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Northwyrm

She/Her | 1996 | UK

Northwyrm art by Bark

Art by Bark of Bark's Bog

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Charlotte Bowman

This page is a work in progress while I work out how to use Neocities. Also I will be changing this from 'Northwyrm's Website' into a more professional 'Charlotte Bowman's Palaeontology Website' once I get a nice profile photo. Very much a work in progress!

Academic Background

Bachelor's degree in Zoology (Newcastle University)

Masters by Research in Palaeontology and Geobiology (University of Edinburgh)

Papers!

Main author of Rostral neurovasculature indicates sensory trade-offs in Mesozoic pelagic crocodylomorphs (Bowman et al. 2021)

My debut paper compared the nerve and blood channels in the skulls of thalattosuchians (ancient crocodylomorphs adapted for life in open ocean) to the nerve and blood channels in modern crocodylians. Crocodylians have special integumentary sensory organs (ISOs)(look for tiny black freckles on their faces!) that they use to detect prey underwater, as their underwater eyesight is poor. Evidence for these ISOs can be seen in crocodylian skulls, which are full of tiny blood and nerve channels to supply the ISOs. In comparison, thalattosuchians have very few blood and nerve channels to supply ISOs, so it is likely they did not have ISOs. They did have large eyes, however, so my paper posits that there was a trade-off between eyesight and ISO sensation.
Morphosource LogoMorphosource project for this paper.

Co-author of Evidence for a novel cranial thermoregulatory pathway in thalattosuchian crocodylomorphs (Young et al 2023)

Thalattosuchian crocodylomorphs had a pair of perculiar grooves on the roof of their mouth: these paired grooves may have supplied blood and nerves to organs on the roof of the mouth that could be inflated with blood like a built-in cooling system; modern bowhead whales have a similar cooling mechanism. Nothing for certain can be said yet, the paper is mostly describing and comparing these grooves and exploring possible reasons for them.

Submitted CT data for A new genus of metriorhynchid crocodylomorph from the Lower Cretaceous of Germany(Sachs et al 2024)

I was not directly an author for this one, but I was the one to upload the CT data to morphosource (so I am in the acknowledgements!). (A lot of us are not based physically in the University of Edinburgh buildings, so we have to use the Remote Desktop App to access the system; due to some IT issues at the time I was one of the few people still connected via Remote Desktop, which is why I was asked to help). This paper is about Enalioetes schroederi, who was previously named Cricosaurus schroederi.
Morphosource LogoEnalioetes schroederi

Co-author on Thalattosuchian crocodylomorphs from the Sinemurian (Early Jurassic) of the UK (Young et al 2024)

Sinemurian taxon... Lorem ipsum... type something herreee
Morphosource LogoSinemurian Taxon

Submitted CT data for/co-author of Skull sinuses precluded extinct crocodile relatives from cetacean-style deep diving as they transitioned from land to sea (Young et al. 2024)

Sinus sinus sinus time
Morphosource LogoMorphosource Uploads for this paper

Co-author of The internal braincase anatomy of Thalattosuchus superciliosus - with implications for the endocranial evolution of metriorhynchid crocodylomorphs (Higgins et al. 2024)

Words about everyone's favourite Thalattosuchus supercilliosus go here.