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Palaeocast
Description

A free webseries exploring the fossil record and the evolution of life on Earth.

Episodes
  • 2024 / 3 / 22
    Episode 160: An introduction to Evolutionary Biology

    The field of evolutionary biology has been greatly influenced by the development of modern genetic methodology. The understanding of genes, genomes and the molecular mechanisms key to life on Earth are all...

  • 2024 / 2 / 19
    Episode 159: An Introduction to Palaeontology

    In 12 years of podcasting, we have never actually taken the time to address the fundamentals of our field. Such questions could include: what is palaeontology, what is a fossil, how does one become a...

  • 2024 / 2 / 7
    200 Years of Dinos

    It's been two centuries since the first dinosaur, Megalosaurus, was named by William Buckland and to commemorate the date, the Natural History Museum hosted '200 Years of Dinosaurs: Their Rise, Fall, and...

  • 2024 / 2 / 6
    Episode 158: Ceoptera evansae

    The Middle Jurassic is incredibly important to our understanding of pterosaur evolution; however, the remarkable rarity and incompleteness of Middle Jurassic pterosaurs has long hampered scientific...

  • 2023 / 12 / 8
    Episode 157: The Carnegie Diplodocus

    Originally mounted in 1907, the Carnegie specimen is the best example of the sauropod dinosaur Diplodocus, and perhaps the most famous dinosaur skeleton in the world. Casts of the specimen, including the...

  • 2023 / 11 / 9
    Life On Our Planet 8.4 - Dan Tapster

    LOOP 8.4: LOOP Showrunner Dan Tapster returns to give a retrospective on the series and its production. We look at went well and address criticisms; is it possible to keep everyone happy? We finish this...

  • 2023 / 11 / 9
    Life On Our Planet 8.3 - Sophie Lanfear

    LOOP 8.3: Episode 8’s producer, Sophie Lanfear, joins us again to describe how difficult it was to wrap the series up, having to balance telling the story of the last ice age with conveying the message of the...

  • 2023 / 11 / 9
    Life On Our Planet 8.2 - Prof. Danielle Schreve

    LOOP 8.2: Prof. Danielle Schreve, Royal Holloway University of London, joins us to cover the last 2 million years of Earth’s history. We explore the periodicity of glacials and interglacials and the control...

  • 2023 / 11 / 9
    Life On Our Planet 8.1 - Introduction

    LOOP 8.1: Dave and Tom introduce episode 8 and round of this special series on Life On Our Planet. We talk about our favourite scenes and reflect on our time working on the documentary and how our...

  • 2023 / 11 / 7
    Life On Our Planet 7.3 - Darren Williams

    LOOP 7.3: We’re taken into the field to film snow leopards by episode 7’s Assistant Producer, Darren Williams. He reveals how difficult it is to get just a few minutes of video, both logistically and...

  • 2023 / 11 / 7
    Life On Our Planet 7.2 - Prof. Christine Janis

    LOOP 7.2: Prof. Christine Janis, University of Bristol, outlines mammalian evolution and focusses on the global events that governs their radiation. We look at why mammals survived the K-Pg mass extinction...

  • 2023 / 11 / 7
    Life On Our Planet 7.1 - Introduction

    LOOP 7.1: In the introduction to episode 7, Dave and Tom just about keep it together whilst reflecting on the most emotional scene of the show. We also celebrate the inclusion of the Antarctic Circumpolar...

  • 2023 / 11 / 7
    Life On Our Planet 6.4 - Dr Anjan Bhullar

    LOOP 6.4: Prof. Anjan Bhullar continues his overview of avian evolution with a look at how the birds fared after the K-Pg mass extinction. What was it that allowed birds to survive when the non-avian...

  • 2023 / 11 / 6
    Life On Our Planet 6.3 - Edd Dyer

    LOOP 6.3: Documentary research takes you down a lot of unexpected avenues. If you’re recreating something like the Chicxulub impact and the K-Pg mass extinction, then you need to be able to provide answers...

  • 2023 / 11 / 6
    Life On Our Planet 6.2 - Dr Anjan Bhullar

    LOOP 6.2: Dr Anjan Bhullar, Yale University, returns to speak further about dinosaurs. He’s pressed on where he’d draw the line between dinosaur and bird, or whether there should even be a distinction between...

  • 2023 / 11 / 6
    Life On Our Planet 6.1 - Introduction

    LOOP 6.1: Dave and Tom introduce us to episode 6 of Life On Our Planet and the pair touch upon the Chicxulub impact and the radiation of birds into the Cenozoic. Dave curtails the introduction with one of his...

  • 2023 / 11 / 5
    Life On Our Planet 5.3 - Dr Anjan Bhullar

    LOOP 5.3: We’re exploring feather evolution with Dr Anjan Bhullar, University of Yale. We trace feathers up the theropod family tree and question whether or not they would be present in ALL dinosaurs. Anjan...

  • 2023 / 11 / 5
    Life On Our Planet 5.2 - Barny Revill

    LOOP 5.2: Producer Barny Revill returns to talk about his second episode. With the public spotlight firmly fixated on the dinosaurs, how much effort had to go into their GCI models and does the reputation of...

  • 2023 / 11 / 5
    Life On Our Planet 5.1 - Introduction

    LOOP 5.1: It’s episode 5 and Dave and Tom are pronouncing dinosaur names all wrong. Does any actually pronounce it “Deinonychus”? Dave reveals why Netflix chose Morgan Freeman as narrator over himself, Tom...

  • 2023 / 10 / 28
    Life On Our Planet 4.3 - Prof. Peter Falkingham

    LOOP 4.3: Prof. Peter Falkingham, Liverpool John Moores University, was the consultant biomechanist for the series. He introduces us to the importance of biomechanics in CGI, but more widely in determining...

  • 2023 / 10 / 28
    Life On Our Planet 4.2 - Barny Revill

    LOOP 4.2: We get down to details with Producer Barny Revill and analyse some of the different elements of episode 4: What were the challenges of working in such inhospitable environments? How do you recreate...

  • 2023 / 10 / 28
    Life On Our Planet 4.1 - Introduction

    LOOP 4.1: Against the odds, we’ve all made it through the PTME. It’s now time to focus on episode 4, with the reptiles and their adaptation to different environments. We touch upon biomechanics and crank up...

  • 2023 / 10 / 27
    Life On Our Planet 3.4 - Ida-May Jones

    LOOP 3.4: With researcher Ida-May Jones, we explore the Venn diagram of academic and documentary research. She introduces us to the strawberry dart frogs and the extraordinary lengths that mothers will go to...

  • 2023 / 10 / 27
    Life On Our Planet 3.3 - Prof. Mike Benton

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  • 2023 / 10 / 27
    Life On Our Planet 3.2 - Sophie Lanfear

    LOOP 3.2: Producer Sophie Lanfear gives us our first insights into how documentaries are shaped. She tells us about the enormous scope of episode three and the difficulty of trying to fit in so many...

  • 2023 / 10 / 27
    Life On Our Planet 3.1 - Introduction

    LOOP 3.1: We introduce episode three of Life On Our Planet and discuss one of the most significant stories in the series. We’re in agreement that lichens are the unsung heroes of the whole series and that...

