@misc{dixon1922the5,
    author = "Dixon, A. C",
    title = "The Roots of Modern Evils, in Gatewood, W. B. J., ed., Controversy in the Twenties",
    year = "1922",
    howpublished = "Fundamentalism, Modernism and Evolution: Nashville, 1979, p. 121",
    note = "talkorigins\_source = {true}; raw\_reference = {Dixon, A. C., 1922, The Roots of Modern Evils, in Gatewood, W. B. J., ed., Controversy in the Twenties: Fundamentalism, Modernism and Evolution: Nashville, 1979, p. 121.}"
}

@misc{bryan1923the2,
    author = "Bryan, W. J",
    title = "The Fundamentals",
    year = "1923",
    howpublished = "The Forum, v. LXX, p. 1675-1680",
    note = "talkorigins\_source = {true}; raw\_reference = {Bryan, W. J., 1923, The Fundamentals: The Forum, v. LXX, p. 1675-1680.}"
}

@misc{barbour1966issues1,
    author = "Barbour, I. G",
    title = "Issues in Science and Religion",
    year = "1966",
    howpublished = "Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey, Prentice-Hall",
    note = "talkorigins\_source = {true}; raw\_reference = {Barbour, I. G., 1966, Issues in Science and Religion: Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey, Prentice-Hall.}"
}

@book{joravsky1970the7,
    author = "Joravsky, D",
    title = "The Lysenko Affair",
    year = "1970",
    publisher = "Cambridge, Mass., Harvard University Press",
    note = "talkorigins\_source = {true}; raw\_reference = {Joravsky, D., 1970, The Lysenko Affair: Cambridge, Mass., Harvard University Press.}"
}

@book{desmond1976the4,
    author = "Desmond, A. J",
    title = "The Hot-Blooded Dinosaurs",
    year = "1976",
    publisher = "New York, The Dial Press",
    note = "talkorigins\_source = {true}; raw\_reference = {Desmond, A. J., 1976, The Hot-Blooded Dinosaurs: New York, The Dial Press.}"
}

@book{wysong1976the14,
    author = "Wysong, R. L",
    title = "The Creation-Evolution Controversy",
    year = "1976",
    publisher = "Midland, Mi., Inquiry Press, 455 p",
    note = "talkorigins\_source = {true}; raw\_reference = {Wysong, R. L., 1976, The Creation-Evolution Controversy: Midland, Mi., Inquiry Press, 455 p.}"
}

@article{crossref1977creationevolution,
    title = "Creation-Evolution Controversy",
    year = "1977",
    journal = "The American Biology Teacher",
    url = "https://doi.org/10.2307/4445942",
    doi = "10.2307/4445942",
    number = "6",
    openalex = "W2620920214",
    pages = "365-366",
    volume = "39"
}

@book{nelkin1977science13,
    author = "Nelkin, D",
    title = "Science Textbook Controversies and the Politics of Equal Time",
    year = "1977",
    publisher = "Cambridge, Mass., M.I.T. Press",
    note = "talkorigins\_source = {true}; raw\_reference = {Nelkin, D., 1977, Science Textbook Controversies and the Politics of Equal Time: Cambridge, Mass., M.I.T. Press.}"
}

@misc{marx1978warmblooded10,
    author = "Marx, J. L",
    title = "Warm-blooded dinosaurs",
    year = "1978",
    howpublished = "Evidence pro and con: Science, v. 199, p. 1424-1426",
    note = "talkorigins\_source = {true}; raw\_reference = {Marx, J. L., 1978, Warm-blooded dinosaurs: Evidence pro and con: Science, v. 199, p. 1424-1426.}"
}

@book{moore1979the12,
    author = "Moore, J. R",
    title = "The Post-Darwinian Controversies",
    year = "1979",
    publisher = "A Study of the Protestant Struggle to come to Terms with Darwin in Great Britain and America, 1870- 1900: Cambridge and New York, Cambridge University Press",
    note = "talkorigins\_source = {true}; raw\_reference = {Moore, J. R., 1979, The Post-Darwinian Controversies: A Study of the Protestant Struggle to come to Terms with Darwin in Great Britain and America, 1870- 1900: Cambridge and New York, Cambridge University Press.}"
}

