster.
On the third night of the conference, Ewan nominated me
(again) to round up people for the annual marine mammal paleo dinner. We ended
up with about 30 people, and had a great time at California Pizza Kitchen; I
got my check early and hoofed it back to the host hotel before the silent
auction finished up. My prints didn’t make quite as much as I had hoped, but
we’ll see what happens next year. After, I spent a few hours at the bar, and at
1am I realized I had only practiced my
talk once before – at UCMP – where Kevin Padian, Pat Holroyd, and various
students (including visiting Harvard student Anjan Bullar) gave me some great
ideas for how to shorten the powerpoint. So, I grabbed a couple friends – my
very close friends Alida Bailleul (MOR) and Jade Simon (MSU), and my buddy and
coauthor Joe El Adli (formerly SDNHM, now U. Michigan) – and gave my talk at 1am out on the pool deck behind the bar. And I
nailed it! It went great. I practiced it again the next morning to John and
Kari Scannella; John is normally pretty critical (and constructive at that),
but didn’t really have much to ask.
The marine mammal session had a number of great talks. Erich
Fitzgerald gave a talk reevaluating some scrappy phocid remains from the
Beaumaris locality in Australia
as well as a phocid braincase from New Zealand.
Former San Diego
State student (Berta lab) Sarah
Kienle gave a talk on feeding ecology in pinnipeds, and Morgan Churchill gave a
pretty interesting talk on tooth spacing in pinnipeds and whether or not Enaliarctos
(the dawn seal) was truly a pierce feeder. Mark Clementz gave a talk on
sirenian isotopes, and Daryl Domning gave an interesting presentation on the Metaxytherium
sea cow lineage. Cetacean presentations included talks by my labmate Cheng Hsiu
Tsai on mysticete phylogeny, a presentation by Ewan on tusked dolphins from the
Oligocene of New Zealand, a talk by Olivier Lambert on squalodontids from Peru,
and a last minute presentation by Rachel Racicot on odontocete inner ears. Phil
Gingerich also spoke about sirenian and cetacean faunas from the Fayum. I also
gave my own presentation which went over pretty well, on some of my
dissertation research focusing on a new eomysticetid taxon represented by an
adult and juveniles of different sizes, preserving the first known ontogenetic
series for an archaic mysticete.
Jack and I after the banquet. Jack has tolerated six or seven years of my weird
marine mammal shenanigans. Photo courtesy Alessandro Carpana.
Although the marine mammal session is always the highlight
of the meeting for me, there was one special event left. At the awards banquet,
my former professor Jack Horner was given the Romer-Simpson Medal, the highest
award given by SVP. Jack gave a great little talk with a short biography (with
all sorts of great old photos from the 60’s and 70’s I’ve only seen once or
twice before), and actually spent most of it talking about how proud he was of
his various students. I took several courses from Jack, and spent an inordinate
amount of time over at Museum of the Rockies using the
preparation laboratory; Jack gave me permission back in 2005 to start lugging
in fossil marine mammals in ridiculously hard concretions, as MOR had the only
pneumatic air tools I could have access to. My undergrad adviser, David
Varricchio, was Jack’s first graduate student, and owing to Jack’s teaching –
and all the time spent talking about paleontological theory with his students
(or just getting “merry”) – Denver Fowler, Liz Freedman, John Scannella, Holly
Woodward, Laura Wilson, Cary Woodruff, Alida Bailleul, and others – I’m very
much in a similar frame of mind and have had the fortune to apply my unique
MSU/MOR perspective on vertebrate paleontology to fossil marine mammals.
Because of this academic heritage, I was pretty damn proud to be a part of the
(rather enormous) group photo of Jack and Mark Goodwin with all of his students
on the stage after the banquet. Up there with me were pretty much all of my
best friends from Montana, and I
am so damn proud to have graduated from that unique group of stellar thinkers.
The Montana State University-Museum of the Rockies-UCMP group. Photo courtesy Alessandro Carpana and Anna Giamborino.
To wrap it up, I guess I’d say that this meeting was one of
the more productive, and definitely the most fun I’ve ever had at SVP. Knowing
that I probably will not have a chance to go to the 2014 meeting in Berlin (and
even if I did, many close friends will not), I knew this would be my last
chance to see quite a few old friends from my Montana days, and I made a point
of putting a stop to “talking shop” after the poster sessions ended, and
spending the evenings with old friends. It was a great time, and I feel
extremely fortunate to have been able to see any of them, even if for only four
days. As I write this, my wife is currently in Billings,
Montana, and tomorrow will be heading to Bozeman
– the first time either of us have been back since 2011 – to see some of our
old friends (and I am extremely jealous!). On a parting note, it's not easy living so far away from literally everyone you've ever known or cared about - and I generally have made a good attempt at putting on a game face. I didn't realize how much I missed everybody until the conference was over - and certain friends got a rare (if not embarassing) peek behind the armor. It all goes to show that I really have to get this dissertation finished, so Sarah and I can return to the US and make a bunch of visits to current and former MSU students spread across the four corners of North America!