· Bone wars Are we not who we thought we were? A boy's 25,000-year-old. with a sharply pointed chin bone, a distinguishing feature of moderns.
Talk: Bone Wars - Wikipedia. Elasmosaurus mistake[edit]The Wikipedia article on "elasmosaurus" contradicts what this article says about its involvement in Cope and Marsh's disputes.
Namely, it says that Marsh never published a paper on plesiosaurs, and that it was actually Joseph Leidy that pointed out Cope's error with the head on the tail. Noclock (talk) 0.
- Bone Wars. Comedy | TV Movie | See all in-development titles on IMDbPro. Note: Because this project is categorized as in development, the data is only available on.
- T-bone's Star Wars Universe. 8 hours ago. T-bone's Star Wars Universe added a new photo. See More See Less. Photo. View on Facebook.
- The Bone Wars was a period of fossil finding and discovery in the U.S.A during the late 19th century. Most of the action took place in Colorado, Nebraska, and Wyoming.
Bone Wars Card Game
The Bone Wars or Dinosaur Wars, Texas Geologist Robert T. Hill & Texas Naturalist Jacob Boll; Texas history column by Clay Coppedge.
Bone Wars Wikipedia
February 2. 00. 9 (UTC)Coprolite[edit]I have heard before from various sources, including my paleontology professor many years ago, that Marsh named fossilized dung "coprolites" as a way to attack Mr. Cope. I do not have sources on this at the moment, does anyone else? I'm not sure, but it seems slightly fishy - copro is a latin prefix dealing with dung, seen in other contexts.
It may have merely been a lecture joke - they never need be funny. Wily. D 1. 5: 1. 2, 2. June 2. 00. 6 (UTC). I do know that Marsh specifically named Mosasaurus copeanus after Cope.- -Mr Fink 1. November 2. 00. 6 (UTC). I read the same thing (about coprolites) in a book on the Bone Wars. It deserves a mention at least, I would think, even if it is just a false rumor.
I can't remember the name of the book, but it could be one of the books mentioned on this page. Cromwellt|talk|contribs 0. June 2. 00. 7 (UTC). As coprolite was coined decades before by either Owen or Buckland, it's all but impossible. Der Wohltemperierte Fuchs(talk) 1. August 2. 00. 8 (UTC)"The" Bone Wars[edit]I want to discuss this, because I'm curious to see what is correct as well.
In my reasoning the lead shouldn't include "the" simply because if you replace "Bone Wars" with another term it doesn't make sense. The "Calpico" is the name given to a restaurant downtown. Here, the noun phrase "The Calpico" is actually the subject of the sentence, which would make it seem as if "The Calpico" is what you call the restaurant since the predicate ("is the name") indicates that the subject is a name. If spoken, this much is obvious.
Then take a look at: "Calpico" is the name given to a restaurant downtown. This is made complicated by the apparent plural in this article title. I'm thinking that it's similar to the case of "the" Netherlands, that makes you want to preface Bone Wars with "the", but I'm wary of the phrase used here, "is the name". The Netherlands is the name given to a country in Europe.
Netherlands is the name given to a country in Europe. I propose. What do you think? ALTON.ıl 0. 4: 3. September 2. 00. 8 (UTC)It's The Bone Wars; this isn't Russia where one can eliminate articles entirely. Take a look at other sources as well: The Bone Wars. Firsfron of Ronchester 0. September 2. 00. 8 (UTC).
I'm aware of that. I wouldn't say "During Bone Wars they ate sandwiches".
My question is whether or not this particular sentence needs "the". To take another example, from some of the articles on your page. The Plainclothesman was an early American television program..
Battles of the Ages was an early American television program.. The first one, the name of the show is "The Plainclothesman". In the second one, the name of the show is "Battles of the Ages".
This I understand. Now, putting those names in this context, we get. The Plainclothesman is the name given to a tv show. Battles of the Ages is the name given to a tv show. Now, if the second one above is correct, then this article shouldn't have this extraneous "the" in front of "Bone Wars", which is analogous to.
The Battles of the Ages is the name given to a tv show. I don't think is correct. Even in my explanation above I do this. The name of the show is Battles of the Ages" not "The name of the show is the. Battles of the Ages".
I hope is correct English otherwise I've been misspeaking all these years. ALTON.ıl 0. 7: 0. September 2. 00. 8 (UTC). I agree that the article I linked isn't entirely consistent, but whether the sentence reads "The Bone Wars" or "the Bone Wars", the is included. I don't see any instance of, eg., "Bone Wars were caused by.." As far as the two articles linked on my user page go, I created Battle of the Ages in May in one edit, and no one has ever edited it since, while The Plainclothesman has only three edits.
It's quite possible that the grammar could be improved in either article, though I tried to use correct grammar when editing the articles in question. The sources used The for The Plainclothesman, but not for Battle of the Ages; the is used for The Bone Wars. Firsfron of Ronchester 0. September 2. 00. 8 (UTC).