  • 2023 / 10 / 26
    Life On Our Planet 2.4 - Edd Dyer

    LOOP 2.4: Silverback researcher Edd Dyer joins us to introduce us to his part in the creation of the series. The title ‘researcher’ really doesn’t do justice to the incredible scope of his role which includes...

  • 2023 / 10 / 26
    Life On Our Planet 2.3 - Dr Tom Fletcher

    LOOP 2.3: Hydrodynamicist Dr Tom Fletcher, Silverback Films, returns to explore the science behind Dunkleosteus. How much of the fossil is known? How does the model compare to the latest reconstruction of the...

  • 2023 / 10 / 26
    Life On Our Planet 2.2 - Prof. Christian Klug

    LOOP 2.2: Prof. Christian Klug, University of Zurich, is our first academic guest. He introduces us to the Cambrian explosion, the Great Ordovician Biodiversification Event and the Late Ordovician Mass...

  • 2023 / 10 / 26
    Life On Our Planet 2.1 - Introduction

    LOOP 2.1: We introduce episode two of Life On Our Planet and discuss our roles in its creation. We’re down deep in the geological time with all the “crunchy and squishy” organisms. We talk about our favourite...

  • 2023 / 10 / 25
    Life On Our Planet 1.2 - Dan Tapster

    In LOOP 1.2 we are joined by showrunner Dan Tapster. He’s the one responsible for pulling everything together, designing the story and creating the best production team. We learn about how LOOP first got...

  • 2023 / 10 / 25
    Life On Our Planet 1.1 - Introduction

    Life On Our Planet (LOOP) is a new 8-part series created for Netflix by Silverback Films and Amblin Television. This Steven Spielberg produced series, narrated by Morgan Freeman, is hugely ambitious in its...

  • 2023 / 10 / 8
    Episode 156: Bird Necks

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  • 2023 / 6 / 1
    Episode 155: The Byron Dig Pt2

    Following up on an initial discovery of ice-age remains in Byron, New York, in the 1950's, Dr Richard Laub took on the task of systematically excavating the 'Hiscock Site' for the Buffalo Museum of Science....

  • 2023 / 5 / 15
    Episode 154: The Byron Dig Pt1

    Following up on an initial discovery of ice-age remains in Byron, New York, in the 1950's, Dr Richard Laub took on the task of systematically excavating the 'Hiscock Site' for the Buffalo Museum of Science....

  • 2023 / 5 / 1
    Episode 153: Castle Bank

    A new Ordovician lagerstätte (site of special fossil preservation) has just been described from Llandrindod Wells, Wales. The site contains the remains of well over 150 different species, most of which are...

  • 2023 / 1 / 25
    Episode 152: Lissamphibian Origins Pt2

    Part 2. Caecilians, sometimes known as ‘blind worms’, are a lesser-known group of lissamphibians (all living amphibians). Most modern caecilians are all fossorial (burrowing) and are restricted to the moist...

  • 2023 / 1 / 25
    Episode 151: Lissamphibian Origins Pt1

    Caecilians, sometimes known as ‘blind worms’, are a lesser-known group of lissamphibians (all living amphibians). Most modern caecilians are all fossorial (burrowing) and are restricted to the moist soils and...

  • 2023 / 1 / 19
    Episode 150: Palaeoart in Pop Culture Pt3

    Palaeontology (dinosaurs in particular) are incredibly well represented in nearly all forms of popular media today. From documentaries and films to computer games and even specialist podcasts. But where did...

  • 2023 / 1 / 1
    Episode 149: Palaeoart in Pop Culture Pt2

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  • 2022 / 12 / 15
    Episode 148: Palaeoart in Pop Culture Pt1

    Palaeontology (dinosaurs in particular) are incredibly well represented in nearly all forms of popular media today. From documentaries and films to computer games and even specialist podcasts. But where did...

  • 2022 / 11 / 15
    Episode 147: Palaeo Gaming Pt2

    Computer games are a colossal industry, eclipsing those of both film and music combined. With so many people playing games, and with so many titles focussing on palaeontological themes, should we be concerned...

  • 2022 / 10 / 21
    Episode 146: Palaeo Gaming Pt1

    Computer games are a colossal industry, eclipsing those of both film and music combined. With so many people playing games, and with so many titles focussing on palaeontological themes, should we be concerned...

  • 2022 / 10 / 5
    Episode 145: Scleromochlus

    Scleromochlus is an animal that has been known for over 100 years, and has been frequently suggested as being an ancestor to pterosaurs. It hails from the Late Triassic of Scotland, and there are fewer than...

  • 2022 / 9 / 15
    Episode 144: Russell's Dinosauroid

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  • 2022 / 9 / 8
    Episode 143: The Palaeontographical Society Pt2

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  • 2022 / 8 / 16
    Episode 142: The Palaeontographical Society Pt1

    This year marks the 175th anniversary of The Palaeontographical Society. Having been established in 1847, PalSoc is the world’s oldest Society devoted specifically to the advancement of palaeontological...

  • 2022 / 7 / 15
    Episode 141: Bolca Fish

    Bolca is a site of exceptional preservation of fossils (termed a konservat lagerstätte) located close to Verona, Italy. This 50 million year old limestone was deposited in the Eocene Epoch and contains over...

  • 2022 / 6 / 20
    Episode 140: Aquatic Spinosaurids

    In the last few years there has been lots of new work on the iconic Spinosaurus - was it aquatic? What about its relatives? What kind of evidence can we look at to tell us this answer? In this episode we...

  • 2022 / 5 / 16
    Episode 139: Marrellomorphs

    Marrellomorphs are the group of early Paleozoic arthropods that get their name from the well-known Burgess Shale fossil Marrella splendens. They have for a long time been considered to be closely related to...

  • 2022 / 4 / 20
    Episode 138: Hispaniolan Sloths

    Sloths (or do you pronounce it “sloths”?), are a group of tree-dwelling xenarthrans from South and Central America. They are well known for their sedentary lifestyles where they just hang around and seemingly...

  • 2022 / 2 / 25
    Episode 137: Tanis

    The end-Cretaceous mass extinction was a cataclysmic asteroid impact that ushered in the end of the non-avian dinosaurs and forever changed the course of evolution on Earth. But what can we say about the...

  • 2022 / 2 / 15
    Episode 136: Burmese Amber Pt2b

    Continuing our mini series on Burmese Amber, we now turn our focus to the ethics of working on this fossil material. Can possessing or working on amber from Myanmar ever be considered ethical? In the first...

  • 2022 / 2 / 3
    Episode 135: Burmese Amber Pt2

    Continuing our mini series on Burmese Amber, we now turn our focus to the ethics of working on this fossil material. Can possessing or working on amber from Myanmar ever be considered ethical? In the first...

  • 2022 / 1 / 16
    Episode 134: Mammal Locomotion and Ecology

    In this episode we talk to Professor Christine Janis about mammal palaeontology, and her career. Christine is one of the world’s foremost experts in mammal palaeontology and mammalogy. She has authored dozens...

