• PLOS.ORG
  • PLOS JOURNALS
  • ABOUT
  • CONTACT
  • Login
PLOS Blogs
Saturday, May 18, 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

Blog Archives

Fossil frogs / The fossil record is not as bad as you think it is

By Sarah Werning
Posted: December 18, 2012
Category: Development, Paleontology | Tagged amphibians, developments, frogs, herps | 10 Comments

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
  • Blog Search

  • Latest PLOS Blogs posts

    • New DataCite / ORCID Integration Tool in The Integrative Paleontologists
    • Opportunistic pathogens evolve mostly harmlessly in healthy humans in The Integrative Paleontologists
    • Open for microbiology: PLOS Biology at ASM 2013 in The Integrative Paleontologists
    • Reconnecting with Food. Essential for our health. in The Integrative Paleontologists
    • This Week in PLOS NTDs and PLOS Pathogens: Targeting Schistosome Receptors; the Secret Life of Glycoproteins; New Strategies Against TB; RRV Viral Entry Mediation in Rhesus Monkeys; and More 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.
      6 hours ago
    • sarahwerning (Sarah Werning)sarahwerning (Sarah Werning): @tmccormick @JMDugan @MikeTaylor @AndyFarke Andy we can drop the NC-SA for the ms we have in review, depending on what the RAM wants.
      6 hours ago
    • sarahwerning (Sarah Werning)sarahwerning (Sarah Werning): @tmccormick @JMDugan @MikeTaylor @AndyFarke Most museums insist on NC for their specimens as a condition of me putting images on MorphoBank.
      6 hours ago
    • TomHoltzPaleo (Thomas R. Holtz, Jr.)TomHoltzPaleo (Thomas R. Holtz, Jr.): RT @AndyFarke: Judy Scotchmoor--a hero of science education--honored by the UC Berkeley Chancellor: http://t.co/pPhdPBwx0K
      6 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

    • I got what you intend, regards for pos... by Trimline Phone in Speakeasy Science
    • Uncover out these pointers read on and le... by Buy Phentermine in Speakeasy Science
    • Laura, thank you so much for getting in t... by Ricki Lewis, PhD in DNA Science Blog
    • hello!,I really like your writing so a lo... by phentermine in Speakeasy Science
    • I write a blog at www.writethehappyending... by Laura King Edwards in DNA Science Blog
    • My goal is to find the stories that every... by Ricki Lewis, PhD in DNA Science Blog
    • I have medicare and pard D but have sever... by ann stewart in Work In Progress
    • There is noticeably big money to comprehe... by Time and expense in Speakeasy Science
    • [...] by a wide margin. Greg Downey has r... by Part 11. Humans Are Blank-ogamous. Sexaptation: The Many Functions of Sex | Patrick F. Clarkin, Ph.D. in Neuroanthropology
    • Hi there! This is my 1st comment here so ... by website in DNA Science Blog
The public library of science   —   Science Blog Network