Forgot to mention: Battle of the Ages is a single battle, while the Bone Wars apparently were more than one incident of fussin' and a- feudin', so I'm not sure the above examples are entirely applicable here. Firsfron of Ronchester 0. September 2. 00. 8 (UTC). Right, I even mentioned that I would use "the" in most cases. I inserted an - s to show Battles as plural, but if that doesn't gel, then disregard my examples. I'm not even really concerned with what the source says, although I hear what you're saying about frequency of the the article- less phrase.
This particular instance here is the specific one that I'm asking you about. Here. The name of the period is Bone Wars. The name of the period is the Bone Wars. Which one sounds right to you? It's just one word, and I'm not going to push it further, but it does not sound right. If it is the case that you decide to go with the third choice "The name of the period is The Bone Wars", then the rest of the article should be made consistent, using capital 'T' within every mention of the title. And then it seems to me that the article title should be moved, as in "The Plainclothesman" (it's not at "Plainclothesman").
ALTON.ıl 0. 7: 4. September 2. 00. 8 (UTC)I'm joining this kerfuffle some years after the above discussion.
As one who teaches students studying English as a second language, and who found this article by chance, I was surprised to find "The" left off the title. The" is the definite article in English and remains unchanged whether referring to the singular or plural. However, when used in reference to a plural noun "the" describes a single group ("the cars") or a series of events constituting a single event ("the Wars of the Roses"). Thus, "the" with a small "t" is the correct use of the definite article in a sentence: ("During the Bone Wars.."). It should be used in the title with a capital "T" because the initial word of a title is always capitalized. Therefore, without further ado, I am adding "The" to the title. If someone wishes to change this proper use of "T/the" please state your reasoning.
American In Brazil (talk) 1. May 2. 01. 4 (UTC)Ok, I could not add "The" to the title. I invite any editor who is more knowledgeable than I to do so.
The Bone Wars" is the correct title. American In Brazil (talk) 1. May 2. 01. 4 (UTC)Dinosaur renaissance[edit]I think the article should have some link or reference to the Dinosaur renaissance of the late 2. Petri Krohn (talk) 1.
February 2. 00. 9 (UTC)Why? The only relation between the two is that there was a lull between people's interests in dinosaurs during the Bone Wars/Gilded Age, and the resurgence of popularity. Der Wohltemperierte Fuchs(talk) 1. February 2. 00. 9 (UTC)alternate name[edit]i have read numerous sources calling this period in north american fossil discovery as "the great dinosaur rush" i won't add it to the article because i'm not sure if that is larger in scale than the bone wars between cope and marsh does anyone else have any thoughts on this? Lazy. Maple. Sunday (talk) 0.
February 2. 00. 9 (UTC)I haven't heard of the name before. Do you have book sources that use this term? Der Wohltemperierte Fuchs(talk) 0. February 2. 00. 9 (UTC).
The name is commonly used. Here's a google book search on it. It what we call it in school (geology school).
KP Botany (talk) 0. February 2. 00. 9 (UTC). I've added a mention; from the looks of it, however, the name is also used to describe a later period of Canadian exploration, so I think it's best we stick with this name.
Der Wohltemperierte Fuchs(talk) 2. February 2. 00. 9 (UTC). Sounds good, i wasn't sure if the "bone wars" was a subset of the "great dinosaur rush." Like KP Botany I have taken a university geology class that referred to cope and marsh's discoveries and conflict as occurring during "the great dinosaur rush." I think now the article adequately reflects this, thanks.
Lazy. Maple. Sunday (talk) 2. February 2. 00. 9 (UTC)Bone Wars card game[edit]At one point, the reference to the Bone Wars card game was linked to the entry for James Cambias, one of the authors. But it's been subsequently edited to say "created by a biology professor", leaving off James entirely.
If he's notable enough to have his own Wikipedia article, shouldn't he be linked here as one of the authors? Ptomblin (talk) 1.
February 2. 00. 9 (UTC)No reason not to link him in the text, and I have just done so. The reference, however, should not be to a book by him or by the company producing the game. We seek independent, secondary sources as references.- -Fuhghettaboutit (talk) 1. February 2. 00. 9 (UTC). That's great, except you still have it wrong. The game was created by Jim Cambias and his wife, Diane Kelly.
Diane is the biology professor, not Jim. Jim is a science fiction writer. Ptomblin (talk) 1.
February 2. 00. 9 (UTC)At the moment the bone wars reference says "Johansen" - no one with that name is listed as a contributor for the game - This confusion may simply be a mispelling of Johnson (Bryant P. Johnson was the artist) - however the full reference says "Johansen, Bruce", "Silenced!: Academic Freedom,Scientific Inquiry,and the first amendment under siege in America". I'm sure it is a fine book and all, but I'm trying hard to see how that reference has any relevance to either the article as a whole or the specific instance it is associated with. The reference directly prior to the bone wars game is 'Waggoner, Ben' - while this is obviously appropriate in the context of the article I find it hard to see how this would be directly related to a fictional work about dinosaurs and aliens.
Dinobass (talk) 2.