  • 2022 / 1 / 2
    Episode 133: Drawing and Painting Dinosaurs

    It can be argued that palaeoart is the single biggest hook for getting people interested in prehistoric life. It takes the complex scientific terminology and data found within the academic literature and...

  • 2021 / 12 / 15
    Episode 132: Burmese Amber Pt1b

    Burmese amber is well known for preserving fossils in exquisite details. This amber is dated to around 100 million years old, representing the Albian - Cenomanian ages of the Cretaceous period, so would have...

  • 2021 / 12 / 2
    Episode 131: Burmese Amber Pt1

    Burmese amber is well known for preserving fossils in exquisite details. This amber is dated to around 100 million years old, representing the Albian - Cenomanian ages of the Cretaceous period, so would have...

  • 2021 / 10 / 30
    Episode 130: Bats

    After rodents, bats are the second largest group of mammals, representing a staggering 20% of all mammal species. They can be found all over the world, with the exception of cold climates, where they often...

  • 2021 / 10 / 1
    Episode 129: Penguins

    Whether it be because of their unique shape, comical walking or extreme ecology, there can be no denying that penguins are incredibly popular and charismatic animals. But what actually makes a penguin a...

  • 2021 / 7 / 31
    Episode 128: Coprolite Inclusions Pt2

    One of the factors that makes palaeontology such a popular science is its constant ability to surprise us. It seems almost every week that a new study is released that significantly adds to our understanding...

  • 2021 / 7 / 19
    Episode 127: Coprolite Inclusions

    One of the factors that makes palaeontology such a popular science is its constant ability to surprise us. It seems almost every week that a new study is released that significantly adds to our understanding...

  • 2021 / 6 / 16
    Episode 126: Beasts Before Us

    In this episode, we talk to our very own Dr Elsa Panciroli about her new book Beasts Before Us. In it, she tells the untold story of mammalian evolution, tracing the origin of synapsids back to the...

  • 2021 / 4 / 30
    Episode 125: Crocodylomorph disparity Pt2

    Crocodiles are often referred to as “living fossils”, but if we compare modern and ancient species, does that label hold up? What different kind of morphologies (shapes) did past crocs have and how did they...

  • 2021 / 4 / 15
    Episode 124: Crocodylomorph disparity

    Crocodiles are often referred to as “living fossils”, but if we compare modern and ancient species, does that label hold up? What different kind of morphologies (shapes) did past crocs have and how did they...

  • 2021 / 3 / 16
    Episode 123: Soil

    Terrestrial life as we know it couldn’t exist without soil. Soil, as we know it today, is a layer of minerals, organic matter, liquids, gasses and organisms that not only provides a medium for plant growth,...

  • 2021 / 3 / 1
    Episode 122: Dietary Ecology of Smilodon fatalis pt2

    Part two of our interview with Dr Larisa DeSantis of Vanderbilt University on the 'dietary ecology' of Smilodon. Smilodon is probably one of the most iconic mammalian apex predators with its extended upper...

  • 2021 / 2 / 15
    Episode 121: Dietary Ecology of Smilodon fatalis Pt1

    Smilodon is probably one of the most iconic mammalian apex predators with its extended upper canines and robustly-built forearms. In fact, when we compare Smilodon to modern cats (felids), we don’t see these...

  • 2021 / 2 / 1
    Episode 120: Naked Ammonite

    It wouldn’t be outlandish to state that many a fossil collection has started with the acquisition of an ammonite. Their planispiral shells (termed a conch) are instantly recognisable and since that conch was...

  • 2020 / 12 / 18
    Episode 119: The Soom Shale

    The Soom Shale is an Ordovician lagerstätte in the Western Cape of South Africa. Whilst it lacks the diversity of organisms seen in other lagerstätten, such as the Burgess Shale or Chengjiang, it more than...

  • 2020 / 12 / 1
    Episode 118: South African Sauropodomorphs

    Piecing together the early lives of dinosaurs is difficult due to a lack of fossils from juvenile and embryonic stages. In this episode, Elsa Panciroli talks to Dr Kimi Chappelle, a postdoctoral fellow at the...

  • 2020 / 11 / 16
    Episode 117: Decolonising Palaeontology

    Lack of diversity is one of the major issues in the sciences in recent times. We’ve discussed diversity in palaeontology in previous podcasts, but in this episode Elsa takes a look at the legacy of racism and...

  • 2020 / 11 / 1
    Episode 116: Ice Age Palaeoecology

    When we think about the Ice Age or the Pleistocene, we generally think of large animals: wooly mammoths trudging through snow, sabre-tooth tigers taking down their next meal, and big bison out on the steppes....

  • 2020 / 10 / 15
    Episode 115b: Diatoms of Lake Baikal

    Part 2. Diatoms are a major group of algae found in waters all around the world. As photosynthetic phytoplankton, they are hugely important ‘primary producers’, integral to nearly every aquatic food chain....

  • 2020 / 10 / 1
    Episode 115a: Diatoms of Lake Baikal

    Diatoms are a major group of algae found in waters all around the world. As photosynthetic phytoplankton, they are hugely important ‘primary producers’, integral to nearly every aquatic food chain. They are...

  • 2020 / 8 / 14
    Episode 114b: Horseshoe Crabs

    Part 2 of 2. The horseshoe crabs (Xiphosura) are a group of large aquatic arthropods known from the East coast of the USA, and the Southern and Eastern coasts of Asia. Despite their name, they are not...

  • 2020 / 7 / 31
    Episode 114a: Horseshoe Crabs

    The horseshoe crabs (Xiphosura) are a group of large aquatic arthropods known from the East coast of the USA, and the Southern and Eastern coasts of Asia. Despite their name, they are not actually crabs at...

  • 2020 / 7 / 15
    Episode 113: PBS Eons

    With palaeontology as popular as it is you will never be short of content online, whether that be articles, blogs, podcasts (of which there are now many others you should also be listening to) or videos. This...

  • 2020 / 6 / 29
    Episode 112: Extinction of the dinosaurs

    The end-Cretaceous (or K-Pg) extinction is one of the best known mass extinctions in Earth's history, primarily because that is when non-avian dinosaurs disappeared. Although the popular idea is that an...

  • 2020 / 6 / 17
    Episode 111: Diversity in Palaeontology

    In this episode, in conjunction with the Society of Vertebrate Paleontology (SVP), we investigate issues of diversity in palaeontology, through interviews with Jann Nassif (PhD student at Ohio University,...

  • 2020 / 5 / 31
    Episode 110: The Fin-Limb Transition and Early Tetrapod Biodiversity

    One of the great themes in palaeobiology is the water-land transition, or how and when the ancestors of today’s four-legged terrestrial animals moved to land. Lines of questioning have included understanding...

  • 2020 / 5 / 1
    Episode 109: Early Tetrapod Feeding Mechanics

    Early tetrapods include the earliest animals to grow legs, and their closest ancestors. Moving from the water to land required a number of changes within the skeleton and muscular system, related to moving...

  • 2020 / 4 / 18
    04/20 Announcement

    Updates about the show and discussion of recent events

  • 2020 / 3 / 1
    Episode 108: Plesiosaurs

    Plesiosaurs are some of the most easily recognisable animals in the fossil record. Simply uttering the words ‘Loch Ness Monster’ can conjure a reasonably accurate image of what they look like. Thanks to...

