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Caroline Abbott

@dimetrodude

Permo-Triassic #paleontology bog witch🦴🌿 | Artist + powerlifter when not doing PhD | Studying therapsid ontogeny and body size @UChicago @FieldMuseum | she/her #BiInSci πŸ’œπŸ©·πŸ’™

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06.08.2023
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Latest posts by Caroline Abbott @dimetrodude

Preview
Trump officials take steps toward a radically different NSF Efforts to shrink staff, budget, and focus have alarmed members of Congress

Another scoop from Jeff Mervis (@policyhound.bsky.social): NSF's ~1400 grant terminations have disproportionately affected PIs from groups underrepresented in science: women, racial & ethnic minorities, & those with disabilities. 1/3
www.science.org/content/arti...

13.05.2025 20:52 πŸ‘ 403 πŸ” 310 πŸ’¬ 15 πŸ“Œ 37
An upside-down American flag hangs from El Capitan near Yosemite National Park’s Horsetail Fall on Saturday to protest the thousands of federal job cuts made by President Donald Trump’s administration. 
Tracy Barbutes/Special to the Chronicle

An upside-down American flag hangs from El Capitan near Yosemite National Park’s Horsetail Fall on Saturday to protest the thousands of federal job cuts made by President Donald Trump’s administration. Tracy Barbutes/Special to the Chronicle

Brilliant protest. Yosemite National Park workers hung an upside-down American flag β€” traditionally a symbol of distress or a national threat β€” thousands of feet off the ground on the side of El Capitan.

23.02.2025 05:57 πŸ‘ 15846 πŸ” 4195 πŸ’¬ 100 πŸ“Œ 196
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Gregg is a former Marine and Forest Service ranger. He's saved the lives of hikers dangling off a cliff or going through cardiac arrest, and he's bravely fought forest fires to save small rural towns.

100% of his salary is paid by WA state.

Elon fired him. Share his story.

23.02.2025 18:35 πŸ‘ 18763 πŸ” 10106 πŸ’¬ 590 πŸ“Œ 532
Michelle Beutler cleared 67 trees off a U.S. Forest Service road in two days. It was the spring of 2023, after a record-breaking winter in the Stanislaus National Forest in California’s Sierra Nevada. Beutler, 59, worked alone with a chain saw to remove every fallen tree on a 10-mile stretch of road between the town of Long Barn in Tuolumne County and the popular Hull Creek Campground. She single-handedly finished the work so the road could open in time for Memorial Day.

As a recreation technician based out of the Summit Ranger Station in the Stanislaus National Forest, Beutler’s job was to clean toilets, pick up trash and maintain recreation sites and campgrounds up and down Sonora Pass. She’d typically drive her Forest Service truck 100 miles a day. She sprayed pit toilets with a fire hose. She wiped away graffiti and removed thousands of pounds of house trash, old furniture and useless stuff that people dumped in the forest. She extinguished hundreds of abandoned and illegal campfires. She assisted law enforcement during emergency accidents, helping officers navigate a swath of rugged forest land that she grew up on and knows intimately.

Michelle Beutler cleared 67 trees off a U.S. Forest Service road in two days. It was the spring of 2023, after a record-breaking winter in the Stanislaus National Forest in California’s Sierra Nevada. Beutler, 59, worked alone with a chain saw to remove every fallen tree on a 10-mile stretch of road between the town of Long Barn in Tuolumne County and the popular Hull Creek Campground. She single-handedly finished the work so the road could open in time for Memorial Day. As a recreation technician based out of the Summit Ranger Station in the Stanislaus National Forest, Beutler’s job was to clean toilets, pick up trash and maintain recreation sites and campgrounds up and down Sonora Pass. She’d typically drive her Forest Service truck 100 miles a day. She sprayed pit toilets with a fire hose. She wiped away graffiti and removed thousands of pounds of house trash, old furniture and useless stuff that people dumped in the forest. She extinguished hundreds of abandoned and illegal campfires. She assisted law enforcement during emergency accidents, helping officers navigate a swath of rugged forest land that she grew up on and knows intimately.

When OMB head Russ Vought talks about deliberate efforts to put federal employees "in trauma" and make them quit their jobs, he's talking about people like Michelle, recently fired by Musk/Trump.

www.sfgate.com/california/a...

