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Category Archives: PLOS ONE

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

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

Bird brains: what they can tell us about ecology and evolution

By Shaena Montanari
Posted: December 10, 2012
Category: Paleontology, PLOS ONE | Tagged birds, CT scanning, ecology, paleoecology, PLOS ONE | 1 Comment

Scintillating caecilian fossils spill new secrets

By Andrew Farke
Posted: December 7, 2012
Category: Paleontology, PLOS ONE, Technology | Tagged amphibians, CT scanning, Eocaecilia, PLOS ONE | 7 Comments
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  • 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

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