• PLOS.ORG
  • PLOS JOURNALS
  • ABOUT
  • CONTACT
  • Login
PLOS Blogs
Thursday, May 23, 2013 | Standing at the intersection of Biology, Geology, and Technology
Skip to content
  • HOME
  • STAFF BLOGS ↓
    • The Official PLOS Blog
    • EveryONE
    • PLOS Biologue
    • PLOS Podcasts
    • Speaking of Medicine
  • BLOGS NETWORK ↓
    • The Guest Blog
    • ECO
      • All Models Are Wrong
      • The Gleaming Retort
      • Integrative Paleontologists
      • Tooth and Claw
      • Wonderland
    • HEALTH
      • Body Politic
      • DNA Science Blog
      • This May Hurt A Bit
      • Obesity Panacea
      • Public Health
      • Translational Global Health
      • Work In Progress
    • NEURO
      • Mind the Brain
      • Neuroanthropology
      • Neurotribes
    • CULTURE
      • At the Interface
      • CitizenSci
      • Gobbledygook
      • MIT SciWrite
      • Neuroanthropology
      • Neurotribes
      • The Panic Virus
      • Sci-Ed
      • The Student Blog
    • ARCHIVED BLOGS
      • Bad Physics
      • Genomeboy
      • Speakeasy Science
      • Take As Directed
  • COMMUNITY ↓
    • About PLOS Blogs
    • List of All Blogs
    • PLOS Blogs Contact
    • Community Guidelines
RSS Feed The Integrative Paleontologists
The Integrative Paleontologists
The Integrative Paleontologists
Skip to content

Author: Andrew Farke

A Dinosaur’s Unexpected Appearance

By Andrew Farke
Posted: May 13, 2013
Category: Dinosaurs, Miscellaneous, Navel Gazing, Paleontology | Leave a comment

A Dinosaur’s Journey to Publication

By Andrew Farke
Posted: April 19, 2013
Category: Dinosaurs, Navel Gazing, Nuts and Bolts, Open Access, Paleontology, PLOS ONE | 13 Comments

Madagascar’s Lonely Little Thief

By Andrew Farke
Posted: April 18, 2013
Category: Dinosaurs, Paleontology, PLOS ONE | 9 Comments

Rooted in History. . .Remembering Wann Langston, Jr.

By Andrew Farke
Posted: April 12, 2013
Category: Navel Gazing, Paleontology | 1 Comment

Who’s to blame (or credit) for fast peer review?

By Andrew Farke
Posted: March 21, 2013
Category: Open Access | Tagged open access, peer review | 12 Comments

Fishing Without a Fossil (Part 2)

By Andrew Farke
Posted: February 28, 2013
Category: Paleontology | Leave a comment

And This is Why We Should Always Provide Our Data. . .

By Andrew Farke
Posted: January 25, 2013
Category: Open Access, Open Data, Paleontology, PLOS ONE | 5 Comments

Fishing Without a Fossil (Part 1)

By Andrew Farke
Posted: January 18, 2013
Category: Paleontology | Tagged ichnology, lungfish, Madagascar, trace fossils | 3 Comments

Book Review: All Yesterdays

By Andrew Farke
Posted: December 28, 2012
Category: books, Review | Leave a comment
  • Blog Search

  • Latest PLOS Blogs posts

    • Violence Against Women: Implications for our communities, our world and our future in The Integrative Paleontologists
    • University of Geneva hosts Citizen Cyberscience in The Integrative Paleontologists
    • Toms River: A New Classic in Epidemiology Writing in The Integrative Paleontologists
    • Hairy, Sticky Leg Pads are In: How Different Spiders Hunt in The Integrative Paleontologists
    • Gun Control, Woopty Doo! in The Integrative Paleontologists
  • Multi Twitter

    • sarahwerningsarahwerning: @tmccormick @JMDugan @MikeTaylor @AndyFarke Andy we can drop the NC-SA for the ms we have in review, depending on what the RAM wants.
      5 days ago
    • JohnRHutchinson (John R. Hutchinson)JohnRHutchinson (John R. Hutchinson): +1 RT @MikeTaylor: MT @AndyFarke "Congrats to _Doctor_ @sarahwerning - officially official as of yesterday!" <-- w00t! Richly deserved!
      3 hours ago
    • MikeTaylor (Mike Taylor)MikeTaylor (Mike Taylor): MT @AndyFarke "Congrats to _Doctor_ @sarahwerning - officially official as of yesterday!" <-- w00t! Richly deserved!
      3 hours ago
    • Drew_Lab (Joshua Drew)Drew_Lab (Joshua Drew): @AndyFarke thank you very much! I wasn't sure to go with it as it's not particularly profound, more just what's been on my mind
      3 hours ago

    powered by Incbrite Wordpress Plugins
  • About The Integrative Paleontologists

    Our blog covers the latest paleontological research, with special attention to issues concerning open science, publishing, and fossils in the digital realm.

    Andy Farke is a vertebrate paleontologist at the Raymond M. Alf Museum of Paleontology. Follow him on Twitter: @andyfarke

    Shaena Montanari is a newly minted Ph.D. from the Comparative Biology program at the Richard Gilder Graduate School at the American Museum of Natural History. Follow her on Twitter: @DrShaena

    Sarah Werning is completing her Ph.D. in Paleontology at The Padian Lab, University of California at Berkeley School of Integrative Biology. Follow her on Twitter: @sarahwerning

    Read more about the The Integrative Paleontologist Team

    All opinions expressed here are our own, and do not necessarily represent the views of any organization with which we are associated

  • Latest PLOS Blogs comments

    • Fellas, upcoming time you purchase the ca... by try this website in Work In Progress
    • Fantastic information here bud, appreciat... by qr codes for business in Tooth and Claw
    • Fantastic blog post however i'm not likin... by broadband and phone deals in Speakeasy Science
    • Hey , I like your Amazing): site. Great c... by Compare Flights in Take As Directed
    • In Australia, as well as other countries,... by John Kaline in Speaking of Medicine
    • RT @findlocalfood: A good article asking ... by JammyBodgerUK in Translational Global Health
    • Appreciating the hard work you put into y... by Skutery elektryczne in Speakeasy Science
    • I believe that is one of several a lot si... by porn in Obesity Panacea
    • So according Leigh's argument, background... by M Chambless in Speaking of Medicine
    • Do we need any better example of the idio... by John Caile in Speaking of Medicine
The public library of science   —   Science Blog Network