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aaronwcampbell t1_iuos7o4 wrote

Instead of just scrolling, you should do your due diligence. šŸ˜

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kvossera t1_iup2i5o wrote

I mean. Iā€™m not doing a deep dive into the Kardashians even tho they get some people hella excited.

Thereā€™s new stuff about quantum computing that just do not understand and canā€™t get my ADHD brain to pay attention to. Itā€™s okay to not be super obsessed with space.

I still ask people what their favorite dinosaur is and most people donā€™t know or care. Thatā€™s okay.

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aaronwcampbell t1_iupgw1g wrote

Good point; just because something has a fan base doesn't mean it's worth doing a deep dive on.

Out of curiosity, what is your favorite dinosaur?

Mine is the ankylosaur. I know that's a pretty basic elementary-school answer, but I'm okay with that. Science has come a long way since I was in elementary school, so perhaps it's time I dip my toe in a bit and learn what's new.

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kvossera t1_iuq1xht wrote

I love all ceratopsian dinosaurs: Triceratops, Centrosaurus, and Styracosaurus. Thereā€™s so many more that I find fascinating like stegosaurus - whatā€™s up with the plates?! But the ceratopsian dinosaurs are just so wild, they look so different yet the nasal horns that some have look so much like rhinocerosā€¦ in fact they all kind of look like rhinoceroses. Just delightful, and all but one species roamed on the west coast of America, Iā€™m on the East coast and unfortunately due to how the Appalachian mountain range formed thereā€™s literally nothing from Devonian to late Ordovician period which absolutely blows because I was obsessed with dinosaurs growing up, still am.

So yeah, Iā€™ve studied dinosaurs, and other eras in the worlds past. One of the happiest times was when I finally got to visit the la Brea tar pits after having watched a movie about prehistoric mega fauna and wanting so badly to get to work in the ā€œfishbowlā€ in the museum. I didnā€™t get to explore it as much as I wanted to but it was bliss.

Ha. Sorry for rambling. I get excited about it and want to get others excited. I think itā€™s crazy that adults donā€™t talk about or have favorite dinosaurs like we would have when we were kids.

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aaronwcampbell t1_iuq3uud wrote

The only dinosaurs adults seem to get excited about these days are political figures! šŸ„šŸ„šŸ›Žļø

Seriously though, I get what you mean. My friend's son has been obsessed with cephalopods since he was a little boy. He been certain of what he wants to do since then, and this year he's graduating with a degree in marine biology. He got me hooked (pun unintended) and now I get excited about the wonderfully strange world of our oceans. Did you know that sharks are older that the rings of Saturn? That just blows my mind.

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kvossera t1_iuq65oc wrote

Yassssssssss sharks are older than trees. Iā€™m also pretty into ocean life as well

I was also really into orca whales in Jr High. Thereā€™s some pods with only a few members living next to pods with dozens and theyā€™re separated by culture or the very few members of one pod of orcas that strategically beach themselves to catch seals. That behavior is taught to younger orcas and not all those who try stick with it and continue to practice / actually hunt that way. itā€™s beautiful to watch

this kinda goes into how they teach each other.

And gah!!!!!! Ask your friendā€™s son if he knows why thereā€™s more fossil evidence of octopuses than of squidā€¦. Itā€™s because squid have higher levels of uric acid in their body to help them be buoyant, whereas octopuses ā€œwalkā€ along the sea floor. So if conditions werenā€™t just right the bodies of squid break down faster than octopuses bodies do so a smaller window to even have conditions to create a fossil never mind that the fossil could be destroyed during any of the millions of years between then and now.

Iā€™m autistic so Iā€™ve been a ravenous information sponge for so many different topics

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