  • 2020 / 2 / 2
    Episode 107b: Nomenclature

    Part 2. Names can provide a large amount of information about the heritage of an individual, the purpose of a product or even the characteristics of an organism. With so much in a name, are there rules...

  • 2020 / 1 / 20
    Episode 107a: Nomenclature

    Names can provide a large amount of information about the heritage of an individual, the purpose of a product or even the characteristics of an organism. With so much in a name, are there rules governing what...

  • 2020 / 1 / 1
    Episode 106: Herpetology

    Herpetology is the study of reptiles, amphibians and caecilians. This includes frogs, salamanders, crocodiles, snakes, lizards and tuatara, to name just a few. These cold-blooded tetrapods have an...

  • 2019 / 11 / 15
    Episode 105: Ferrodraco

    Australia has many fossils from all ages, including several dinosaurs known exclusively from this time and place. However, they are not well known for their pterosaur fossils, having only a handful of...

  • 2019 / 10 / 15
    Episode 104: Ediacaran Developmental Biology

    The Ediacaran Period is host to the first large and complex multicellular organisms known in the fossil record. This 'Ediacaran Biota' has long eluded definitive placement on the tree of life, seemingly...

  • 2019 / 9 / 15
    Episode 103: Terror Birds

    Terror birds, or phorusrhacids as they are known scientifically, are a group of large, flightless birds that lived during the Cenozoic, and truly lived up to their name. Known for their large, powerful...

  • 2019 / 9 / 1
    Episode 102b: Small Shelly Fossils

    Between the weird and wonderful rangeomorphs of the Ediacaran Period and the world-famous palaeocommunities of the Burgess Shale, the 'Early Cambrian' is host to a 'waste basket' of fossils untied by their...

  • 2019 / 8 / 14
    Episode 102a: Small Shelly Fossils

    Between the weird and wonderful rangeomorphs of the Ediacaran Period and the world-famous palaeocommunities of the Burgess Shale, the 'Early Cambrian' is host to a 'waste basket' of fossils untied by their...

  • 2019 / 7 / 1
    Episode 101: Organic Preservation of Dinosaur Bone

    Fossilisation of organic material was long thought to result in the complete loss of original content. However in the last 20 years, several high-profile publications reported the discovery of proteins, blood...

  • 2019 / 5 / 24
    Episode 100: Tiktaalik

    One of palaeontology‘s great themes of questioning is the rise of novelty: how new structures and functions arise in specific lineages. In this episode we speak with Neil Shubin, Professor of Organismal...

  • 2019 / 4 / 15
    Episode 99: Megalodon and Marine Megafauna

    Undoubtedly, Megalodon is the world’s most famous extinct shark is and in this episode, we hear everything we know about this taxon, its ecology and how it got to be so big. Its ultimate extinction is also...

  • 2019 / 3 / 15
    Episode 98: 10 Tons

    From 1:1 scale whales to microfossils scaled up to the size of a house, there are few model-building projects that 10 Tons are afraid to take on. At the helm of this business is Esben Horn and in this...

  • 2019 / 2 / 28
    Episode 97: Opsins

    Opsins are the photosensitive proteins in the eye, responsible for converting a photons of light into an electro-chemical signals. Different opsins react to different wavelengths of light, each corresponding...

  • 2019 / 1 / 1
    Episode 96: Decapods

    Decapods are a group of crustaceans that include such well-known families as crabs, lobsters and shrimp. Whilst crustaceans are known from as early as the Cambrian, we don't see the first decapods until...

  • 2018 / 10 / 16
    Episode 95: Plants and Atmosphere

    The interaction between plants and atmosphere forms the basis of the carbon cycle and is amongst the most important processes for maintaining life on the planet today. Photosynthesis removes carbon dioxide...

  • 2018 / 9 / 17
    Episode 94: Joggins Fossil Cliffs

    The Carboniferous was a time of huge swampy forests, big trees, and lots of life both on land and in the ocean. One world-renowned fossil site from approximately 300 million years ago is the Joggins Fossil...

  • 2018 / 8 / 12
    Episode 93: The History of Palaeontological Outreach

    Palaeontology has an ability to grab the public’s attention like no other subject. Perhaps it’s the size and ferocity of something like a T. rex, or maybe it’s the alien nature of something like Hallucigenia....

  • 2018 / 7 / 1
    The Expedition: Context

    Welcome to this special series of podcasts relating to a fieldtrip that I have been invited on by Dr Martin Brazeau of Imperial College London. I’m being flown out as the Palaeozoic arthropod “expert” of the...

  • 2018 / 7 / 1
    The Expedition: Planning

    Welcome to this special series of podcasts relating to a fieldtrip that I have been invited on by Dr Martin Brazeau of Imperial College London. I’m being flown out as the Palaeozoic arthropod “expert” of the...

  • 2018 / 5 / 30
    Episode 92: Squamate Origins

    Squamates are a group of reptiles that include lizards and snakes, with the earliest fossils occurring in the Jurassic, despite molecular studies dating the group back to the Triassic. The study of their...

  • 2018 / 5 / 24
    Episode 91: Dinosaurs of Appalachia

    The Appalachian mountains, span the Eastern margin of the United States of America. They are predominantly composed of Paleozoic rocks, but Mesozoic marine sediments (formed adjacent to the Appalachian...

  • 2018 / 5 / 3
    Episode 90: Ichthyornis

    Bird evolution has long fascinated palaeontologists. Despite crown-group birds (birds giving rise to modern lineages today) evolving during the Cretaceous, there are relatively few fossils from this time,...

  • 2018 / 4 / 17
    Episode 89: Teeth and herbivory in reptiles

    Tooth shape and arrangement is strongly linked with diet, and palaeontologists often use teeth to determine what kind of food an animal may have been eating. Carnivorous teeth are generally more simple, while...

  • 2018 / 4 / 6
    Episode 88: Bacula

    The buculum is a bone present in the head of the penis of most mammals. Whilst a few mammals, like us, don't possess a baculum, some have greatly reduced versions and many have very elaborate shapes. Despite...

  • 2018 / 3 / 17
    Episode 87: Archaeopteryx

    Archaeopteryx is perhaps one of the most iconic taxa in the fossil record. Exclusively found in the Late Jurassic Solnhofen Lagerstätte in Bavaria, Germany, it is a crucial taxon for understanding the...

  • 2018 / 2 / 1
    Episode 86: Coal

    The Carboniferous (Latin for ‘coal-bearing’) is a period of the Paleozoic named after the massive accumulations of coal that were formed globally during this time. These coal deposits were the fuel for the...

  • 2018 / 1 / 7
    Episode 85: Ichthyosaurs

    Ichthyosaurs are large marine reptiles that existed for most of the Mesozoic Era. The most familiar forms superficially represent dolphins, but some earlier ichthyosaurs were more eel like. They could attain...

  • 2018 / 1 / 6
    Episode 84: Neoproterozoic Acritarchs

    In this episode, we interview Dr Leigh Anne Riedman, University of California, about life during the Neoproterozoic Era, the most recent of the Precambrian Eon. This time interval is far from straight...

