I have not posted in a very long time, and I’m afraid I need only two words to explain that: college applications. Things may remain like this for a while.
On a different note, I was recently given the opportunity
during an oceanography class to research anything ocean-related that I wanted.
The only stipulation for this project was that I must ultimately present my
research is some way to the class at some point during the semester. Once a
week for the entire quarter, the entire class was given free reign with laptops
and whatever supplies the teacher had in her classroom. For me, this was the result:
I tend to gravitate towards animals
and fantastic monsters that don’t seem like they could possibly be real, so I
naturally decided to start in the Triassic. I started surfing the web and
collecting information, and eventually ended up with a Word page filled with
jumbled facts about nothosaurs. Nothosaurs are a less well-known species of
ancient reptiles—not dinosaurs—that I stumbled across while looking for large
species of marine and coast animals. My original intention was to do a
comparative analysis of Triassic-era to modern-day ocean life; to find an
animal from each time period that more or less matched up, and then list the
common traits between the two. As I worked, however, I realized that I’d been
spending almost all of my time researching nothosaurs, and that I had almost no
information on placodonts, mosasaurs, or ichthyosaurs. I decided to switch.
Nothosaurs were a species of aquatic
reptile that lived during the Triassic (240-225 million
years ago). They
spent most of their lifetime in the water and were physically adapted for
swimming, but many of their fossils have been found above ancient shorelines
and suggest that they laid their eggs on land much like modern-day crocodiles
and alligators. They’re classified under the family Sauropterygia and the genus Nothosauria, and there are over a dozen known individual species. Their
name, originating from ancient Greek, means ‘false lizard’.
Nothosaur skull |
Crocodile skull |
In conclusion, will state that my
knowledge of this species is very incomplete. This was a high-school science
project, the internet was my main source of information, and a lot of the
conjectures I offered up could be completely, fantastically incorrect.
Furthermore, if any of my readers are, in fact, well-acquainted with the order Nothosaurioidea,
I would greatly appreciate any input and will repost an update in two weeks on
what people have to offer. Feel free to leave comments below.
In the meantime, I’ll try my best to
keep up on blog posts through the perpetual bog of schoolwork I’ve been slogging
through, and I wish you, as ever, happy reading.
S. R.
Koch
No comments:
Post a Comment
I appreciate comments!