WANT A PROFILE LIKE THIS?
Create my FREE Plan Or learn about other options
Iain Reid
PeerJ Author
105 Points

Contributions by role

Preprint Author 105
Preprint Feedback 30
Answers 25

Contributions by subject area

Paleontology
Taxonomy
Biogeography
Ecology

By Q&A topic

Paleontology
Taxonomy

Iain J. Reid

PeerJ Author

Summary

Electrical Engineering undergraduate at University of British Columbia, Okanagan campus

Biogeography Computational Biology Data Science Ecology Evolutionary Studies Mathematical Biology Paleontology Taxonomy Zoology

Past or current institution affiliations

University of British Columbia

Work details

Undergraduate

University of British Columbia
September 2020
School of Engineering

PeerJ Contributions

  • Preprints 1
  • Feedback 4
  • Answers 1
July 27, 2016 - Version: 3
A review of dinosaurian body fossils from British Columbia, Canada
Iain J Reid
https://doi.org/10.7287/peerj.preprints.1369v3

Provided feedback on

1 vote
25 May 2017

The Chinese colossus: an evaluation of the phylogeny of Ruyangosaurus giganteus and its implications for titanosaur evolution

This is not a comment on the results of the paper so much as it is constructive criticism on the presentation of the phylogenetic analysis through the figures and the text. The sim...

1 vote
24 Jul 2017

Theropod specimens from the Navesink Formation and their implications for the Diversity and Biogeography of Ornithomimosaurs and Tyrannosauroids on Appalachia

Wonderful paper here. Very in-depth discussion and description (more than in Yun 2017). However, it might be worth noting that "Teihivenator" is a nomen nudum as of yet since no Zo...

28 Jan 2017

A new reconstruction of Struthiosaurus austriacus Bunzel 1871

A little more details on why you interpreted the osteoderm locations as they appear here would be appreciated. Osteoderm "E" may be in an incorrect location, or the unknown oste...

20 Jul 2018

Diversity of raptor dinosaurs in southeastern North America revealed by the first definite record from North Carolina

Just a simple note in the introduction, you state that seven taxa have been named from Late Cretaceous North America, but only list six. I believe you are missing Hesperonychus and...

1 Answer

1
accepted Literature work or re-evaluation of housed specimens?