Today is July 31st, 2023 which means….
… that Tetrapod Zoology ver 4 – the version you’re at right now – has been going for five years already. As ever with milestones of this nature, I want to use this as an excuse to look back on what’s happened here since the previous ver 4 birthday. Consider this a highlights reel for the Tet Zoo events of the last year.
We start with my August 2022 article on black dogs (as in, the semi-mythical spectral giant hounds), an article that’s been regarded by some readers as a bit weird relative to the normal Tet Zoo remit. Maybe that’s so, buuut maybe it’s not since at least a few authors have considered black dogs relevant to cryptozoological hypotheses (rendering the topic appropriate for Tet Zoo coverage). Furthermore, the ‘sociocultural’ angle that I covered in the article is very much consistent with some of the hypotheses I’ve published elsewhere on belief in, and sightings of, mystery creatures (Naish 2017, 2022).
A big deal for me personally was my September 2022 talk at the United Nations Science Summit. It’s a big marker in the history of Tetrapod Zoology in general and I’ve already written about it a fair bit. Moving on, I’ve been meaning for years to talk about the diversity, evolution and natural history of zebras, and I finally published a long-in-gestation article on this subject in October 2022. What was intended to be a single, brief, picture-led article evolved into a multi-part – and as yet unfinished – series; part 2 was published in June 2023.
Mesozoic Art and TetZooCon 2022. October saw the publication of Mesozoic Art: Dinosaurs and Other Ancient Animals in Art, co-authored and co-edited with Steve White and published by Bloomsbury Wildlife (White & Naish 2022). Mesozoic Art has been hugely well received and has sold well; we’re extremely happy with the feedback we’ve received from reviewers, contributors and people in the palaeoart community. It should be emphasised that the production of a big, glossy palaeoart-themed book is something of a gamble. This one really paid off. Will there be a Mesozoic Art 2? Well, hold that thought.
We planned to do various signing events and talks on Mesozoic Art but, sadly, they never panned out, this ultimately meaning that TetZooCon 2022 (in December) functioned as a big launch event, sort of.
And having mentioned TetZooCon 2022 – the 9th TetZooCon – it was the biggest TetZooCon so far. Held at Bush House, King’s College, London, it included an All Yesterdays event, a palaeoart exhibition, on-stage discussions about designing aliens and pterosaurs, a pop-up cosplay event, a quiz (with more prizes than we could give away), and a Crystal Palace fieldtrip. 2023’s event will be held at the same venue, most likely on December 2nd and 3rd, but this is not yet confirmed. Pay attention to the TetZooCon facebook page to see news as it’s announced.
Technical dinosaur work. Regular readers will know that – when and where I can – I aim to finish and publish technical work on the Mesozoic animals that interest me, some of which stems from my time in academia (including my PhD years at the University of Portsmouth and a subsequent post-doc I had at the University of Southampton). When these studies see print, I of course write about them here, but I’ve also had reason to write about incomplete or unfulfilled studies too.
A project that ultimately didn’t go the way we hoped it would resulted in December 2022’s article on Robert Plot’s lost dinosaur bone. While we (‘we’ = me, Paul Stewart, Martin Simpson and Hilary Ketchum) could have published a technical paper on what happened, I opted to out the whole story as a blog article instead. The spinosaurid work I do with Chris Barker and Neil Gostling (both based at the University of Southampton) continued throughout 2022 and 2023 as we published our study of baryonychine brain endocasts (Barker et al. 2023a) in February, and our analysis of an isolated tooth (and what it means for Wealden spinosaurid diversity; Barker et al. 2023b) in March 2023. The latter study was intended as an initial foray into spinosaurid tooth diversity and what it might mean, and follow-up work is underway.
Ancient Sea Reptiles. February 2023 also saw the publication of a book I’d been mentioning on and off throughout 2022, namely Ancient Sea Reptiles: Plesiosaurs, Ichthyosaurs, Mosasaurs and More (Naish 2023a), published by The Natural History Museum in the UK and Smithsonian Books in the USA. I’ve already said quite a few times that getting this book into print marks the fulfilment of decades of trying to do just this, and I’m very pleased with the result.
An article announcing the book’s publication is here, and a follow-up on various of the subjects it covered appeared in May. I’m due to give talks on the book and its contents at various events during 2023, including TetZooCon in December. A published article on Mesozoic marine reptiles appeared in Evolve, the magazine of the Natural History Museum, in June (Naish 2023b).