@incollection{hopson1980relative6,
    author = "Hopson, J. A",
    editor = "Thomas, D. K. and Olson, E. C.",
    title = "Relative Brainsize in Dinosaurs: Implications for Dinosaur Endothermy",
    year = "1980",
    booktitle = "A Cold Look at the Warm Blooded Dinosaurs",
    publisher = "Washington, D.C., American Association for the Advancement of Science, p. 287-310",
    note = "talkorigins\_source = {true}; raw\_reference = {Hopson, J. A., 1980, Relative Brainsize in Dinosaurs: Implications for Dinosaur Endothermy, in Thomas, D. K., and Olson, E. C., eds., A Cold Look at the Warm Blooded Dinosaurs: Washington, D.C., American Association for the Advancement of Science, p. 287-310.}"
}

@article{doi101126science6750792,
    author = "Numbers, Ronald L.",
    title = "Creationism in 20th-Century America",
    year = "1982",
    journal = "Science",
    abstract = {As the crusade to outlaw the teaching of evolution changed to a battle for equal time for creationism, the ideological defenses of that doctrine also shifted, from biblical to scientific grounds. The development of "scientific creationism" is here described.},
    url = "https://doi.org/10.1126/science.6750792",
    doi = "10.1126/science.6750792",
    openalex = "W2149300830"
}

@misc{marshall1983a9,
    author = "Marshall, E",
    title = "A controversy on Samoa comes of age",
    year = "1983",
    howpublished = "Science, v. 219, p. 1042-1045",
    note = "talkorigins\_source = {true}; raw\_reference = {Marshall, E., 1983, A controversy on Samoa comes of age: Science, v. 219, p. 1042-1045.}"
}

@book{openalexw2033422527,
    author = "Godfrey, Laurie R.",
    title = "Scientists confront creationism",
    year = "1983",
    booktitle = "DigitalGeorgetown (Georgetown University Library)",
    abstract = "The recent massive attack by fundamentalist Christians on the teaching of evolution in the schools has left scientists indignant and somewhat bewildered. Creationist arguments have seemed to them a compound of ignorance and malevolence, and, indeed, there has been both confusion and dishonesty in the creationist attack. First, there has been a confusion, partly deliberate, of the fact that organism have evolved with theories about the detailed mechanics of the process. The facts of evolution are clear and are not disputed by any serious scientific worker.",
    openalex = "W2033422527"
}

@inproceedings{cracraft1984the3,
    author = "Cracraft, J",
    title = "The Significance of the Data of Systematics and Paleontology for the Evolution-Creation Controversy, in Awbery, F. T., and Thwaites, W. M., eds., Evolutionists Confront Creationists",
    year = "1984",
    booktitle = "San Francisco, Ca., American Association for the Advancement of Science, v. 1, Part 3, p. 189- 205; Proceedings of the 63rd Annual Meeting of the Pacific Division",
    note = "talkorigins\_source = {true}; raw\_reference = {Cracraft, J., 1984, The Significance of the Data of Systematics and Paleontology for the Evolution-Creation Controversy, in Awbery, F. T., and Thwaites, W. M., eds., Evolutionists Confront Creationists: San Francisco, Ca., American Association for the Advancement of Science, v. 1, Part 3, p. 189- 205; Proceedings of the 63rd Annual Meeting of the Pacific Division.}"
}

@book{larson1985trial8,
    author = "Larson, E. J",
    title = "Trial and Error",
    year = "1985",
    publisher = "The American Controversy over Creation and Evolution: New York, Oxford University Press, 222 p",
    note = "talkorigins\_source = {true}; raw\_reference = {Larson, E. J., 1985, Trial and Error: The American Controversy over Creation and Evolution: New York, Oxford University Press, 222 p.}"
}

@misc{mckown1985the11,
    author = "McKown, D. B",
    title = "THe real culprit behind religious conflicts in public education",
    year = "1985",
    howpublished = "The American Rationalist, v. 29, no. 6, p. 84-86",
    note = "talkorigins\_source = {true}; raw\_reference = {McKown, D. B., 1985, THe real culprit behind religious conflicts in public education: The American Rationalist, v. 29, no. 6, p. 84-86.}"
}

@article{ayala1988creationevolution,
    author = "Ayala, Francisco J.",
    title = "Creation/Evolution Controversies Science and Earth History: The Evolution/Creation Controversy A. N. Strahler",
    year = "1988",
    journal = "BioScience",
    url = "https://doi.org/10.2307/1310881",
    doi = "10.2307/1310881",
    number = "10",
    pages = "705-707",
    volume = "38"
}