  • 2017 / 12 / 1
    Episode 83: Gogo Fishes

    Professor John Long is an early vertebrate researcher at Flinders University, Australia. He is most famous for his work on the three-dimentionally-preserved fish from the Gogo Formation, North West Australia....

  • 2017 / 10 / 17
    Episode 82: Dinosaurs of China

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  • 2017 / 10 / 1
    Episode 81: Coccolithophores

    Coccolithophores are tiny unicellular eukaryotic phytoplankton (algae). Each is covered with even smaller calcium carbonate plates called coccoliths and it is these that are commonly preserved in the fossil...

  • 2017 / 9 / 1
    Episode 80: Paleocreations

    We've covered how palaeoart is made on Palaeocast before, but never what daily life is like for a professional palaeoartist. What does it take to get started, when can you say no to a commission and which...

  • 2017 / 8 / 1
    Episode 79: Late Devonian Vertebrates

    The transition of fins to limbs is one of the most significant in the history of vertebrate evolution. These were the first steps that would eventually allow tetrapods to go on to dominate so many terrestrial...

  • 2017 / 6 / 30
    Episode 78: Japanese Palaeontology

    When thinking of palaeontology in Asia, most people think of Mongolia and China, but there is actually a significant palaeontology community in Japan. Japan has many fossils, starting in the Ordovician, and...

  • 2017 / 6 / 15
    Episode 77: South American Gomphotheres

    The proboscideans are a group of animals that contains the elephant and mastodont families. Many of us will be well-aware of these groups, but what of some of the lesser-known proboscideans? One such family...

  • 2017 / 5 / 15
    Episode 76: Hydrodynamics

    The shape of an animal is a reflection of the way it interacts with the physical world around it. By studying the mechanical laws which influence the evolution of modern animals, we can better understand the...

  • 2017 / 5 / 2
    Episode 75: Laser-Stimulated Fluorescence

    Palaeontology is a constantly evolving field; when new methods and techniques are invented, they allow us to revisit old fossils and test our previous observations and hypotheses. Recently, an exciting new...

  • 2017 / 4 / 12
    Episode 74: Early Archosaurs and Teleocrater

    We have a pretty good idea about how different dinosaur groups evolved, and how they are related (although anyone who has been following the recent dinosaur relationship shake-up knows this is not quite as...

  • 2017 / 3 / 15
    Episode 73: Sensory Structures

    Ask anyone to list all the senses and they'll probably stop at five. Touch, taste, sight, smell and hearing are all important to humans, but in the animal kingdom, there exist others. In this interview, Prof....

  • 2017 / 2 / 1
    Episode 72b: Las Hoyas

    Las Hoyas is a Early Cretaceous lagerstätte (site of special preservation) located close to the city of Cuenca, Spain. In this episode, we welcome Ángela Delgado Buscalioni and Francisco JosÊ Poyato-Ariza,...

  • 2017 / 1 / 18
    Episode 72a: Las Hoyas

    Las Hoyas is a Early Cretaceous lagerstätte (site of special preservation) located close to the city of Cuenca, Spain. In this episode, we welcome Ángela Delgado Buscalioni and Francisco JosÊ Poyato-Ariza,...

  • 2016 / 12 / 1
    SVP2016 B

    This year, the 76th Annual Meeting of the Society of Vertebrate Paleontology was held in Salt Lake City, Utah, USA. We sent Liz and Caitlin there to report on events at the conference.

  • 2016 / 11 / 16
    SVP2016 A

    This year, the 76th Annual Meeting of the Society of Vertebrate Paleontology was held in Salt Lake City, Utah, USA. We sent Liz and Caitlin there to report on events at the conference.

  • 2016 / 10 / 15
    Episode 71: Graptolites

    Graptolites are small colonial organisms, each made up of many tiny, genetically identical zooids joined together by tubes. They've been around since the Cambrian and at times in Earth's history have been...

  • 2016 / 10 / 1
    Episode 70: The Golden Age of Dinosaur Discovery

    The last 10 years has shown a large increase in the number of new species and new discoveries of dinosaurs, as well as the number of papers written. It seems that almost every week there is a new species or...

  • 2016 / 8 / 16
    Episode 69: Fungal Symbioses

    Plants, Animals and fungi; these are all three of the Kingdoms of life we’re all most familiar with, but what you might not know is that fungi are more closely related to animals than they are to plants....

  • 2016 / 8 / 1
    Episode 68: Fossil plants and the Paleocene Eocene thermal maximum

    The Bighorn Basin in Wyoming has been an important area for research into terrestrial ecosystems for decades. The basin formed as part of the uprising of the Rocky Mountains in the west of North America, and...

  • 2016 / 7 / 22
    Episode 67: Blue Beach Tetrapods

    Blue Beach is a locality in Nova Scotia, Canada that is well known for it's fossils from the Lower Carboniferous. In particular, it is significant for being one of few sites in the world that has fossils from...

  • 2016 / 6 / 28
    Episode 66b: Saving Mongolia’s Dinosaurs

    Mongolia is a vast country with fossils from almost every period in the history of life. Important specimens representing the origin of birds, the origin of mammals, many unique dinosaur species, and the...

  • 2016 / 6 / 28
    Episode 66a: Saving Mongolia’s Dinosaurs

    Mongolia is a vast country with fossils from almost every period in the history of life. Important specimens representing the origin of birds, the origin of mammals, many unique dinosaur species, and the...

  • 2016 / 6 / 3
    Episode 65: Saurian

    “Saurian is a video game focused on providing the most captivating prehistoric experience ever developed for commercial gaming: living like a true dinosaur in a dynamic open world through intense, survival...

  • 2016 / 5 / 29
    Episode 64: When life nearly died

    Around 250 million years ago, the largest biotic crisis the world has ever known occurred. The Permo-Triassic Mass Extinction (PTME) was an event that saw the loss of up to 95% of all species. The extinction...

  • 2016 / 4 / 13
    Episode 63: Return of the Tully Monster

    Science is a process and so the door to the revision and refinement of hypotheses must always be left open. From the research discussed in our last episode, the newspapers would have you believe that the...

  • 2016 / 3 / 18
    Episode 62: The Tully Monster

    Tullimonstrum gregarium, better known as the ‘Tully Monster’ is a problematic fossil from the Late Carboniferous Mazon Creek lagerstätte, Illinois, USA. The identity of this fossil has been the subject of...

  • 2016 / 3 / 15
    Episode 61: WitmerLab

    Dr. Larry Witmer’s lab at Ohio University studies the anatomy of modern animals to make interpretations regarding the functional morphology of extinct vertebrates. WitmerLab incorporates anatomical studies...

  • 2016 / 3 / 4
    Episode 60: Determining Diet

    Diet is perhaps the most important aspect of ecology. As such, understanding the diet of extinct animals is crucial if we wish to reconstruct the ecosystems of the past. However, determining what was on the...

  • 2016 / 2 / 22
    Episode 59: Chemnitz petrified forest

    Beneath the city of Chemnitz, Germany, exists a entire fossilised forest. This whole ecosystem was preserved in life-position during a series of volcanic events. The forest is from the Permian period and thus...