24.02.2025 00:04 πŸ‘ 3392 πŸ” 1300 πŸ’¬ 70 πŸ“Œ 63
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Synapsids | DINO DNA with Conor O'Keeffe and Caroline Abbott | Dimetrodon and Lystrosaurus β€” The Jurassic Park Podcast Synapsids | DINO DNA with Conor O'Keeffe and Caroline Abbott | Dimetrodon and Lystrosaurus

It’s been a wild week for Jurassic fans, but one of the highlights for me was this awesome episode of the podcast featuring @dimetrodude.bsky.social and @conorontology.bsky.social discussing real science!
It’s a MUST listen!

www.jurassicparkpodcast.com/home/synapsi...

06.02.2025 21:55 πŸ‘ 5 πŸ” 4 πŸ’¬ 1 πŸ“Œ 0
An echidna on brown mulch ground looking up at the camera and smiling.

An echidna on brown mulch ground looking up at the camera and smiling.

I did capture a SMILING echidna in 2020. Perfect snap of the moment! Might be useful at this trying time :)

04.02.2025 13:21 πŸ‘ 821 πŸ” 194 πŸ’¬ 7 πŸ“Œ 8

Thanks so much for having me! It was so fun to chat about Dimetrodon and Lystrosaurus with you Conor, and representations of synapsids in paleo-media! I say let's get even MORE funky non-dino friends in the JW franchise!

#paleontology πŸ¦–πŸͺ¨πŸ§ͺ

05.02.2025 15:10 πŸ‘ 9 πŸ” 1 πŸ’¬ 1 πŸ“Œ 0
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Facilitating Research at Predominantly Undergraduate Institutions: (RUI and ROA-PUI)

Just wanted to make sure that everyone saw that the NSF RUI solicitation is BACK UP. Program staff indicated that it was accidentally archived.

new.nsf.gov/funding/oppo...

31.01.2025 15:26 πŸ‘ 12 πŸ” 12 πŸ’¬ 0 πŸ“Œ 0
A pair of bush moas (Anomalopteryx didiformis) walk through a dense forest. Ferns and moss cover the ground.

A pair of bush moas (Anomalopteryx didiformis) walk through a dense forest. Ferns and moss cover the ground.

A crested moa (Pachyornis australis) walks through a field of golden grass. Snow-capped mountains stretch across the most distant part of the background.

A crested moa (Pachyornis australis) walks through a field of golden grass. Snow-capped mountains stretch across the most distant part of the background.

A coastal moa (Euryapteryx curtus) crests a dune. A line of pΔ«ngao runs down the middle and across the top of the dune. A full moon glows above the moa.

A coastal moa (Euryapteryx curtus) crests a dune. A line of pΔ«ngao runs down the middle and across the top of the dune. A full moon glows above the moa.

An eastern moa (Emeus crassus) walks along a shore at night. The pink lights of aurora australis can be seen above the horizon.

An eastern moa (Emeus crassus) walks along a shore at night. The pink lights of aurora australis can be seen above the horizon.

Moas!

22.10.2024 15:20 πŸ‘ 371 πŸ” 127 πŸ’¬ 3 πŸ“Œ 2
Excerpt of Washington Post article that says: 
After he was ordained and had been a priest two years, Tutu was sent to London to study. "I'm sure there was racism there, but we were protected by the church. It was marvelous. We didn't have to carry our passes anymore and we did not have to look around to see if we could use that bath or that exit. It was a tremendously liberating thing."

When Tutu returned to South Africa, he began to rise in the church hierarchy. Still, the strictures of his past sometimes haunted him. He recalls boarding a flight in Nigeria in the 1970s and discovering that the pilot and copilot were black. "I was thrilled," recalls Tutu.

Black pilots! But once airborne, Tutu began shifting uneasily in his seat. He wasn't quite certain why. "I had a nagging worry about whether we were going to make it," he says.

As he squirmed and worried, the cause finally hit him. It was the pilots. "Could these blacks really fly this plane . . . without a white person at the controls?"

The real horror of apartheid, he explains, is that "it can cause a child of God to doubt that he or she is a child of God . . . You come to believe what others have determined about you, filling you with self-disgust, self-contempt and self-hatred, accepting a negative self-image."

