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I Know Dino: The Big Dinosaur Podcast

Eoraptor - Episode 60

I Know Dino: The Big Dinosaur Podcast

I KNOW DINO, LLC

Iknowdino, Science, Dinosaurs, Dinosaur Podcast, Earth Sciences, Dinosaur, Natural Sciences, Education

4.7653 Ratings

🗓️ 20 January 2016

⏱️ 64 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Interview with Brad Jost, host of the show Jurassic Park Podcast, where we talk about all the movies, shows, toys, and other dinosaur media from 2015. 

Also dinosaur news, including the new titanosaur on display at the American Museum of Natural History in New York, tyrannosaurid trackways in Glenrock, Wyoming, and more. Plus, dinosaur of the day Eoraptor, one of the earliest known dinosaurs of all time.

Visit http://www.IKnowDino.com for more information including a link to dinosaur sites near you.

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Transcript

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0:00.0

This episode is brought to you by K-12-powered schools, tuition-free online accredited public schools for kindergarten through 12th grade.

0:09.7

Go to k-12.com slash IKD to find a tuition-free K-12-powered school near you and enroll now.

0:32.7

Hello and welcome to I know Dino.

0:34.3

I'm Garrett. And I'm Sabrina.

0:34.7

And today we'll be talking about EORAFTA.

0:37.9

We have an interview with Brad Jost from the Jurassic Park podcast and some dinosaur news.

0:44.8

Some big dinosaur news.

0:47.0

Eh, big.

0:49.4

You'll get that in a minute.

0:51.0

Yes, you might get it right now.

0:53.4

So first in the news is a story slash

0:57.2

republished article. It was published originally in Volumina Jurassic and then revisited in PureJ

1:06.6

preprints recently. And it's titled The Fragilegesia of Amphicalius Regillimus,

1:14.6

and it was written by Carrie Woodruff and John R. Foster.

1:18.8

So some background, Edward Drinker Cope discovered a vertebrae in the summer of 1878,

1:24.9

and he identified the fossil as a sauropod and named it amphicolius

1:29.7

fragilimus.

1:31.7

The only bone found was a single incomplete vertebra that was reported to be a meter and a half

1:39.0

tall, which is about five feet, obviously huge, and that was incomplete. It was actually recreated as a complete

1:47.9

bone a few years ago by Tony DeCrosi and Ken Carpenter. And they ended up with a bone that is more

1:54.2

than eight and a half feet or two and a half meters tall. And we'll have a link to a picture on our

1:59.9

blog and in our newsletter. It's totally crazy.

...

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