The Society
SVP & Paleo News
November 28, 2007
A Call for Symposia
The Program Committee for the 68th Annual Meeting of the Society of Vertebrate Paleontology, to be held at the Renaissance Cleveland Hotel, Cleveland, Ohio, October 15-18, 2008, is calling for symposia proposals.

Proposals should include a concise description of the symposium topic including its significance and specific relevance to the particular meeting time and location (if appropriate), and a list of speakers and preliminary titles, not to exceed 16 speakers in total. Five or six poster presentations are also welcome. Proposals should not exceed two pages in length.

Please send proposals to Jason Head, Program Committee Chair at: jason.head@utoronto.ca.

The deadline for proposal submission is December 14, 2007.

Jason J. Head
SVP Program Committee Chair

 

A Call for Field Trips and Workshops
The Host Committee for the 68th Annual Meeting of the Society of Vertebrate Paleontology, to be held at the Renaissance Cleveland Hotel, Cleveland, Ohio, October 15-18, 2008, is calling for workshop and field trip proposals, including pre and post-meeting events. 

The Proposal Outline contains a list of all of the information you must provide to the Host Chair in order for your proposal to be considered.  Examples of previous field trips and workshops can be viewed in the 2007 Second Circular.

Proposals, and questions, should be submitted to Darin Croft, Host Committee Chair at: dcroft@case.edu . The deadline for proposal submission is Friday, December 14, 2007.

Darin Croft
2008 Host Committee Chair

 

A Call for Patterson Grant Award Applications
Applications for the Patterson Memorial Grant Award are due January 15, 2008. The application date was moved up so the winners could be selected in April and the grant funds could be used for summer projects. The award, named in honor of Dr. Bryan Patterson, supports graduate and undergraduate student field work in vertebrate paleontology.

The application and detailed instructions are available on the Patterson Grant Award Web page.

To apply for the award, follow the instructions and complete and submit the electronic application by the end of the day, January 15, 2008.  Mail the sponsor signed copy by January 30, 2008.  Faxed copies of the signed application will NOT be accepted. Applicants and their sponsors must be SVP members or pending members.

The Patterson Award Committee will be announce the winner(s) on the first Monday following the 15th of April. Winner(s) will be acknowledged at the 67th SVP Annual Meeting Banquet. Questoins can be directed to Patrick O'Connor at: oconnorp@ohiou.edu .

Patrick O'Connor
Patterson Memorial Grant Chair

Categories: SVP Broadcast E-mails
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icon date 14:26:34 | icon author Meagan Comerford
After years of planning, the award-winning BBC TV series Walking with Dinosaurs comes to life in a stunning theatrical event.  Internationally-renowned designers have worked with scientists to create 15 life-sized dinosaurs, including the terror of the ancient terrain, Tyrannosaurus rex!  Be amazed and thrilled as the greatest creatures ever to walk the earth return before your eyes.  It’s a dazzling $20-million-dollar arena spectacle of unprecedented size and quality set to captivate young and old alike.  Marvel at the story of their 200-million-year domination of life on earth.  Watch them walk.  Hear them roar.  BE there as they fight for survival and supremacy.  From the ripple of their skin to the glint in their eye, you will know the dinosaurs really have returned!  So make sure you have your seat to see the return of the dinosaurs!  Buy tickets today!
For information about the tour, visit the website www.dinosaurlive.com.
 
The associated press release gives information about the artistic creators behind this exhibit.
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icon date 13:12:48 | icon author Meagan Comerford
November 15, 2007

CHICAGO, IL (June 16, 2007) –  Fossilized footprints are relatively common, but figuring out exactly which ancient creature made particular tracks has been a mystery that has long stumped paleontologists.   In the latest issue of the Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology, a team of researchers overcome this dilemma for the first time, and link a fossil trackway to a well-known fossil animal.

Sebastian Voigt, a trackway expert from the Institute of Geology, Freiberg University of Mining and Technology, Germany, and David Berman and Amy Henrici of the Carnegie Museum of Natural History, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, who study fossil skeletons, took a close look at an exceptional fossil collection from 290 million year old sediments of central Germany known as the Tambach Formation.  The Bromacker locality in the Tambach Formation has been famous for its fossil footprints for well over a century, but “identifying the animals that made the tracks proved challenging,” commented Voigt.  Fortunately, the Bromacker locality offered clues to solving the problem for the paleontologists. Superbly detailed trackways were found in concert with exceptionally preserved skeletons, in the same sediments.  “To have beautifully preserved trackways and skeletons at the same site is a unique situation for paleontologists – it provides a wonderful opportunity to better understand how these extinct animals lived,” noted Berman.  

The team combined their expertise in anatomy and ichnology (the study of tracks) to match up the most common tracks with their makers.  Detailed measurements of the tracks, combined with measurements of the legs, feet and backbones of the skeletal material allowed the team to pinpoint the trackmakers.  The two most common skeletal fossils, Diadectes absitus and Orobates pabsti, grew to approximately 3 or 4 feet.  These closely related reptile-like creatures were some of the first four-legged plant eaters on land, and have no close living relatives.  Their limb skeletons and size match them well to the Bromacker locality’s two most common types of trackway, scientifically named Ichniotherium cottae and Ichniotherium sphaerodactylum.  Sebastian Voigt said, “Now that we have matched the two most common skeletons to their trackways, it is time to turn our attention to the rarer animals.  Our work opens new doors for delving into other paleobiological questions, including how Diadectes and Orobates walked.” 

View an image of a skeleton of Lower Permian diadectomorph Orobates pabsti and restoration of how it may have appeared as the trackmaker ichnospecies Ichniotherium sphaerodactylum; artwork by Mark A. Klingler. See Voigt et al. To download a full-sized image of this image, right click here, choose 'Save As..' and save the file to a location on your computer.

 

ABOUT THE SOCIETY OF VERTEBRATE PALEONTOLOGY
Founded in 1940 by thirty-four paleontologists, the Society now has over 2,000 members representing professionals, students, artists, preparators, and others interested in VP. It is organized exclusively for educational and scientific purposes, with the object of advancing the science of vertebrate paleontology.

The Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology
The Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology (JVP) is the leading journal of professional vertebrate paleontology and the flagship publication of the Society. It was founded in 1980 by Dr. Jiri Zidek and publishes contributions on all aspects of vertebrate paleontology.
 

CONTACTS:
David Berman       
412 -622-3248     
bermand@carnegiemnh.org 

Sebastian Voigt
+49-3731-392038
s.voigt@geo.tu-freiberg.de

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icon date 10:30:00 | icon author Meagan Comerford
November 14, 2007

Renew your dues online today.

It's dues renewal time for the 2007-2008 Membership Year (10/01/2007 - 9/30/2008). Sponsors: you can renew your sponsored member's dues online while renewing your own.

If you have any questions, contact the business office at: svp@vertpaleo.org.

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icon date 10:44:08 | icon author Meagan Comerford
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