Spyke
sh.itjust.works

Paleontology nerd here. There isn't an official term for the tail spikes, but thagomizer is pretty much an unoffcial official term.

105

I mean... if you don't have an official term for it, but basically everyone in your field calls it a thagomizer, does that not make thagomizer the official term? If not, what makes a term "official"?

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Denvilreply
lemmy.one

Well, whats the official term? If its just tail spikes I will be very disappointed

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Denvilreply
lemmy.one

Oh I'm an absolute buffoon, I thought he said THAT isn't the official term

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Pretty much. Thagomizer is used in literature, but not always. I would say it is officially recognized, but semi-officially used

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I just got the notification for this, sorry. There isn't a real official term other than tail spikes, but iirc thagomizer has been used in literature, such as this paper describing a new specimen of a stegosaur from Portugal and its impacts on the taxonomy of stegosaurs

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Nothing has ever made more sense. Wander around a college science department during his heyday and they basically wallpapered the place in The Far Side.

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sh.itjust.works

Wasn't sure about this, felt like an online myth, so checked it out on Wikipedia. Seems legit. On a related note, found quite the rabbit hole on that article:

Other scientific terms first used in fiction:

  • Boojum tree
  • Crash bandicoot
  • Flange as the collective noun for baboons
  • Horrendous Space Kablooie
  • Quark
  • Shmoo
  • Snark
  • Sonic
  • Waldo
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I adore hearing stories about the mutual fandom - of eachother - between Gary Larson and the scientific community.

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lemmy.world

This made me less angry. Now someone should come up with a fitting name for the set of plates.

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The Thagomizer | Spyke