Hayley Orlowski
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hayleyozoic.bsky.social
Hayley Orlowski
@hayleyozoic.bsky.social
240 followers 310 following 29 posts
UMN palaeo grad student, rock eater, horse tooth measurer, book hoarder, impulse zoogoer | she/her 🏳️‍⚧️🏳️‍🌈 🦖 | Views my own
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Reposted by Hayley Orlowski
Ashbaugh, A.J., Jamniczky, H.A. & Theodor, J.M. Tying the knot between morphology and development: using the patterning cascade model between cheek teeth to study the evolution of molarization in hoofed mammals. J Mammal Evol 32, 23 (2025). doi.org/10.1007/s109...
Tying the knot between morphology and development: using the patterning cascade model between cheek teeth to study the evolution of molarization in hoofed mammals - Journal of Mammalian Evolution
Hoofed mammal premolars show a range of occlusal crown morphology from molariform to caniniform, and the position of taxa on this spectrum can be described as the relative molarization of the premolars. Molarized premolars function together with the molars in grinding mastication in which these unique premolars appear. The degree of molarization varies across dietary ecologies, which has led to cheek tooth morphology being designated as an important contributor to dietary predictions in extant and extinct taxa. Recent research into mammalian occlusal cheek tooth patterning have found independent patterning mechanisms of the premolars and molars. A research gap exists in understand how molarization of the premolars has occurred so frequently in hoofed mammals if these dental regions are independent in their patterning. In this study, we tested the application of the patterning cascade model to the lower premolar-molar boundary in hoofed mammals using a geometric morphometrics framework. We used 2D geometric morphometrics to study occlusal cuspid covariation at the lower p4-m1 boundaries of 16 artiodactyl and 18 perissodactyl species. Phylogenetically informed modularity analyses were used to test alternate a priori hypotheses originating from evolutionary, developmental, and functional considerations of cheek tooth morphogenesis. Our results showed artiodactyls and perissodactyls differ significantly in their p4-m1 boundary covariation patterns, which we hypothesize could be caused by heterochronic shifts between premolar and molar development. To our knowledge, our study is the first to contribute a comprehensive yet accessible 2D geometric morphometric method to further investigate the evolution of molarized premolars.
doi.org
Always "funny" to find plagiarism in scientific papers, especially ones from the last five years...
More of this on museum signage, please
Reposted by Hayley Orlowski
this feels like an incredible new urban legend taking shape on reddit otoh I've lowkey seen this happen. like jerusalem syndrome but for talking to the computer
Whenever some new dinosaur drama drops I love imagining what it would be like if we acted the same way whenever a new Miocene horse paper comes out.
Reposted by Hayley Orlowski
New publication! My first dissertation chapter is now published in @plosone.org with @paleobadger.bsky.social, @calamanderso.bsky.social, Hannah Miller, Max Deckman, and Brandon Price. Any images not credited below are from this paper.

doi.org/10.1371/jour...

@uwmadscience.bsky.social

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doi.org
Reposted by Hayley Orlowski
Results from the #paleostream!
Ojoceratops, Leidyosuchus, Hemiauchenia and Bienotheroides.
oof 😣 It's crazy how central this stuff is to biology and how obscure it is to the general public!
Honestly the best part about getting into the latter part of a graduate degree is not having to sit though that anymore
happy "explain phylogenetics" week to every biology instructor on earth
Reposted by Hayley Orlowski
same methods, different era
about to get my h-index up
Reposted by Hayley Orlowski
"Lord of Plains" - faux woodblock/linocut style art of a heavily stylized Przewalski's horse. Intended as part of a series with the Lord of Meadows piece. #art #horse #wildhorse #fauxlinocut #linocut #illustration #printmaking
on the phone with my lawyer this very moment
only dinosaur fossils though because i think their small sample sizes are funny and want them to be even smaller
my "i eat fossils when no one else is looking" shirt at the natural history museum is raising a lot of questions already answered by the shirt
It's hard. As someone who's in a very early career stage it definitely feel like there's a push to go for the broad-scale, big-picture thing that's more likely to get recognition and citations to help build a career. And that stuff's important...but it's all built on the "grunt work".
I think of this quote from Derek Ager (1963):
Reposted by Hayley Orlowski
I don't know, but late-19th-century horse papers go about the same for me.
Can you tell why one of these is referred to as a "stilt-legged horse"? The taxonomy of these guys is contentious, and it's not helped by the fact that it can be hard to tell them apart from more standard-shaped horses... #FossilFriday