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negativenull, to science_memes in Mary Anning was the GOAT

It’s far too late but:

In 2012, the plesiosaur genus Anningasaura was named after Anning and the species Ichthyosaurus anningae was named after her in 2015.

chuckleslord, to science_memes in HYAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA!

Explain

fossilesque,
@fossilesque@mander.xyz avatar

tl;dr

  1. Only fragments remain as evidence, as the only full skeleton was destroyed.
  2. Partial skeletons may be different subspecies.

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spinosaurus#Discovery_and_n…

chuckleslord,

Thank you

JohnDClay,

Oh that’s sad about it being lost

Stromer claimed that the specimen was from the early Cenomanian, about 97 million years ago.[8][6]

It was destroyed in World War II, specifically “during the night of 24/25 April 1944 in a British bombing raid of Munich” that severely damaged the building housing the Paläontologisches Museum München (Bavarian State Collection of Paleontology). However, detailed drawings and descriptions of the specimen remain. Stromer’s son donated Stromer’s archives to the Paläontologische Staatssammlung München in 1995, and Smith and colleagues analysed two photographs of the Spinosaurus holotype specimen BSP 1912 VIII 19 discovered in the archives in 2000.

Ichi_matsu, to science_memes in What more can I say?

That’s goth.

abysmalpoptart,

Just in case the reference was missed

youtu.be/TIy3n2b7V9k?si=H4HCcR6_ZcEMFthk

threelonmusketeers, (edited )

Here’s a shorter link without tracking: youtu.be/TIy3n2b7V9k

I am a human, and this action was performed manually.

Smokeydope,
@Smokeydope@lemmy.world avatar

The piped bot is gonna take a hit out on your ass for cutting into their turf

American_Communist22, to science_memes in heart of ice
@American_Communist22@lemmygrad.ml avatar

@Pluto is this true?

DroneRights,

Ew, hexbear user

American_Communist22,
@American_Communist22@lemmygrad.ml avatar

BUDDY! ITS YOU! You’re one of my favorites, a real poster.

Zombiepirate, to science_memes in Mary Anning was the GOAT
@Zombiepirate@lemmy.world avatar

They did her dirty.

Such a badass though.

drolex,

Well you have to undestand their reasoning.

“My dear fellow members, today we review the application of Mary Anning to become a member of our distinguished society. As usual, the devil’s advocate will start.”

“Thank you, Sir. Mary Anning! On one hand, she’s a woman, and on the other… No wait, actually I rest my case.”

“Thank you. Now the defense can move forward.”

“No, sorry, she is a woman after all.”

" Big no-no then. Huzzah, tradition prevails! To the smoking room, chaps."

protist, to science_memes in One thing I've learned after 21 years - you never know what is gonna come through that door.

There are roughly 2,200,000 known animal species, and 400,000 of those are just beetles. Entomologists estimate there are 10 quintillion insects on Earth

metallic_z3r0,

Makes sense. Insect lifespans are so short that evolution can be much faster. Primates have been around for 65 million years and only have 431 species, a life form with 1/20th the lifespan at best would have to speciate much faster than that.

lol3droflxp,
@lol3droflxp@kbin.social avatar

More likely the small size, flight and the holometabolous lifestyle.

There is the theory that the number of species is related to the number of available niches. For mammals, a tree may offer 2-3 with the ground, the branches and maybe something like burrowing (this is just for illustration purposes).

Insects can live in the leaves, dead branches, inside the wood, in the mosses, on the ground, in the leaf litter layer, burrowing etc., etc. because they are so small. They can also easily transit between different places because most of them can fly.

Because the larvae of holometabolous insects can occupy a completely different niche than the adults, every combination of niches can more or less be considered a new niche.

All of this is reflected in the species richness of insects. The primary wingless groups of insects are not very diverse compared to winged insects. And within the winged insects, the holometabolous species make up the vast majority. Hymenoptera, flies and beetles make up the majority of insects and they are all winged and holometabolous. If you just look at the hemimetabolous ones, they aren’t much more diverse than other groups of arthropods.

ALostInquirer, to science_memes in human mfers don't know what they're missin

some birds may see things more like the bottom picture? humans be missin’ out fr!

Kata1yst,
@Kata1yst@kbin.social avatar

Sure, lots of newer studies on this. This article covers it well and gives some examples: https://academic.oup.com/bioscience/article/50/10/854/233996

hexaflexagonbear, to science_memes in Mary Anning was the GOAT
@hexaflexagonbear@hexbear.net avatar
morrowind, to science_memes in 𓍊𓋼😿𓋼𓍊
@morrowind@lemmy.ml avatar

Can I just say thanks for using the meme template right

bazus1, to science_memes in Whitmore knew.

The best of the least-appreciated Disney movies.

there1snospoon,

I feel Treasure Planet deserves at least an equal place amongst those gems. But both are incredible and that’s just personal preference speaking.

bazus1,

It’s really too bad that Tarzan is saddled with the end of the Disney Animation renaissance. Everything that came AFTER it is just as fantastic: Atlantis and Treasure Planet as discussed, Lilo and Stitch, Extremely Goofy Movie, Emperor’s New Groove… that’s a four year span of comedic and meme-worthy excellence. That same era birthed other movies whose fandoms have withstood the test of time: Iron Giant, ElDorado, Titan A.E., Shrek, Spirited Away, Ice Age, Sinbad amongst others.

fossilesque,
@fossilesque@mander.xyz avatar

100000000000000000000%

DashboTreeFrog,

I wasn’t into it when it first came out. A big part of the Disney movie experience for me as a kid was the music, so I left disappointed.

I rewatched it years later and was just mesmerized by the art and overall feel of the movie. Got the feeling that if it came out as a Dreamworks, or some other studio’s movie instead it would have been better appreciated, but could just be me.

magnetosphere, to science_memes in 𓍊𓋼😿𓋼𓍊
@magnetosphere@kbin.social avatar

Don’t feel bad, fungi. Lots of people informally lump you in with plants. It’s not personal.

fossilesque,
@fossilesque@mander.xyz avatar
fossilesque,
@fossilesque@mander.xyz avatar

This title makes me more angry the longer I look at it.

fossilesque,
@fossilesque@mander.xyz avatar
GentlemanLoser, to science_memes in o(╥﹏╥)o

Ashamed to say I hadn’t considered this before. Aw. What a loss.

BarrierWithAshes, to science_memes in JAPANESE KNOTWEED
@BarrierWithAshes@kbin.social avatar

For me its zebra mussels. I see those, it's a firefight on sight.

1847953620,

Gotta have those high-capacity magazines

noodle, to science_memes in abandonware empires
@noodle@feddit.uk avatar

Games publishers are in a war of attention and don’t want to compete with themselves. They won’t sell you an old game if they can get you hooked on the new version with microtransactions and DLC with no story and sub-par multiplayer.

The next point is just making the case for open source.

psud,

Some companies just make their new version compelling. You can’t get the experience of Balders Gate 3 by playing Balders Gate 1.

I think they’re all competing with themselves anyway, the biggest customer group for Whatever 5 will be players of Whatever 4. Giving away Whatever 1, 2, and 3 will increase sales of 4 and 5

Nurgle, to science_memes in JAPANESE KNOTWEED

Pointing out earth worms are invasive in many places has been my go to recently.

fossilesque,
@fossilesque@mander.xyz avatar

Not the permafrost!!

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