  • 2016 / 1 / 15
    Episode 58: Animal biomechanics

    One of the most difficult aspects of palaeontology is understanding how extinct animals moved around. It’s one thing to find a fossil and reconstruct it’s morphology, but it’s completely another to put that...

  • 2016 / 1 / 1
    Episode 57: Wealden Fossils

    The Wealden Supergroup of southern England is known for it's Cretaceous fossils, particularly of dinosaurs, but also crocodilians, pterosaurs, lizards, invertebrates, and plants. The group represents the...

  • 2015 / 12 / 5
    Virtual Natural History Museum

    Laura interviews Dave about Palaeocast's new project: The Virtual Natural History Museum. The Virtual Natural History Museum (V-NHM) is a project designed to make digital palaeontological resources accessible...

  • 2015 / 12 / 1
    Episode 56 - Vertebrate preparators

    Preparators are specialist staff working in museums and universities worldwide. They perform a very wide variety of tasks from fieldwork excavations, to specimen conservation. Any fossil has to be prepared...

  • 2015 / 11 / 30
    Geological Society of America annual meeting 2015

    This year the annual meeting of the Geological Society of America was held in Baltimore, Maryland. This is one of the largest conferences that palaeontologists attend, with over 6000 attendees from all fields...

  • 2015 / 11 / 15
    Episode 55: Pterosaurs

    Pterosaurs were the first vertebrates to achieve powered flight, and lived in the skies above the dinosaurs during the Mesozoic. They're often mistakenly identified as dinosaurs, but are in fact a separate,...

  • 2015 / 11 / 10
    SVP 2015 Dallas Texas Part 3

    The last part of our coverage from the 75th annual meeting of the society of vertebrate paleonology. In this part Caitlin speaks to Professor Christopher Smith about the history of the society, how it was...

  • 2015 / 11 / 10
    SVP 2015 Dallas Texas Part 2

    In the second part of our SVP coverage we have interviews with some of the researchers on the scientific content of their posters and conference presentations.

  • 2015 / 11 / 10
    SVP 2015 Dallas Texas Part 1

    The Society of Vertebrate Paleontology annual meeting is the largest conference each year for the world's vertebrate palaeontologists to present their work, network with each other, and find out what everyone...

  • 2015 / 11 / 1
    Episode 54: Crystal Palace Dinosaurs

    The ‘Crystal Palace Dinosaurs’ are a series of sculptures of extinct animals including dinosaurs, other extinct reptiles and mammals, which can be found in the grounds of the Crystal Palace in London....

  • 2015 / 10 / 15
    Episode 53: Ankylosaurs

    Ankylosaurs are a group of non-avian dinosaurs best known for their armour, tank-like bodies, and sometimes large tail clubs. First appearing in the Jurassic, they were common in Late Cretaceous ecosystems,...

  • 2015 / 9 / 28
    Episode 52: Melanin

    Melanin is a pigment that is found across the animal kingdom. Melanosomes, the organelles that contain melanin, have been found preserved in fossil feathers and melanosome shape has been used to infer the...

  • 2015 / 9 / 27
    63rd Symposium of Vertebrate Palaeontology and Comparative Anatomy

    The Symposium of Vertebrate Palaeontology and Comparative Anatomy (SVPCA) annual conference was held at the University of Southampton National Oceanography Centre at the beginning of September. This is the...

  • 2015 / 9 / 1
    Episode 51: Eurypterids

    Eurypterids, or ‘sea-scorpions’ are an extinct group of chelicerates: the group containing the terrestrial arachnids (such as spiders and scorpions) and the aquatic ‘merostomes’ (represented today solely by...

  • 2015 / 8 / 14
    Episode 50: Rangeomorph Reproduction

    On today's episode we're revisiting Mistaken Point, Newfoundland, Canada. At this lagerstätte it is possible to find large bedding planes full of Precambrian organisms called rangeomorphs. These are an...

  • 2015 / 7 / 31
    Episode 49: Synapsids

    Synapsids are one of the major groups of terrestrial vertebrates. They first appear in the Carboniferous period and since that time have gone through many radiation and extinction events. But what did these...

  • 2015 / 7 / 17
    Episode 48: The Burgess Shale

    The Burgess Shale is probably the world's most famous lagerstätte (site of special preservation). Discovered in 1909 on Mt. Stephen, in the Canadian Rockies of British Colombia, Canada, this locality provided...

  • 2015 / 6 / 29
    Episode 47: Lobopodians

    It's been quite a week for lobopodians! First off, we've had the redescription of Hallucigenia by Dr Martin Smith. This enigmatic fossil from the Burgess Shale typifies the difficulty palaeontologists have...

  • 2015 / 6 / 15
    Episode 46: Understanding Biodiversity

    The world is currently undergoing a massive biodiversity crisis, and many people have said that we are in the next major mass extinction event, with species going extinct each day. Unfortunately, we don't...

  • 2015 / 6 / 1
    Episode 45: Post K-Pg radiations

    The Cretaceous-Paleogene (K-Pg) mass extinction was the latest of the 'big five' events. Approximately 75% of species went extinct, with the most notable victims being non-avian dinosaurs. But what happened...

  • 2015 / 5 / 1
    Episode 44: Trackway modelling

    We've covered ichnology before, in Episode 14, but it's time to revisit trackways with a high-tech approach. We talk to ichnologist and computer expert Dr Peter Falkingham, from Liverpool John Moores...

  • 2015 / 4 / 29
    Palaeocast Art Competition 2015

    After the success of last year’s palaeoart competition we’re stepping up a gear and launching an even bigger and better contest. This time we've got three times as many prizes to give away courtesy of Cider...

  • 2015 / 4 / 15
    Episode 43: Ancient DNA

    DNA (deoxyribonucleic acid) is a molecule that encodes the genetic information within every species of life on earth. The information contained within the sequence of base pairs determines how any given...

  • 2015 / 4 / 1
    Episode 42: Pterosaur aerodynamics

    Palaeontology is more than just going out into the field, digging up bones, and putting them back together. A good understanding of biology, geology, and even engineering can help to figure out how extinct...

  • 2015 / 3 / 15
    Episode 41b: Insects

    Insects are the most abundant and diverse group on animals on the planet today. Would they therefore also be expected to have the richest fossil record? When did they first evolve and how rapid was their...

  • 2015 / 3 / 1
    Episode 41a: Insects

    Insects are the most abundant and diverse group on animals on the planet today. Would they therefore also be expected to have the richest fossil record? When did they first evolve and how rapid was their...

  • 2015 / 2 / 15
    Episode 40b: Brachiopods

    Brachiopods are some of the most common fossils to be found in rocks worldwide. Their thick, hard and (often) calcareous shells make them preferentially preserved in the fossil record. We probably all have...

  • 2015 / 2 / 1
    Episode 40a: Brachiopods

    Brachiopods are some of the most common fossils to be found in rocks worldwide. Their thick, hard and (often) calcareous shells make them preferentially preserved in the fossil record. We probably all have...

