Here is our study, published July 10, 2019, announcing Hesperornithoides miessleri to the world: https://t.co/JxxDB9uBD5
The fantastic artwork is by Gabriel Ugueto @SerpenIllus. https://t.co/MRhkuaG3P3
@BrandHarrison This was last summer, hunting for dinosaurs in the Morrison Formation in Wyoming. This is the site where Hesperornithoides was found. We went searching for more.
Here's the paper about Hesp:
https://t.co/JxxDB9uBD5
Fun statistic - our article 'A new paravian dinosaur from the Late Jurassic of North America supports a late acquisition of avian flight' was in the top 5 most viewed #EvolutionaryStudies #Paleontology and #Taxonomy articles in @thePeerJ in 2019!
@HodariNundu @bibi1152633771 The cladogram in this paper says so. I have yet to hear the arguments, but it’s fun to think about. https://t.co/hFCT1AhBdN
Nuestra última noticia de "Arsénico por Iguanodón" es la publicación del dinosaurio Hesperornithoides miessleri, un troodóntido encontrado en la Formación Morrison (con Ilustración de @SerpenIllus). Enlaces del epi y del artículo: https://t.co/nEYhoO0Q9G y https://t.co/qWOg7LdW52 https://t.co/BICjPA4Jh4
@StatedClearly @TetZoo Yes Deinonychus can be secondarily flighless, But it's not Avialan or a"bird"
This recent research here conducted a phylogenetic analysis and concluded that flight may have evolved independently many times in Feathered dinosaurs..
https://t.co/jyu49x6jGK https://t.co/WI3G2L3CwN