Excerpt of Washington Post article that says: After he was ordained and had been a priest two years, Tutu was sent to London to study. "I'm sure there was racism there, but we were protected by the church. It was marvelous. We didn't have to carry our passes anymore and we did not have to look around to see if we could use that bath or that exit. It was a tremendously liberating thing." When Tutu returned to South Africa, he began to rise in the church hierarchy. Still, the strictures of his past sometimes haunted him. He recalls boarding a flight in Nigeria in the 1970s and discovering that the pilot and copilot were black. "I was thrilled," recalls Tutu. Black pilots! But once airborne, Tutu began shifting uneasily in his seat. He wasn't quite certain why. "I had a nagging worry about whether we were going to make it," he says. As he squirmed and worried, the cause finally hit him. It was the pilots. "Could these blacks really fly this plane . . . without a white person at the controls?" The real horror of apartheid, he explains, is that "it can cause a child of God to doubt that he or she is a child of God . . . You come to believe what others have determined about you, filling you with self-disgust, self-contempt and self-hatred, accepting a negative self-image."

Here's what Desmond Tutu had to say about DEI and aviation (probably), almost 40 years ago in the Washington Post
www.washingtonpost.com/archive/life...

30.01.2025 22:10 πŸ‘ 113 πŸ” 36 πŸ’¬ 5 πŸ“Œ 1
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National Science Foundation suspends salary payments, leaving researchers unable to pay their bills An NSF online payment system remained down after the federal funding freeze was lifted, leaving early-career scientists scrambling to pay bills

National Science Foundation suspends salary payments, leaving researchers unable to pay their bills www.statnews.com/2025/01/30/t...
Story by @ericboodman.bsky.social

30.01.2025 22:53 πŸ‘ 1459 πŸ” 1019 πŸ’¬ 59 πŸ“Œ 115

Scientific societies don’t have to renew their commitments to work in a β€œbipartisan fashion” right now when one party is actively and extremely rapidly dismantling scientific enterprise in this country.

30.01.2025 23:38 πŸ‘ 123 πŸ” 28 πŸ’¬ 4 πŸ“Œ 0
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This question means something else to a stratigrapher

31.01.2025 01:36 πŸ‘ 33 πŸ” 3 πŸ’¬ 3 πŸ“Œ 0

Would love to be added!

30.01.2025 19:02 πŸ‘ 1 πŸ” 0 πŸ’¬ 0 πŸ“Œ 0
Photo of SK in a forest in Pennsylvania, wearing a tie dyed field shirt from the 2017 grassland bird Konza Crew and holding a large sparrow that is black on one side of the body and brown on the other.

Photo of SK in a forest in Pennsylvania, wearing a tie dyed field shirt from the 2017 grassland bird Konza Crew and holding a large sparrow that is black on one side of the body and brown on the other.

Here is a photo of a trans non-binary biologist (me) holding a bird (Eastern Towhee) that is likely a bilateral gynandromorph-- a fusion of cells with female-type chromosomes and cells with male-type chromosomes in one bird!

Biological sex and human gender diversity is real and wonderful β€οΈπŸ³οΈβ€βš§οΈ

22.01.2025 20:55 πŸ‘ 7343 πŸ” 1009 πŸ’¬ 103 πŸ“Œ 38
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Super excited that our review on the ecology of the Ediacaran-Cambrian transition is now out on how ecology changes across scales from organisms to communities to the world through time. Fab art @franzanth.bsky.social showing the build up of ecological complexity
www.cambridge.org/core/journal...

22.01.2025 18:28 πŸ‘ 394 πŸ” 111 πŸ’¬ 9 πŸ“Œ 12
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Trucidocynodon riograndensis, a Late Triassic carnivorous cynodont from Brazil, had spear-like incisors, elongated canines, and advanced brain structures. New CT scans reveal that canine replacement stopped and the species had unique jaw traits.
Kerber et al.: https://buff.ly/40EameI
#FossilFriday

17.01.2025 15:00 πŸ‘ 33 πŸ” 12 πŸ’¬ 0 πŸ“Œ 1

Omg would love to see one of those specimens one day

15.01.2025 03:28 πŸ‘ 0 πŸ” 0 πŸ’¬ 1 πŸ“Œ 0

I already have the Dimetrodon, Gorgonops, Wiwaxia, and Tiktaalik and was wondering what I should add to the collection and then I see...?! Trilobite?! Slippers?!?!? for $27 US DOLLARS?!!??!

Ugh twist my arm *adds to cart*

15.01.2025 03:22 πŸ‘ 11 πŸ” 2 πŸ’¬ 0 πŸ“Œ 0

Me but in Evolving Planet at the Field Museum!!!

