Tutorial 30: how to identify Morrison sauropod cervicals
May 3, 2016
When I was back in Oklahoma in March, I met with Anne Weil to see some of the new Apatosaurus material she’s getting out of her Homestead Quarry. It’s nice material, but that’s a post for another day. Anne said something that really resonated with me, which was, “I love it when you guys post about vertebral morphology, because it helps me learn this stuff.” Okay, Anne, message received. This will begin to make things right.
I spent a week at BYU back in 2005, collecting data for my dissertation. One of the first things I had to do was teach myself how to identify the vertebrae of different sauropods, because BYU has just about all of the common Morrison taxa. These are the notes I made back then.
I always planned to do something with them – clean them up, get them into a more usable form. There are a lot of scribbly asides that are probably hard for others to read, and it would be more useful if I put the easily confused taxa next to each other – Barosaurus next to Brachiosaurus, for example. And I didn’t go into serial changes at all.
Still, hopefully someone will find these useful. If there are things I missed or got wrong, the comment thread is open. And if you want all four spreads in one convenient package, here’s a PDF: Wedel 2005 notes on Morrison sauropod cervicals
Mike and I leave for the Sauropocalypse tomorrow. I’m hoping to post at least a few pretty pictures from the road, as I did for the Mid-Mesozoic Field Conference two years ago. Stand by…
Filed in Apatosaurus, Barosaurus, brachiosaurids, Brachiosaurus, camarasaurs, cervical, diplodocids, Diplodocus, Haplocanthosaurus, pneumaticity, Things I should have posted a year ago, Tutorial
6 Responses to “Tutorial 30: how to identify Morrison sauropod cervicals”
Leave a Reply
This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.
May 3, 2016 at 7:34 pm
I’m so excited!
I just can’t hide it
I’m about to visit the brachiosaur capital of the world
And I think I like it.
May 6, 2016 at 2:19 pm
[…] situation where you can’t tell a Camarasaurus neck vertebra from that of an Apatosaurus, Matt Wedel can help out with this tutorial. “Scentless in Nevada” — University of California Berkeley undergrad Hiep Nguyen discusses […]
May 17, 2016 at 3:39 pm
[…] in Haplocanthosaurus, Camarasaurus, and the brachiosaurids, at least from what I’ve seen. See this post for details. I know that the left VLF here looks like a second ridge, but the cotyle is broken off […]
June 3, 2016 at 1:05 pm
Thank you!
February 20, 2018 at 6:39 am
[…] For a related thing in the same vein, see Tutorial 30: how to identify Morrison sauropod cervicals. […]
January 28, 2020 at 11:12 pm
[…] In Camarasaurus, the zygs strongly overhang the front end of the centrum in the cervicals (see this and […]