@incollection{crossref1998the,
    title = "The new Germany eight years on",
    year = "1998",
    booktitle = "Modern Germany",
    url = "https://doi.org/10.4324/9780203976654-5",
    doi = "10.4324/9780203976654-5",
    pages = "13-24"
}

@book{smout1998the,
    author = "Smout, Kary D.",
    title = "The Creation/Evolution Controversy",
    year = "1998",
    abstract = "This rhetorical study of the various language strategies and competing worldviews involved in the 140-year argument between Biblical creationists and Darwinian evolutionists focuses on the 1860 Huxley/Wilberforce debate, the 1925 Scopes Monkey Trial, and the 1981 Arkansas Creation-Science Trial. When Darwin published hisOrigins of Speciesin 1859, he initiated a debate about the origin of human life and the role of God in human affairs scarcely equalled in world history. Smout traces the response of Biblical creationists to Darwinian evolutionists. Looking carefully at the stories told and the tactics used by both sides, he analyzes all available accounts of the original debate culminating in the 1860 Huxley/Wilberforce debate, the 1925 Scopes Monkey Trial, and the 1981 Arkansas Creation-Science Trial. Professor Smout argues that both sides in the controversy use various language strategies to persuade the culture as a whole to see the world that they see and to enact their position as public policy. As Smout illustrates, the problem is that both sides rely on an inadequate conception of language as a namer of timeless realities rather than as an instrument used by human communities to achieve their goals. He attempts to articulate a better view of language and to show how it might help solve intractable arguments such as this. He argues that we should see language as a tool that shapes what we see, and definitions of terms as political acts rather than statements of fact made by disciplinary experts. An important analysis for students and scholars in rhetoric, history, religion, and sociology.",
    url = "https://doi.org/10.5040/9798400633409",
    doi = "10.5040/9798400633409",
    openalex = "W4399225020"
}

@article{doi101126science28454232137,
    author = "Sereno, Paul C.",
    title = "The Evolution of Dinosaurs",
    year = "1999",
    journal = "Science",
    abstract = "The ascendancy of dinosaurs on land near the close of the Triassic now appears to have been as accidental and opportunistic as their demise and replacement by therian mammals at the end of the Cretaceous. The dinosaurian radiation, launched by 1-meter-long bipeds, was slower in tempo and more restricted in adaptive scope than that of therian mammals. A notable exception was the evolution of birds from small-bodied predatory dinosaurs, which involved a dramatic decrease in body size. Recurring phylogenetic trends among dinosaurs include, to the contrary, increase in body size. There is no evidence for co-evolution between predators and prey or between herbivores and flowering plants. As the major land masses drifted apart, dinosaurian biogeography was molded more by regional extinction and intercontinental dispersal than by the breakup sequence of Pangaea.",
    url = "https://doi.org/10.1126/science.284.5423.2137",
    doi = "10.1126/science.284.5423.2137",
    openalex = "W1974320804",
    references = "brouwers1987dinosaurs, coria1995a, doi101007978364268836217, doi10100797836426953391, doi1010160031018272900491, doi1010160031018282900852, doi1010160198025483901334, doi101017s0022336000026706, doi101017s0094837300004310, doi101017s0094837300026543, doi10103820167, doi101038248168a0, doi101038277560a0, doi10103831927, doi10103832642, doi10103834356, doi101038378774a0, doi101038385247a0, doi101038387390a0, doi10108002724634199010011815, doi10108002724634199110011386, doi10108002724634199210011473, doi10108002724634199310011490, doi10108002724634199410011523, doi10108002724634199510011250, doi10108002724634199810011101, doi10108002724634199810011115, doi101093oso97801985491780010001, doi101098rstb19950125, doi101111j109636421998tb00569x, doi101111j1469185x1997tb00024x, doi101111j155856461973tb05912x, doi101111j155856461996tb04496x, doi101111j174966321940tb57047x, doi101111j216409471940tb00068x, doi101126science2645160828, doi101126science2725264986, doi101126science27953581915, doi101126science28053661048, doi101126science28253921298, doi101126science2845414616, doi101127njgpa210199841, doi101139e93187, doi101146annurevea03050175000415, doi101146annurevearth251435, doi1015159780691224244, doi1023071292217, doi1023073514751, doi1023073515466, openalexw1528487914, rowe1989a, sereno1997the"
}

