The University of Queensland's Dr Steve Salisbury and Museums Victoria's Tim Ziegler join Philip Clark to talk about Australian dinosaurs for ABC Nightlife
Research by palaeontologists from The University of Queensland is revealing exciting new insights into one of Australia's most important dinosaur fossils.
A new study lead by PhD candidate Andréas Jannel sheds light on the foot biomechanics and posture of sauropod dinosaurs, using Rhoetosaurus brownei, an early sauropod from the Middle Jurassic Walloon Coal Measures of Roma, south-western Queensland, Australia
An unprecedented 21 different types of dinosaur tracks have been identified on a 25-kilometre stretch of the Dampier Peninsula coastline around Walmadany (James Price Point).
Seasickness, snow and sea ice couldn’t keep a University of Queensland scientist from his mission to learn more about Antarctica’s dinosaurs, with the palaeontologist returning from his trip with more than a tonne of fossils.
Everyone loves a good dinosaur story and they don’t come much better than the dramatic dinosaur stampede found in Queensland’s outback. But did a stampede really happen?
Palaeontologists have reaffirmed the idea that the set of large footprints at Lark Quarry in outback Queensland were made by a plant-eating ornithopod dinosaur, as opposed to a predatory theropod.
Congratulations to UQ VP & Biomechanics Lab PhD candidate Anthony Romilio on winning the prestigious 2014 Taylor & Francis Award for Best Student Article in Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology.
The rolling downs of central-western Queensland are littered with the remnants of a bygone world. With luck and a good eye, one might find the sun-bleached bones of a long-dead giant dinosaur or a diminutive crocodilian.
Congratulations to Caitlin Syme for taking out the Best Student Oral Presentation prize at the 14th Conference on Vertebrate Evolution, Palaeontology, and Systematics (CAVEPS) in Adelaide.