Attention dog lovers! New research published today in Nature Communications shows how dogs evolved in response to a cooling, drying climate in North America over the last 40 million years. This research was conducted in part at the American Museum of Natural History by Z. Jack Tseng, who is taking over the Museum's Instagram account today! Click the link in our profile to learn more about the research. --------------------------------------- #TsengTakeover, 1/7: When life gives you fossils, take photos and post them on Instagram. My name is Jack Tseng (@tseng_zj) I am a National Science Foundation postdoctoral researcher in the Division of Paleontology at the American Museum of Natural History. I am a paleontologist interested in predators of all shapes and sizes, and my specialty is in the hunting and feeding specializations of carnivorous mammals. Also, I love dogs. In a recent project, I worked with a team of researchers to document the link between broad-scale environmental changes during the past 40 million years of geological history in North America, and the rise and fall of a group of predators deeply rooted on this continent: the dog family. We found some fascinating results, but none were as interesting as the actual fossils behind the science. For the next couple of posts, I will highlight little known facts about the dog family, and some of the fossil treasures not on display in the museum exhibits, but which are crucial to our current understanding of the past, present, and future of dogs. One interesting fact: did you know that the dog family has its origin in North America, within what is today the United States? Image: AMNH/ @denisdenio #Takeover #InstagramTakover #DogsofInstagram

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アメリカ自然史博物館のインスタグラム(amnh) - 8月19日 00時15分


Attention dog lovers! New research published today in Nature Communications shows how dogs evolved in response to a cooling, drying climate in North America over the last 40 million years. This research was conducted in part at the American Museum of Natural History by Z. Jack Tseng, who is taking over the Museum's Instagram account today! Click the link in our profile to learn more about the research.
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#TsengTakeover, 1/7: When life gives you fossils, take photos and post them on Instagram. My name is Jack Tseng (@tseng_zj) I am a National Science Foundation postdoctoral researcher in the Division of Paleontology at the American Museum of Natural History. I am a paleontologist interested in predators of all shapes and sizes, and my specialty is in the hunting and feeding specializations of carnivorous mammals. Also, I love dogs. In a recent project, I worked with a team of researchers to document the link between broad-scale environmental changes during the past 40 million years of geological history in North America, and the rise and fall of a group of predators deeply rooted on this continent: the dog family. We found some fascinating results, but none were as interesting as the actual fossils behind the science. For the next couple of posts, I will highlight little known facts about the dog family, and some of the fossil treasures not on display in the museum exhibits, but which are crucial to our current understanding of the past, present, and future of dogs. One interesting fact: did you know that the dog family has its origin in North America, within what is today the United States?
Image: AMNH/ @denisdenio #Takeover #InstagramTakover #DogsofInstagram


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