Palaeontology

Posted: 29 Mars 2012 à 15 h 56 , by David Evans
Categories: 
| Commentaires (0) | Commentaire

March 24, 2012

Posted: 27 Mars 2012 à 13 h 37 , by David Evans
Categories: 
| Commentaires (0) | Commentaire

March 24, 2012

Posted: 26 Mars 2012 à 10 h 56 , by David Evans
Categories: 
| Commentaires (0) | Commentaire

March 22-23, 2012

Posted: 2 Mars 2012 à 9 h 26 , by admin
Categories: 
| Commentaires (0) | Commentaire

Contributed by Peter May, President, Research Casting International Ltd.

We held a press preview day at our shop last week to launch the ROM’s major summer exhibition – Ultimate Dinosaurs: Giants from Gondwana. Of the 17 dinosaur skeletons to be exhibited, ten are pretty well finished; just final paint to be applied.

Posted: 24 janvier 2012 à 10 h 11 , by David Evans
Categories: 
| Commentaires (0) | Commentaire

Illustration of a dinosaur nest.

Fig. 1. Reconstruction of a Massospondyus nesting site. Courtesy J. Csotonyi

Posted: 18 janvier 2012 à 14 h 23 , by David Rudkin
Categories: 
| Commentaires (0) | Commentaire

David M. Rudkin, Assistant Curator in Invertebrate Palaeontology, will be presenting at the upcoming  ROM Research Colloquiumjoin us on February 3 at 11:30am in the Signy & Cléophée Eaton Theatre to hear more about An Embarrassment of Worms: Fossil Priapulida from the Silurian of Ontario … Real and Imagined

Posted: 1 décembre 2011 à 8 h 53 , by admin
Categories: 
| Commentaires (0) | Commentaire

Join us Thursday, December 1 from 11 am to noon EST as we live blog from the ROM during the launch event for the Burgess Shale Virtual Museum of Canada. This online exhibition is the most current and comprehensive resource for knowledge on one of the world’s most important fossil sites.

Posted: 28 novembre 2011 à 10 h 48 , by David Evans
Categories: 
| Commentaires (0) | Commentaire

Today, Caleb Brown and colleagues announced the discovery of Canada’s newest dinosaur, Thescelosaurus assiniboiensis – the first new dinosaur species to be discovered in Saskatchewan since 1926. The new dinosaur is named after the historic District of Assiniboia, where it was found. The small-bodied, two-legged plant-eater lived alongside the famed Tyrannosaurus rex and Triceratops, at the very end of the age of dinosaurs.

Posted: 25 novembre 2011 à 9 h 09 , by David Rudkin
Categories: 
| Commentaires (0) | Commentaire

After three days of successful fieldwork on the chilly Grand Rapids Uplands, we return – toting a fresh batch of fossils – to The Manitoba Museum in Winnipeg. This is the home turf of my colleague, Graham Young, and almost a second home for me.

Posted: 18 novembre 2011 à 12 h 00 , by David Evans
Categories: 
| Commentaires (0) | Commentaire

Fossils wrapped in plaster with labels written on the outside

Marked field jackets containing horned dinosaur bones from the McPheeter’s bonebed (MBB) and the South Side Ceratopsian (SSC).

Subscribe to RSS - Palaeontology