Talk:Jeholopterus

Latest comment: 6 years ago by Monsieur X in topic Outdated non-english versions

Too technical

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The article reads like a JVP publication. It needs to be wikified and completely re-written to be understood by general audiances. It also leans heavily towards the work of David Peters without giving proper context (much of this work, especially the ridiculous skeketal image, is accepted by only an extreme minority of pterosaur researchers--i.e., Peters himself, who wrote the present article).Dinoguy2 03:09, 2 December 2006 (UTC)Reply

Removal of Paleo-stub

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While I agree with Dinoguy2's estimating that the article is still too technical, I definately think this article has graduated beyond stub status, & have removed the template from the main article. Congratulations to everybody involved! --mordicai. 18:04, 31 December 2006 (UTC)Reply

User:Jeholopterus's Edit

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I've moved this here as I don't feel it is appropriate or NPOV for the article itself but may have value for discussion. --mordicai. 19:03, 31 December 2006 (UTC)Reply

I would argue that the feature you describe are bizarre, Mr. Peters, just as I'd describe the strange features of the anglerfish as bizarre. If pterosaurs do indeed have the features you ascribe to them, they were without a doubt bizarre creatures. If everyone else disagrees with me and judges this usage to be POV, I won't mind if it's altered. However, it is inappropriate for you to amend an encyclopedia article from a virtually first-person perspective to defend your views. If you have published data to contrast with the published data presented in the article, please present it in an NPOV manner. Simply writing "Peters disagreed with Bennett's assessment (Peters, 2004). He argued that..." etc., would have sufficed. I, the author of the paragraph you call defamatory, was simply quoting a published source. If I were to have consulted you for your resopnse, I would be engaging in original research, which is not allowed on wikipedia. We report published findings here, we do not publish our own. Dinoguy2 21:43, 31 December 2006 (UTC)Reply


Okay, here's the deal guys: The original authors of the Jeholopterus papers found all sorts of wonderful things in that fossil, including hairs, hairs that were on the tips of plumes that were originally compared in the popular press with feathers, and a hairy tail plume. Plus two long teeth. So when DinoGuy2 quotes Bennett or comments himself that what I 'see' in the fossil is 'bizarre' (i.e. beyond reality), I think it is okay to point out that these structures were described originally. Thus the bizarre attribute needs to be correctly stuck on the fossil, not on me or my methods. The comments by DinoGuy2 and the exclusion of published data on Jeholopterus do not follow Wikki mandates or policies and probably should be reported to the authorities. So, fellas, be nice. If you had studied the fossil even for an hour and come up with opposing conclusions, I would respect your right to publish them. I only ask for the same courtesy.

Jeholopterus 18:07, 15 January 2007 (UTC)Reply

BTW, the skull in the illustration by Mike Hanson (the wings up one) is largely imaginary. No pterosaur has a wide flat parietal, no pterosaur has such a flimsy palate (and what bones are those anyway?) and no pterosaur has an orbit at mid skull. All anurognathids have a deep jugal, not the one Mike shows. Plus the two big teeth are missing! Even the original authors saw those! If you're going after guys who are making stuff up, why did you choose to let that illustration remain? If you guys can't speak with authority on this subject, why would you silence someone who can?

Jeholopterus 18:39, 15 January 2007 (UTC)Reply

I'm re-reading the paper, just to make sure I'm right about this. The authors do not note "two long teeth", only that "the teeth on the premaxilla are longer and more curved than those on the maxilla". Furthermore, they do note a hairy tail, but in contrast to your findings, they use the hair outline to argue for a short tail, as no cervical verts are preserved ("No caudal vertebrae are preserved, but the tail is probably short as in Anurognathus based on the preservation of the “hairs” presumably in the tail region"). They never describe it as plume-like or imply that it's longer than hair elsewhere on the body. It is disingenuous to imply that this in any way means the authors agree with your hypothesis of an unusually long soft tissue tail. Maybe I'm missing it--could you provide a direct quote from the paper so I can search it? Dinoguy2 02:19, 16 January 2007 (UTC)Reply
For what it's worth, Dalla Vacchia (2002) casts doubts on Wang et al.s interpretation of the tail, noting that thir 'tail hairs' are not figured in any of the provided diagrams, and state that no conclusions can be drawn about it becasue "the tail is totally absent". Dinoguy2 02:24, 16 January 2007 (UTC)Reply