  • 2015 / 1 / 1
    Episode 39: Dinosaurs of Alberta

    Alberta, Canada is one of the world’s richest areas for dinosaur fossils, and especially fossils from the Late Cretaceous. Iconic dinosaurs like T. rex, Triceratops, and Parasaurolophus, as well as numerous...

  • 2014 / 12 / 10
    Episode 38: Ceratopsians

    Ceratopsians are some of the most iconic dinosaurs that we recognise today including animals like Triceratops and Styracosaurus, with their big horns and frills. But is that what all 'horned dinosaurs' looked...

  • 2014 / 12 / 1
    Episode 37: Theropods and birds

    Theropods are what we would classically recognise as the meat-eating dinosaurs of the Mesozoic Era. They are best known from genera such as Tyrannosaurus and Velociraptor but the group is much more diverse...

  • 2014 / 11 / 10
    Society of Vertebrate Paleontology 2014 Day 4

    Welcome to our coverage of the Society of Vertebrate Paleontology annual conference held this year at the Estrel Hotel, Berlin, between the 5th and 9th November.       We're delighted to be back at this...

  • 2014 / 11 / 7
    Society of Vertebrate Paleontology 2014 Day 3

    Welcome to our coverage of the Society of Vertebrate Paleontology annual conference held this year at the Estrel Hotel, Berlin, between the 5th and 9th November.     We're delighted to be back at this event,...

  • 2014 / 11 / 6
    Society of Vertebrate Paleontology 2014 Day 2

    Welcome to our coverage of the Society of Vertebrate Paleontology annual conference held this year at the Estrel Hotel, Berlin, between the 5th and 9th November.   We're delighted to be back at this event,...

  • 2014 / 11 / 6
    Society of Vertebrate Paleontology 2014 Day 1

    Welcome to our coverage of the Society of Vertebrate Paleontology annual conference held this year at the Estrel Hotel, Berlin, between the 5th and 9th November. We're delighted to be back at this event,...

  • 2014 / 11 / 1
    Episode 36: Emu Bay Shale

    The Emu Bay shale is a Burgess Shale-type lagerstätte from the Early Cambrian of South Australia. We speak to Dr John Paterson, of the University of New England, all about the locality and the fossils it...

  • 2014 / 10 / 16
    Episode 35: Ostracods

    Ostracods are tiny crustaceans (relatives of shrimps, crabs and water-fleas), distinguished by having a shell that is easily fossilised. As microfossils, by virtue of a long and rich fossil record, ostracods...

  • 2014 / 10 / 7
    IPC4 Day 4

    Welcome to the final day of our coverage of the 4th International Palaeontological Congress (IPC4) from Mendoza, Argentina.

  • 2014 / 10 / 6
    IPC4 Day 3

    Welcome to the third day of our coverage of the 4th International Palaeontological Congress (IPC4) from Mendoza, Argentina.

  • 2014 / 10 / 1
    IPC4 Day 2

    Welcome to the second day of our coverage of the 4th International Palaeontological Congress (IPC4) from Mendoza, Argentina.

  • 2014 / 9 / 30
    IPC4 Day 1

    Welcome to our coverage of the 4th International Palaeontological Congress (IPC4) from Mendoza, Argentina. The International Palaeontological Congress is a global meeting devoted to Palaeontology throughout...

  • 2014 / 9 / 25
    Episode 34b: Foraminifera and Palaeoclimatology

    Planktonic foraminifera are single celled organisms that are highly abundant in modern oceans and a hugely important part of the Earth’s carbon cycle. Each cell builds a hard calcite ‘test’ around itself in a...

  • 2014 / 9 / 15
    Episode 34a: Foraminifera and Palaeoclimatology

    Planktonic foraminifera are single celled organisms that are highly abundant in modern oceans and a hugely important part of the Earth's carbon cycle. Each cell builds a hard calcite 'test' around itself in a...

  • 2014 / 9 / 1
    Episode 33: Year 2 Review

    We now find ourselves embarking upon our third year, but before we do so, we're going to take a look back at last year and see what we've all been up to.

  • 2014 / 8 / 15
    Episode 32B: Canids

    We’re all familiar with canines (dogs, wolves, jackals, foxes, etc), but these are just only one of three sub-families of the larger canid family to survive to the present day. There were also the...

  • 2014 / 8 / 5
    Episode 32A: Canids

    We're all familiar with canines (dogs, wolves, jackals, foxs, etc), but these are just only one of three sub-families of the larger canid family to survive to the present day. There were also the...

  • 2014 / 7 / 15
    Episode 31: Anomalocaridids

    Anomalocaridids are iconic Cambrian animals, originally found in the Burgess Shale deposits in Canada. From the Genus Anomalocaris, their name translates as 'strange shrimp' owing to their initial...

  • 2014 / 7 / 1
    Episode 30: Palaeoart

    The celebrate the launch of 'The Paleoart of Julius Csotonyi' from Titan Books we take a look at the field of palaeoart. In this episode, we're joined by Julius himself and ask how his images are produced,...

  • 2014 / 6 / 15
    Episode 29B: Medusae

    One of the longest-ranging and outwardly primitive-looking groups of animals on the planet are the Medusozoa. In consisting of around 95% water, it may be surprising to know that there is a fossil record of...

  • 2014 / 6 / 1
    Episode 29A: Medusae

    One of the longest-ranging and outwardly primitive-looking groups of animals on the planet are the Medusozoa. In consisting of around 95% water, it may be surprising to know that there is a fossil record of...

  • 2014 / 5 / 1
    Episode 28: From worms to stars

    Echinoderms are characterised by a mineralised skeleton, specialised water vascular system and five-fold symmetry. It is this unusual body plane symmetry that gives the starfish its star-shape. None of these...

  • 2014 / 3 / 15
    Episode 27: Mare aux Songes

    One of the most iconic animals to ever have gone extinct is the dodo, Raphus cucullatus. Endemic to Mauritius, this flightless bird was last seen around 1662 and is thought to have been driven to extinction...

  • 2014 / 2 / 1
    Episode 26: The Tree of Mammals

    Mammals are an incredibly diverse and highly successful group of animals. They include some of the tallest, heaviest and fastest animals around today, as well as our own species. For over 100 years,...

  • 2014 / 1 / 16
    Episode 25: Marsupials of Riversleigh

    Continuing our look at Australia's marsupials, we speak to Dr. Karen Black, also of the University of New South Wales. Here, we discuss Riversleigh fossil site, what fossils it contains, how they preserved...

  • 2014 / 1 / 1
    Episode 24: Marsupial evolution

    Marsupials are a group of mammals best known from Australia, but are also present in South America and up to the southern and eastern parts of the USA. Despite their current geographical distribution,...

  • 2013 / 12 / 1
    Episode 23: Mass extinctions

    What are Mass extinctions, how are they quantified, what are the driving forces behind them, how bad were the ones in the past and will we have more in the future? To answer these questions we are joined by...

  • 2013 / 11 / 5
    SVP Day 4

    The Society of Vertebrate Paleontology are this year holding their annual conference in the Westin Bonaventure Hotel, Los Angeles. The SVP were formed in 1940 by thirty-four paleontologists, the society now...