The following new articles were published at Tetrapod Zoology during March, April and May of 2023…
There is also a podcast. I don’t know what overlap there is between the readership of Tet Zoo the blog and Tet Zoo the podcast, but episodes of the podcast have been published at reasonable frequency across the last year. It’s all down to when John Conway and I can make time to actually sit down and record together: John’s hectic schedule means that he’s only ever available for a short window on certain days. Whatever, during 2023 we released episodes that are connected to the content of Ancient Sea Reptiles, and a Prehistoric Planet tie-in released in May 2023 is our exclusive and wide-ranging conversation with Jon Favreau. The episodes in question are…
Episode 89: Marine Reptiles Episode V, The Crocs Strike Back
Episode 91: Marine Reptiles episode VI, The Return of the Weirdos
Cassowaries. I’ve already said what a huge deal it was that I got to go to Florida in January 2023 and assist with Todd Green and the Cassowary Conservancy of North America in the moving of nine live cassowaries. My article on this event – published in July 2023 – was actually written some months ago but had to be delayed for a number of good reasons. Much more on cassowaries is due to be announced in the near future; something special might be happening at TetZooCon 2023.
And that essentially brings us up to date. Tetrapod Zoology as a whole is 17 years old (it will be 18 in January 2024), but ver 4 is now five years old, so I think it can be considered ‘established’ at this point. That’s reflected in visitor counts (which are now about similar to what they were at ver 3), in how findable the blog is via web searches, and in how much content is hosted here.
On the financial side of things, things are ticking over thanks to support I receive at patreon (where assorted images and amounts of text are released exclusively, literally years before they’re ready to be published). The patreon account has also allowed me to pay for specific bits of research where I would otherwise have struggled or failed to see the relevant project to completion. So: massive, massive thanks to my patrons.
And thanks, as ever, to readers, visitors and commenters. Massive thanks if you’ve been visited ver 4 for its five years of duration, and here’s to the future. I still have so much I want to do.
For previous TetZoo articles on birthdays and other landmarks, see…
Happy first birthday Tetrapod Zoology (part I), January 2007
Happy first birthday Tetrapod Zoology (part II), January 2007
Happy second birthday Tetrapod Zoology (part I), January 2008
Tetrapods of 2007 (happy birthday Tet Zoo part II), January 2008
Happy THIRD birthday Tet Zoo, January 2009
Tet Zoo = 4 years old today, January 2010
2009, a year of Tet Zooery, January 2010
Four years of Tet Zoo: to infinity... and beyond!, April 2010
It is with some dismay that I announce Tet Zoo's first hemi-decade, January 2011
Tet Zoo 5th birthday extravaganza, part II, January 2011
Happy Birthday Tetrapod Zoology: SIX YEARS of blogging, January 2012
Happy 6th Birthday, Tetrapod Zoology (part II), January 2012
Tetrapod Zoology enters its 8th year of operation, January 2013 (I cannot find any intact versions of this article, thanks SciAm)
Today marks NINE YEARS of Tetrapod Zoology, January 2015
Tetrapod Zoology 10th-Birthday Extravaganza, Part 1: 2015 in Review, January 2016
Tetrapod Zoology 10th Birthday Extravaganza, Part II: the Rest of 2015 Reviewed, January 2016
Tetrapod Zoology 10th-Birthday Extravaganza, Part 3: Tet Zoo's Tetrapod Treatment in 2015, January 2016
Today Is Tet Zoo's 11th Birthday, January 2017
The 12th Year of Tet Zoo, January 2018
The Tet Zoo 12th-Birthday Event, Part 2, January 2018
The Much Belated Final Part of the Tetrapod Zoology 12th Birthday Event, December 2018
Tetrapod Zoology Is A Teenager Now, January 2019
Tetrapod Zoology's 14th Year of Operation, 2019 in Review, January 2020
On Tetrapod Zoology’s 15th Birthday, the Year in Review, January 2021
Happy 16th Birthday, Tetrapod Zoology, February 2022
Four Years of Tetrapod Zoology ver 4, July 2022
The 17th Year of Tetrapod Zoology: 2022 in Review, January 2023
Refs - -
Naish, D. 2017. Hunting Monsters. Arcturus, London.
Naish, D. 2022. A cultural phenomenon. The Biologist 69 (3), 16-21.
Naish, D. 2023a. Ancient Sea Reptiles. Natural History Museum, London.
Naish, D. 2023b. Ancient sea reptiles. Evolve 52, 32-37.