(but also at the aquarium because how can you not be in awe of every critter)

15.01.2025 03:16 πŸ‘ 8 πŸ” 2 πŸ’¬ 1 πŸ“Œ 0
a foggy winter morning. the sky is purple and pink with a couple glowing clouds. the twilight hour casts a dusty lilac light over a dusting of snow across a field behind a small farmers' fence. a few semi-bare trees and bushes fade into the background.

a foggy winter morning. the sky is purple and pink with a couple glowing clouds. the twilight hour casts a dusty lilac light over a dusting of snow across a field behind a small farmers' fence. a few semi-bare trees and bushes fade into the background.

ok it's been a rough start to the month here's a pink sky to cheer up the feed a bit #art

13.01.2025 21:08 πŸ‘ 2586 πŸ” 619 πŸ’¬ 50 πŸ“Œ 1
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Our anatomical description of Hapsidopareion is out in Papers in Palaeontology! Thanks to collaborators and mentors @gondwannabe.bsky.social, Arjan Mann, and @hanssues.bsky.social and ISU undergraduate coauthors for their massive help with segmentation! πŸ˜„https://doi.org/10.1002/spp2.1610

07.01.2025 16:56 πŸ‘ 42 πŸ” 19 πŸ’¬ 1 πŸ“Œ 6
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This building is standing on the shoulders of pterosaurs

12.12.2024 15:18 πŸ‘ 279 πŸ” 47 πŸ’¬ 9 πŸ“Œ 1
A pair of Castorocauda on a partly submerged tree branch. One of the Mammaliforms has its head underwater looking at an aquatic salamander. A Pterosaur flies in the background

A pair of Castorocauda on a partly submerged tree branch. One of the Mammaliforms has its head underwater looking at an aquatic salamander. A Pterosaur flies in the background

Quick sketch I did as a request from patron Flouder who suggested I sketched the Late Jurassic mammaliform Castorocauda lutrasimilis

#paleoart #sciart #sketch

12.12.2024 19:57 πŸ‘ 311 πŸ” 77 πŸ’¬ 3 πŸ“Œ 2
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Self-organized patterning of crocodile head scales by compressive folding - Nature Crocodile head scales self-organize through purely mechanical compressive skin folding rather than a patterning process controlled by gene interactions.

Can I just say that this is about the coolest study that I've seen in ages. Just outstanding integrative science! #OA in Nature, too. Plus, the YouTube vid is exceptionally well done: www.youtube.com/watch?v=vuvU.... Sorry if I'm gushing, but it's all an early #Crocmas gift. πŸŠπŸŽ„

12.12.2024 17:06 πŸ‘ 90 πŸ” 25 πŸ’¬ 2 πŸ“Œ 0

Not yet! I'm saving that as a graduation present to myself 😊 I did get more Waterhouse Hawkins art next to my Crystal Palace Megalosaurus though!

12.12.2024 02:39 πŸ‘ 1 πŸ” 0 πŸ’¬ 0 πŸ“Œ 0
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Hi everyone! Back on this site after literally a year! Quick re-intro: I'm Caroline, a synapsid paleobiology PhD student finishing up at UChicago and the Field Museum. Interested broadly in paleoevodevo and quantifying variation πŸ¦–πŸ‘©β€πŸ”¬πŸπŸ¦΄ I'm on that postdoc/faculty job grind πŸ‘€ Happy to be here!

11.12.2024 17:21 πŸ‘ 51 πŸ” 9 πŸ’¬ 1 πŸ“Œ 0
Ontogenetic mechanisms of size change: implications for the Lilliput effect and beyond | Paleobiolog... Ontogenetic mechanisms of size change: implications for the Lilliput effect and beyond

Yes! I'm a PhD student at UChicago in evbio (evbio.uchicago.edu/program/stud...) and I just got my first chapter out (www.cambridge.org/core/journal...)

12.12.2023 15:45 πŸ‘ 0 πŸ” 0 πŸ’¬ 0 πŸ“Œ 0

Can I be added to the feed as a contributor?

04.12.2023 15:34 πŸ‘ 0 πŸ” 0 πŸ’¬ 1 πŸ“Œ 0

@pattonoswalt.bsky.social loved your 10pm set tonight in Chicago!!! I (sadly) cheered for BRHS.... I am a grad of there (Mr. Richards fucking rules) and W&M. Your work was so important for me + my partner through tough times. This was our first time seeing you live and it was so special. Thank you!

09.11.2023 05:59 πŸ‘ 6 πŸ” 0 πŸ’¬ 0 πŸ“Œ 0