  • 2013 / 11 / 2
    SVP Day 3

    The Society of Vertebrate Paleontology are this year holding their annual conference in the Westin Bonaventure Hotel, Los Angeles. The SVP were formed in 1940 by thirty-four paleontologists, the society now...

  • 2013 / 11 / 1
    SVP Day 2

    The Society of Vertebrate Paleontology are this year holding their annual conference in the Westin Bonaventure Hotel, Los Angeles. The SVP were formed in 1940 by thirty-four paleontologists, the society now...

  • 2013 / 10 / 31
    Society of Vertebrate Paleontology: Day 1

    The Society of Vertebrate Paleontology are this year holding their annual conference in the Westin Bonaventure Hotel, Los Angeles. The SVP were formed in 1940 by thirty-four paleontologists, the society now...

  • 2013 / 10 / 30
    GSA day 3

    This year sees the GSA celebrate its 125th anniversary, having formed in 1888. It's a massive event with thousands of attendees. There are literally hundreds of talks to hear and posters to see, so we're...

  • 2013 / 10 / 29
    GSA Day 2

    This year sees the GSA celebrate its 125th anniversary, having formed in 1888. It's a massive event with thousands of attendees. There are literally hundreds of talks to hear and posters to see, so we're...

  • 2013 / 10 / 27
    Geological Society of America: Day 1

    This year sees the GSA celebrate its 125th anniversary, having formed in 1888. It's a massive event with thousands of attendees. There are literally hundreds of talks to hear and posters to see, so we're...

  • 2013 / 10 / 15
    Episode 22: Fire and Charcoal

    Most people would consider fire to be an entirely destructive process, however given the right circumstances organic materials can be exquisitely preserved by charcoalification. We no doubt all know charcoal...

  • 2013 / 10 / 1
    Episode 21: Marine reptiles of Svalbard

    In this episode we talk to Jørn Hurum, Associate Professor of Vertebrate Paleontology at the Natural History Museum Oslo, Norway.  Jørn has varied research interests including dinosaurs and mammals (being one...

  • 2013 / 9 / 15
    Episode 20: Year Review

    As Palaeocast celebrates it's 1st Birthday, we take the chance to look back over the past year and review our highlights. We also look towards the future and discuss our plans to attend some upcoming...

  • 2013 / 9 / 1
    Episode 19: The Great Ordovician Biodiversification Event

    The Great Ordovician Biodiversification Event, or 'GOBE', describes one of the most important increases in biodiversity in the history of life on earth. During a relatively short time span of some 25 million...

  • 2013 / 7 / 1
    Episode 18: Trilobites

    Trilobites are one of the most instantly recognisable groups of fossils. They were present from the very start of the Paleozoic and went on the fill a great number of ecological roles before going extinct at...

  • 2013 / 5 / 15
    Episode 17: Ammonoid evolution and ecology

    Ammonoids are a diverse group of cephalopods, a group of molluscs that include squid, octopuses, cuttlefish and nautiloids. They lived for over 300 million years (from the Early Devonian – the end Cretaceous)...

  • 2013 / 5 / 1
    Episode 16: Multicellularity in cyanobacteria

    One of the most significant events in Earth’s history has been the oxygenation of its atmosphere 2.45–2.32 billion years ago. This accumulation of molecular oxygen in Earth’s atmosphere was so significant...

  • 2013 / 4 / 15
    Episode 15: Micropalaeontology

    Perhaps one of the most overlooked areas of palaeontology, within the public eye, is micropalaeontology. Micropalaeontology is an umbrella discipline, covering a diverse range of organisms, with...

  • 2013 / 4 / 1
    Episode 14b: Trace fossils

    Ichnology is the study of trace fossils (also termed ichnofossils). Opposed to body fossils, the physical remains of an organism, trace fossils are the fossilised interactions between an organism and the...

  • 2013 / 3 / 15
    Episode 14a: Trace fossils

    Ichnology is the study of trace fossils (also termed ichnofossils). Opposed to body fossils, the physical remains of an organism, trace fossils are the fossilised interactions between an organism and the...

  • 2013 / 3 / 1
    Episode 13: Best Western Denver Southwest

    Every palaeontologist needs to put their feet up once in a while, and what better place to do so that the Best Western Denver Southwest? This hotel is located just a stone's-throw away from Dinosaur Ridge,...

  • 2013 / 2 / 15
    Episode 12: Paleozoic problematica

    Fossils, at the best of times, are difficult to interpret. Palaeontologists attempt to reconstruct organisms from what little remains are left. This can be relatively simple for groups that we are familiar...

  • 2013 / 2 / 1
    Episode 11: Sexual selection in the fossil record

    Sexual selection is responsible for much of the astounding diversity in morphology and behaviour that we can see in animals and plants today, but how can we reliably recognise it in the fossil record? We...

  • 2013 / 1 / 15
    Episode 10: Carboniferous Arthropods

    The first animals came onto land sometime before 425 Ma. These early colonizers were members of a group called the arthropods - probably early relatives of the millipedes first. However, early land animals -...

  • 2013 / 1 / 1
    Episode 9: The Palaeontological Association AGM

    The 16th to the 18th December 2012 saw University College Dublin host  The Palaeontological Association (PalAss) 56th annual general meeting. Palaeocast were present at the conference for quite a few reasons:...

  • 2012 / 12 / 15
    Episode 8: Mesozoic Vertebrate Ecology

    The Mesozoic Era saw the spectacular rise and fall of many groups, particularly in terrestrial vertebrates. These include birds, squamates, crocodiles, and pterosaurs, who wove a complex tapestry of evolution...

  • 2012 / 11 / 15
    Episode 7: Colouration in fossils

    We can observe colour to be highly important for animals today. It can be used for many different purposes, including camouflage and signalling, and produced by many different methods. What is true of...

  • 2012 / 11 / 1
    Episode 6: Early vertebrate evolution and extinction

    Vertebrates are one of the most diverse and successful groups of animals on the planet. Modern vertebrates come in an astounding array of sizes and shapes and can be found anywhere from the deepest oceans to...

  • 2012 / 10 / 15
    Episode 5: Mistaken Point

    The biota of the Ediacaran period (635 - 541 ma) is of critical importance to our understanding of the origin of animals because it immediately precedes the Cambrian fauna, from which all subsequent animal...

  • 2012 / 10 / 1
    Episode 4: The fossil forests of Gilboa

    We interview Professor William Stein of Binghamton University about the world's first forets at Gilboa, NY, USA. We talk through the history of the research at this famous locality covering the destruction of...

  • 2012 / 9 / 15
    Episode 3: Amber and Parasitism

    We got a chance to talk to Dr. George Poinar of Oregon State University about his work in amber. We discuss what it is and how it forms, but also talk about the organisms that are preserved within and the...

  • 2012 / 8 / 29
    Episode 1: Earliest fossils and the hunt for extraterrestrial life

    You may be forgiven for having missed the news of NASA's Curiosity rover, or Mars Science Laboratory (MSL), having landed on Mars, given all the coverage the 2012 Olympics had been getting. To try and even...

  • 2012 / 8 / 28
    Episode 2: Isotelus Rex

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