@article{crossref2009palaeontology,
    title = "Palaeontology: Hot-blooded dinosaurs",
    year = "2009",
    journal = "Nature",
    url = "https://doi.org/10.1038/462254f",
    doi = "10.1038/462254f",
    number = "7271",
    pages = "254-255",
    volume = "462"
}

@article{doi101007s1205200901174,
    author = "Angielczyk, Kenneth D.",
    title = "Dimetrodon Is Not a Dinosaur: Using Tree Thinking to Understand the Ancient Relatives of Mammals and their Evolution",
    year = "2009",
    journal = "Evolution Education and Outreach",
    abstract = "The line of descent that includes all living mammals extends back in time over 300 million years. Many of the ancient relatives of mammals that fall along this line are very different in appearance from living mammals and are frequently mistaken for reptiles such as dinosaurs. This misconception is reinforced by the fact that these animals are often referred to as “mammal-like reptiles,” a term reflecting outdated methods for classifying organisms. In reality, these ancient mammal-relatives, known as synapsids, are more closely related to living mammals than they are to any reptiles. Evolutionary trees, which depict patterns of descent from common ancestors among organisms, are very useful for understanding why this is the case and for reconstructing the evolutionary histories of many of the unique characters found in mammals. Here, I provide an introduction to evolutionary trees and their implications for understanding the relationships between mammals, synapsids, and reptiles. This is followed by a review of synapsid diversity and a discussion of how evolutionary trees can be used to investigate when in synapsid history different mammalian characteristics first appeared.",
    url = "https://doi.org/10.1007/s12052-009-0117-4",
    doi = "10.1007/s12052-009-0117-4",
    openalex = "W2026668796",
    references = "crossref2007scientists, doi10108002724634198810011708, doi101086383584, doi101242jeb01745, doi1023071292217, doi1023071445584, doi1023071446122, doi1023074448410, doi105962bhltitle59991, doi107208chicago97802263604920010001, openalexw2983381470, openalexw634659594"
}

@incollection{bolt2010evolutioncreation,
    author = "Bolt, Laura M.",
    title = "Evolution/Creation Controversy",
    year = "2010",
    booktitle = "21st Century Anthropology: A Reference Handbook",
    url = "https://doi.org/10.4135/9781412979283.n60",
    doi = "10.4135/9781412979283.n60",
    openalex = "W2492358261",
    pages = "600-611"
}

