So... turns out I've been doing this 10 years. The very first post on Equatorial Minnesota went out December 15, 2013. Here we are, 409 posts and one surprisingly sprawling Compact Thescelosaurus later. I'm hoping there will be many more posts to come, because I still have many ideas, even if the pace has slowed down (lots of other things going on).
For fun, here are some posts from the first five full years that I'm particularly fond of, for various reasons:
2014:
- Practical guide to to MNNRA/metro-area bedrock geology
- "The generic history of dinosaur paleontology" series (final part)
- Sponge detective: when faunal lists go bad
- A brief history of dinosaurs on the Internet
- Designasaurus II
2015:
- Historic Twin Cities geologic maps and photos
- Reports of gut contents in herbivorous dinosaurs
- "Where are they now" series (final part)
- Coming Attractions in Dinosauria?
- Nodosaurus: more than a corduroy armadillo
2016:
- A tale of two packrat species
- Gonioceras: when a nautiloid is also a shovel-flounder
- Cambrian island-hopping at Taylors Falls
- Stegopelta
- A locked dinosaur mystery
- (former) Ash beds in St. Paul
- The Great Minnesota Brachiopod Caper of 1892
- Club Late Ordovician
2017:
- George William Featherstonhaugh
- Further adventures in the Mazomanie
- The limitations of the layer cake
- Follow-up: Pipestone National Monument, Scenella, Cylindrocoelia
- 75 years of "Hadrosaurian Dinosaurs of North America"
- Life on Mill Street
2018:
- Practical guide to St. Croix Valley sedimentary formations
- Titanosaurs all the way down, the start of the ongoing series
- Identifying invertebrate fossils
- Fun with nautiloids: an essay in futility
- Big Ordovician brachiopods: Strophomena and friends
- Lower Decorah trilobites
- Dryosaurus elderae and the revenge of Nanosaurus agilis
- Rebbachisauridae
- Decorah gastropods (and some things that look like gastropods)
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