markopalaeo.bsky.social
@markopalaeo.bsky.social
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Landing at Wolf's Fang, a staging camp on the Antarctic continent 🇦🇶

The team are on the way to Halley Research Station on the Brunt Ice Shelf.

They were meant to get to Halley today, but weather on the rest of their route is causing delays. Not a bad view to wait with though, eh?
November 5, 2025 at 5:26 PM
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Superb! A new species of Charnia - found in Charnwood Forest - has been named after Prof Martin Brasier 😊
🥳 NEW FOSSIL! Researchers from Canada have named a new species of fossil from the 560 million year old rocks of Charnwood Forest!

🌟 Its called Charnia brasieri, shaped like a frond, and could grow to a metre long.

🌐 Read more on our website: www.charnwoodforest.org/researchers-...
November 4, 2025 at 9:09 AM
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Oxford had a talented group make a video about the #dinosaur tracks in Oxfordshire this summer.
Birmingham also had a talented group make a video.

I made the video for our group. It is less professional. And has wildly inappropriate music:

youtu.be/6ULOHr7dkF0
Oxfordshire Dinosaur tracks - Falkingham Lab from Liverpool John Moores University
YouTube video by Peter Falkingham
youtu.be
October 14, 2025 at 4:33 PM
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Museum researcher Frankie Dunn has a funded research placement opportunity with @charnwoodforest.bsky.social ! Applications are now open!

The project is part time (14 hours per week) over 12 weeks and the researcher will be receive a stipend of £1,300

www.charnwoodforest.org/collaborator...
Geopark and Partners Seeking to Recruit Two Researchers - Charnwood Forest Geopark
We’re looking for two researchers to join exciting and innovative projects that will help shape the future of our work in Charnwood Forest. Do you know someone who might be interested? Working with pa...
www.charnwoodforest.org
October 14, 2025 at 2:33 PM
@fossiliam.bsky.social I guess you’ve seen this one in Chapter House Street, York?
For #FossilFriday, a cobble from the streets of York with corals, not sure of the precise taxon. Maybe Carboniferous?
July 6, 2025 at 3:26 PM
For #FossilFriday, a cobble from the streets of York with corals, not sure of the precise taxon. Maybe Carboniferous?
July 4, 2025 at 5:08 PM
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👋Bon voyage as the 2024/25 season ends in Rothera! ❄️

The new Discovery Building is now in use, powering and supplying the station as a new era of polar science begins.
Final works continue ahead of handover later this year.

Read more: www.bas.ac.uk/media-post/e...

#PolarScience #Sustainability
June 25, 2025 at 10:59 AM
Here we go, day 1 of Lyme Regis Fossil Festival. Come and find us in the Jubilee Pavilion @bas.ac.uk #FossilFestival
June 14, 2025 at 6:47 AM
A very happy 99th birthday to Sir David. I’ve had the great honour to have met him several times in both human and ship form.
May 8, 2025 at 9:10 PM
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Great to see that the 2025 Lyme Regis Fossil Festival programme is now published. I'll be giving a couple of talks about local lass #MaryAnning (of course!) The festival is a fantastic event, loads to see and do, and not to be missed! I hope to see you there!
fossilfestival.com/lyme-regis-f...
April 8, 2025 at 9:23 AM
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6 April 1821: at @geolsoc.bsky.social, William Conybeare introduces the genus Plesiosaurus for some bones from the Lias of Lyme Regis that differed from Ichthyosaurus. The best specimens (probably bought from #MaryAnning) were in the collection of Thomas Birch, but no complete specimen was known.
April 6, 2025 at 9:31 AM
For #FossilFriday here’s a Homo sapiens trace fossil on the Norfolk coast being revealed by coastal erosion due to anthropogenic climate change.
March 7, 2025 at 6:45 PM
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20 January 1814: the 'Caledonian Mercury' reports that William Bullock is sending a collection of natural history specimens from his new London museum to Edinburgh, including 'the fossil head of a crocodile' – the first public display of the 1811–12 ichthyosaur found by #MaryAnning and her brother.
January 20, 2025 at 12:09 PM
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Henry De la Beche celebrated Buckland's coprolitic inclinations in this wonderful cartoon, 'A Coprolitic Vision', c.1829, following Buckland's paper on several discoveries by #MaryAnning: her pterosaur, fossil sepia and coprolites, which she had realised as early as 1824 were fossil faeces.
December 13, 2024 at 5:37 PM
For #FossilFriday here’s something I came across today, the skull of the Early Jurassic plesiosaur Anningasaura. From the Natural History Museum, London.
November 29, 2024 at 11:24 PM
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Storm Bert hits the UK today, on the bicentenary of the Great Storm of 22-23 Nov 1824 which caused widespread destruction along the S coast of England. #MaryAnning told a friend of the damage in Lyme Regis. Contrary to some later accounts, her house was not damaged, but her brother's premises were.
November 23, 2024 at 7:25 AM
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This #FossilFriday morning's blue #PaleoArt, for all the new #Bluesky people, features the #mosasaur #Platecarpus...
November 22, 2024 at 10:12 AM
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Leaping Balaur bondoc #paleoart for #FossilFriday. This image follows the interpretation that Balaur was an omnivorous bird, not a "double-clawed" dromaeosaur. The skull is unknown, so the head is based on Sapeornis. Originally created for the first @palaeogames.bsky.social book. #sciart
November 22, 2024 at 8:14 AM
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This #FossilFriday, I offer you a 50 million year old feather. I found this in the Green River Formation, while doing fieldwork for @johellawell.bsky.social's PhD back in 2006.
November 22, 2024 at 1:44 PM
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The new Woolly Rhino coin is available in a variety of metals, including silver and gold. Released today, from The Royal Mint and the Natural History Museum, London. You can buy my Ice Age Giants collection here: www.royalmint.com

#coins #coincollector #coincollecting #paleoart #sciart #scicomm
November 15, 2024 at 12:53 PM