@book{openalexw1585246501,
    author = "Farlow, James O. and Brett-Surman, Michael K.",
    title = "The Complete Dinosaur",
    year = "2012",
    booktitle = "Opus: Research \& Creativity (Indiana University – Purdue University Fort Wayne)",
    abstract = "PREFACE: James O. Farlow and M. K. Brett-Surman PART ONE: THE DISCOVERY OF DINOSAURS The Earliest Discoveries: William A. S. Sarjeant European Dinosaur Hunters: Hans-Dieter Sues North American Dinosaur Hunters: Edwin H. Colbert Asian Dinosaur Hunters: John R. Lavas Dinosaur Hunters of the Southern Continents: Thomas R. Holtz, Jr. PART TWO: THE STUDY OF DINOSAURS Hunting for Dinosaur Bones: David D. Gillette The Osteology of the Dinosaurs: Thomas R. Holtz, Jr. and M. K.Brett-Surman The Taxonomy and Systematics of the Dinosaurs: Thomas R. Holtz, Jr. and M. K. Brett-Surman Dinosaurs and Geologic Time: James O. Farlow The Scientific Study of Dinosaurs: Ralph E. Chapman Molecular Paleontology: Rationale and Techniques for the Study of Ancient Biomolecules: Mary Higby Schweitzer Dinosaurs as Museum Exhibits: Kenneth Carpenter Restoring Dinosaurs as Living Animals: Douglas Henderson PART THREE: THE GROUPS OF DINOSAURS Introduction: James O. Farlow and M. K. Brett-Surman Politics and Paleontology: Richard Owen and the Invention of Dinosaurs: Hugh Torrens Evolution of the Archosaurs: J. Michael Parrish Origin and Early Evolution of Dinosaurs: Michael J. Benton Theropods: Philip J. Currie Segnosaurs (Therezinosaurs): Teresa Maryanska Prosauropods: Jacques VanHeerden Sauropods: John S. McIntosh, M. K. Brett-Surman, and James O. Farlow Stegosaurs: Peter M. Galton Ankylosaurs: Kenneth Carpenter Marginocephalians: Catherine A. Forster and Paul C. Sereno Ornithopods: M. K. Brett-Surman PART FOUR: BIOLOGY OF THE DINOSAURS Land Plants as Food and Habitat in the Age of Dinosaurs: Bruce H. Tiffney What Did Dinosaurs Eat? Coprolites and Other Direct Evidence of Dinosaur Diets: Karen Chin Dinosaur Combat and Courtship: Scott Sampson Dinosaur Eggs: Karl F. Hirsch and Darla K. Zelenitsky How Dinosaurs Grew: R. E. H. Reid Engineering a Dinosaur: R. McN. Alexander Dinosaurian Paleopathology: Bruce M. Rothschild Dinosaurian Physiology: the Case for Intermediate Dinosaurs: R. E. H. Reid Oxygen Isotopes in Dinosaur Bone: Reese E. Barrick, Michael K. Stoskopf, and William J. Showers A Blueprint for Giants: Do Living Reptiles, Birds or Mammals Provide the Best Model for the Physiology of Large Dinosaurs? Frank V. Paladino, James R. Spotila, and Peter Dodson New Insights into the Metabolic Physiology of Dinosaurs: John Ruben, Andrew Leitch, Willem Hillenius, Nicholas Geist, and Terry Jones The Scientific Study of Dinosaur Footprints: James O. Farlow and Ralph E. Chapman The Paleoecological and Paleoenvironmental Utility of Dinosaur Tracks: Martin G. Lockley PART FIVE: DINOSAUR EVOLUTION IN THE CHANGING WORLD OF THE MESOZOIC ERA Biogeography for Dinosaurs: Ralph E. Molnar Major Groups of Non-Dinosaurian Vertebrates of the Mesozoic Era: Michael Morales Continental Tetrapods of the Early Mesozoic: Faunas and Faunal Changes: Hans-Dieter Sues Dinosaurian Faunas of the Later Mesozoic: Dale A. Russell and Jose F. Bonaparte The Extinction of the Dinosaurs: A Dialogue Between a Catastrophist and a Gradualist: Dale A. Russell and Peter Dodson PART SIX: DINOSAURS AND THE MEDIA Dinosaurs and the Media: Donald F. Glut and M. K. Brett-Surman APPENDIX: A CHRONOLOGICAL HISTORY OF DINOSAUR PALEONTOLOGY: M. K. Brett-Surman GLOSSARY CONTRIBUTORS INDEX",
    openalex = "W1585246501",
    references = "chatterjee2013a, chinsamy1998polar, deklerk2000a, doi101002ar20982, doi101002ara10097, doi101002jmor10406, doi101007s0011400804883, doi1010160031018291900605, doi1010160034666781900695, doi101016jannpal200803002, doi101016jepsl200801015, doi101016jpalaeo201002025, doi101017cbo9780511608551, doi101017s0022336000018862, doi101017s0094837300007557, doi101017s0094837300016900, doi101017s0094837300021321, doi101038262207a0, doi101038307360a0, doi10103832884, doi101038359117a0, doi101038362709a0, doi101038368196a0, doi101038nature03635, doi101038nature10906, doi101046j14401738200300386x, doi10108002724634199810011086, doi10108002724634199910011125, doi10108008912960903503345, doi10108010420940802471027, doi101086284406, doi101086422766, doi101098rspb20060443, doi101111j10963642200600245x, doi101111j10963642200900631x, doi101111j1469185x200900107x, doi101111j150239311985tb00690x, doi101111j15023931200900187x, doi101126science1157704, doi101126science1180219, doi101126science172397867, doi101126science24248841403, doi101126science27352791204, doi101127njgpm19831983141, doi1011300091761319930210503pioatv23co2, doi101130g23452a1, doi101130spe40p1, doi101144001676492006032, doi101144gslsp20042280106, doi101146annurevearth040610133502, doi101146annurevearth28119, doi101146annurevgenet37110801143214, doi10120600030082200635301ydanpc20co2, doi1012066391, doi101353book59141, doi101371journalpone0012292, doi1016660094837320000260450fpindi20co2, doi1016660094837320050310291teafot20co2, doi1016690883135120030180286rpoumt20co2, doi1016710272463420020220593cvancf20co2, doi1016710272463420020220766tehits20co2, doi101671a11168, doi102110palo2007p07070r, doi1023071445147, doi1023073514548, doi102475ajss425149387, doi104202app20080049, doi105281zenodo13315375, doi105281zenodo16692311, doi105281zenodo3739898, doi105962p339375, fiorillo2004the, jacobsen1998feeding, lehman1987late, nelson1980counts, openalexw1550095290, openalexw1558456135, openalexw2163397885, openalexw2242116350, openalexw2506868775, pontzer2009biomechanics, russell2002synopsis, seymour1976dinosaurs, sloan1986gradual, stevens2006binocular, witmer1991biomechanics, woodward1910on"
}

