2009
DOI: 10.1002/ar.20981
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Dinosaurs in the Year of Darwin

Abstract: This special issue of The Anatomical Record explores the recent advances in the functional morphology and paleobiology of dinosaurs. Although Darwin did not study dinosaurs because paleontology was in its infancy a century and half ago, he considered both paleontology and anatomy as essential subjects for establishing the validity of evolution. The study of dinosaurs constitutes a vigorous subdiscipline within vertebrate paleontology, and anatomists and evolutionary functional morphologists constitute an espec… Show more

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Cited by 13 publications
(14 citation statements)
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“…-longer toe impressions -Digit I most prominent versity and evolutionary transitions (Dodson, 2009 et al, 2000). It seems easier to envision an increase in body size within a temporally correlative taxonomic group than to invoke a significant range extension for a more derived, younger-occurring taxonomic group.…”
Section: Ceratopsian Footprintmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…-longer toe impressions -Digit I most prominent versity and evolutionary transitions (Dodson, 2009 et al, 2000). It seems easier to envision an increase in body size within a temporally correlative taxonomic group than to invoke a significant range extension for a more derived, younger-occurring taxonomic group.…”
Section: Ceratopsian Footprintmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…That would be great.” Peter, is, and was, always the kind and perceptive teacher who could see when a student was lost. He guided me through Anatomy lab at Yale, and has since guided thousands more as a revered Professor of Veterinary Anatomy and Vertebrate Paleontology at Penn, not to mention the world's leading expert on those funky dinosaurs with horns on their heads (see Dodson, ; Laitman, ).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…As anyone who has spent even a few moments with Peter knows, get him in room with dinosaurs, particularly ceratopsians (the horned dudes, he's their king!) and he's gone (see Dodson, .) But, I was in heaven!…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Their compendia detailed reviews and cutting‐edge science exploring many aspects of the zygoma's growth, development, variation, and experimental manipulations in a range of species. This, the second‐part, delves into questions that relate to evolutionary and comparative aspects of the vertebrate skull, long a favored topic of our august journal (see, for example, many papers in Laitman ; Ross, ; Marquez, ; Dodson, ; Van Valkenburgh et al, ). Delving deeper into our archives, one will find: comments on the evolutionary/systematic importance of facial bones in the comparative, osteological study of rails and cranes by Shufeldt (); by the extraordinary, and often under‐appreciated osteologist, Bruno Oetteking in his insights on the evolution of the human zygoma (Oetteking, ); work by Allis () assessing ancestral homologies to the squamosal bone in fish; beautiful, and detailed, comparative anatomy of the facial musculature and zygomatic arch of the orang by Sullivan and Osgood (); and by Shanker, on the skulls of extant and fossil turtles, with insights on jugal evolution among these groups and reptiles in general (Shanker, ).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%