I've left some substantial modifications to the text, while not actually changing other comments, I've added a new section and have expanded the rest. I have also uploaded an image of the skeleton to underscore the crushed, partiality, and broken-ness of the type specimen. Qilong 20:55, 16 January 2007 (UTC)Reply

Thanks for the input--I have removed the section explaining the differences in the restorations, as the captions already do a pretty good job of noting which theory, as discussed in the text, is being illustrated. It was also a bit too self-referential. If the article needs a mini-article explaining it, it's probably not very well written overall :P The image looks great, but it's been automatically marked for deletion since no copyright infomation was provided. Unortunately, unless it's a photo you took yourself, I don't think it's eligible for inclusion without special permission of the author. Dinoguy2 22:56, 16 January 2007 (UTC)Reply

References

  1. ^ * Peters, D. (2005). "Pterosaur Ptrouble." Prehistoric Times, 72: 44-46.

why

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why is it considered "unlikely" that jeholopterus was a vampire? personally i think it's a neat idea. 76.102.94.69 (talk) 01:52, 4 March 2009 (UTC)Reply

Because the only "evidence" for such an interpretation was found by one guy who is known as kind of a kook, doesn't look at specimens directly (rather, he blows up pictures in Photoshop) and claims to have found all kinds of crazy stuff on pterosaurs including babies clinging to mothers (he believes that babies were born alive and lacked bones even though bony pterosaur embryos in eggs have since been found), wild frills and dangles, etc. Nobody else, including people who have actually examined the specimens, can find any of this. Others who have looked for these vampire fangs say that they're just broken pieces of the upper jaw bone and do not resemble teeth at all. Dinoguy2 (talk) 15:05, 4 March 2009 (UTC)Reply
I hate to admit it, but I think so too. Jeholopterus has a weak bite, so I don't know if it can gnaw through a scaly hide of a dinosaur, even if its teeth were incredibly sharp. Personally, I think the dimorphodonts or preondactylians would make better vampires as they have large incisors. Who knows, there may be an actual vampire-pterosaur out there somewhere, we just haven't found it yet.184.186.6.124 (talk) 18:29, 4 April 2017 (UTC)Reply

David Peters stuff

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There's now a small edit war over whether to keep the section that debunks David Peters' theories or not. As I mentioned in my edit summaries: "If people read the vampire theory and checked Wikipedia for confirmation, they would find nothing, and keep believing it. It's much better to debunk it. Just like the Compsognathus article debunks the flipper theory" and "It needs to be debunked, what better place than here? If it has been reported in notable sources, it is out there, and needs to be refuted". Perhaps we should discuss it here instead of "warring"? FunkMonk (talk) 01:42, 6 July 2012 (UTC)Reply

The take-home-message of Darren Naish, whose blog post no doubt provoked the blankings of the section here: "I’ve been saying on facebook for a while (we talk quite a lot about Dave’s stuff) that something needs to be done. By this I mean that the rest of us need to somehow counteract the enormous web-presence of ReptileEvolution.com. So, what to do? Just ignoring ReptileEvolution.com doesn’t work in the age of the internet. The site is easy to find, so any rebuttal of any sort needs to be easy to find too."[1] What you're doing by deleting the section is therfore exactly opposite of what Naish proposes. What is more easy to find than Wikipedia? FunkMonk (talk) 02:19, 6 July 2012 (UTC)Reply
So the point relevant for Wikipedia is, if David Peters has managed to get his theories cited by mainstram sources (like the vampire fangs), and these theories have subsequently been refuted, we should show this in the relevant articles, to avoid any kind of ambiguity. FunkMonk (talk) 02:56, 6 July 2012 (UTC)Reply
Agreed. Some of his theories are high-profile and need to be addressed as false. In fact we should probably cite the io9 article as an example here to specifically refute it, using TetZoo as a reference. MMartyniuk (talk) 14:09, 6 July 2012 (UTC)Reply

considering that he backs up none of his claims with evidence, i think you made the right choice.--50.138.213.207 (talk) 02:36, 5 December 2012 (UTC)Reply

Life restoration

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Am I misinterpreting this[2] image, or is the eye placed in the wrong opening? FunkMonk (talk) 12:43, 4 January 2013 (UTC)Reply

Outdated non-english versions

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Can someone who can update the Spanish, Serbo-Croatian, Dutch and Chinese version of this article? Monsieur X (talk) 20:46, 15 May 2018 (UTC)Reply