@incollection{crossref201614,
    title = "14. HOT-BLOODED DINOSAURS?",
    year = "2016",
    booktitle = "Dinosaurs",
    url = "https://doi.org/10.7312/luca17310-016",
    doi = "10.7312/luca17310-016",
    pages = "255-276"
}

@article{doi101111brv12638,
    author = "Campione, Nicolás E. and Evans, David C.",
    title = "The accuracy and precision of body mass estimation in non‐avian dinosaurs",
    year = "2020",
    journal = "Biological reviews/Biological reviews of the Cambridge Philosophical Society",
    abstract = "Inferring the body mass of fossil taxa, such as non-avian dinosaurs, provides a powerful tool for interpreting physiological and ecological properties, as well as the ability to study these traits through deep time and within a macroevolutionary context. As a result, over the past 100 years a number of studies advanced methods for estimating mass in dinosaurs and other extinct taxa. These methods can be categorized into two major approaches: volumetric-density (VD) and extant-scaling (ES). The former receives the most attention in non-avian dinosaurs and advanced appreciably over the last century: from initial physical scale models to three-dimensional (3D) virtual techniques that utilize scanned data obtained from entire skeletons. The ES approach is most commonly applied to extinct members of crown clades but some equations are proposed and utilized in non-avian dinosaurs. Because both approaches share a common goal, they are often viewed in opposition to one another. However, current palaeobiological research problems are often approach specific and, therefore, the decision to utilize a VD or ES approach is largely question dependent. In general, biomechanical and physiological studies benefit from the full-body reconstruction provided through a VD approach, whereas large-scale evolutionary and ecological studies require the extensive data sets afforded by an ES approach. This study summarizes both approaches to body mass estimation in stem-group taxa, specifically non-avian dinosaurs, and provides a comparative quantitative framework to reciprocally illuminate and corroborate VD and ES approaches. The results indicate that mass estimates are largely consistent between approaches: 73\% of VD reconstructions occur within the expected 95\% prediction intervals of the ES relationship. However, almost three quarters of outliers occur below the lower 95\% prediction interval, indicating that VD mass estimates are, on average, lower than would be expected given their stylopodial circumferences. Inconsistencies (high residual and per cent prediction deviation values) are recovered to a varying degree among all major dinosaurian clades along with an overall tendency for larger deviations between approaches among small-bodied taxa. Nonetheless, our results indicate a strong corroboration between recent iterations of the VD approach based on 3D specimen scans suggesting that our current understanding of size in dinosaurs, and hence its biological correlates, has improved over time. We advance that VD and ES approaches have fundamentally (metrically) different advantages and, hence, the comparative framework used and advocated here combines the accuracy afforded by ES with the precision provided by VD and permits the rapid identification of discrepancies with the potential to open new areas of discussion.",
    url = "https://doi.org/10.1111/brv.12638",
    doi = "10.1111/brv.12638",
    openalex = "W3082346069",
    references = "doi101016jcub201706071, doi101016jpalaeo201206027, doi101017cbo9780511608551, doi101038417070a, doi101038srep06196, doi101086303327, doi101098rsbl20120263, doi101098rspb20060443, doi101098rspb20171219, doi1011112041210x12226, doi101111evo12150, doi101111j17447429200700272x, doi101111j2041210x201100153x, doi101111pala12329, doi101126science1061967, doi101152physrev1947274511, doi101371journalpone0044318, doi101371journalpone0051925, doi101371journalpone0081917, doi101371journalpone0082000, doi107717peerj857, openalexw1558456135, openalexw195142154, openalexw2593733766, openalexw260994251, pontzer2009biomechanics"
}

@incollection{crossref202214,
    title = "14 HOT-BLOODED DINOSAURS?",
    year = "2022",
    booktitle = "Dinosaurs",
    url = "https://doi.org/10.7312/luca20600-018",
    doi = "10.7312/luca20600-018",
    pages = "255-276"
}
