WitmerLab at Ohio University
Fleshing out the past

Had a wonderful and productive visit here with Justyna Słowiak—so many tyrannosaurs! 🦖 Justyna is building an exciting career at the Institute of Paleobiology at the Polish Academy of Sciences by leading modern studies of the dinosaurs of the classic Polish-Mongolian Paleontological Expeditions of the 1960s combined with a network of collaborators. I'm lucky to count myself among her collaborators! More to come...!
@dafoxxa @ohio.university @ouhcom @ohiobiosciences #Tarbosaurus #tyrannosaur

Had a wonderful and productive visit here with Justyna Słowiak—so many tyrannosaurs! 🦖 Justyna is building an exciting career at the Institute of Paleobiology at the Polish Academy of Sciences by leading modern studies of the dinosaurs of the classic Polish-Mongolian Paleontological Expeditions of the 1960s combined with a network of collaborators. I'm lucky to count myself among her collaborators! More to come...!
@dafoxxa @ohio.university @ouhcom @ohiobiosciences #Tarbosaurus #tyrannosaur

#FossilFriday I was surprised this week to find that a new dinosaur species bears my name—kindasorta. A specimen of the Mongolian ankylosaurian dinosaur Pinacosaurus that was described in 2003 by Rob Hill, me (Witmer), and the late great Mark Norell was made the holotype of a new species—Pinacosaurus hilwitnorum—in an article this week in Historical Biology by Paul Penkalski. By combining the first three letters of each author's name, he honored our 2003 collaboration (https://bit.ly/4nC5PTU). It's wonderful to see that our article is still relevant, probably mostly because it took on the often bewildering array of apertures and fossae in the narial (nostril) region. The species epithet "hilwitnorum" also was a welcome reminder of a fun project. Rob Hill and I chatted on the phone about it this week and reminisced about a rewarding collaboration in what seemed like simpler times. We both miss Mark, as well. The second image shows Paul Penkalski during a 2015 visit to WitmerLab to study our collection of ankylosaur skulls. His recent article in Historical Biology is here: https://doi.org/10.1080/08912963.2026.2633178.
@amniote @amnh @historicalbiology @ohio.university @ouhcom @ohiobiosciences #pinacosaurus #ankylosaur #mongolia

#FossilFriday I was surprised this week to find that a new dinosaur species bears my name—kindasorta. A specimen of the Mongolian ankylosaurian dinosaur Pinacosaurus that was described in 2003 by Rob Hill, me (Witmer), and the late great Mark Norell was made the holotype of a new species—Pinacosaurus hilwitnorum—in an article this week in Historical Biology by Paul Penkalski. By combining the first three letters of each author's name, he honored our 2003 collaboration (https://bit.ly/4nC5PTU). It's wonderful to see that our article is still relevant, probably mostly because it took on the often bewildering array of apertures and fossae in the narial (nostril) region. The species epithet "hilwitnorum" also was a welcome reminder of a fun project. Rob Hill and I chatted on the phone about it this week and reminisced about a rewarding collaboration in what seemed like simpler times. We both miss Mark, as well. The second image shows Paul Penkalski during a 2015 visit to WitmerLab to study our collection of ankylosaur skulls. His recent article in Historical Biology is here: https://doi.org/10.1080/08912963.2026.2633178.
@amniote @amnh @historicalbiology @ohio.university @ouhcom @ohiobiosciences #pinacosaurus #ankylosaur #mongolia

Tarbosaurus! 🦖 Having a great visit here with Justyna Słowiak of the Institute of Paleobiology at the Polish Academy of Sciences in Warsaw (Instytut Paleobiologii PAN).
1. Lately she's been honing her segmentation skills on a Tarbosaurus braincase (ZPAL MgD-I/4), with some guidance from our resident CT guru Ryan Ridgely. We're already collaborating on brain endocast ontogeny in Tarbosaurus but lots of other new projects are now brewing!
2. The second photo shows Justyna with the full skeleton of the same adult Tarbosaurus specimen (ZPAL MgD-I/4) in the exhibit space at the Museum of Evolution in Warsaw. It's exciting how Justyna and her colleagues in Warsaw are using new techniques like CT scanning to restudy these famous Gobi specimens discovered in the 1960s.
@dafoxxa @ohio.university @ouhcom @ohiobiosciences #Tarbosaurus #tyrannosaur #Ctscan #3dvisualization

Tarbosaurus! 🦖 Having a great visit here with Justyna Słowiak of the Institute of Paleobiology at the Polish Academy of Sciences in Warsaw (Instytut Paleobiologii PAN).
1. Lately she's been honing her segmentation skills on a Tarbosaurus braincase (ZPAL MgD-I/4), with some guidance from our resident CT guru Ryan Ridgely. We're already collaborating on brain endocast ontogeny in Tarbosaurus but lots of other new projects are now brewing!
2. The second photo shows Justyna with the full skeleton of the same adult Tarbosaurus specimen (ZPAL MgD-I/4) in the exhibit space at the Museum of Evolution in Warsaw. It's exciting how Justyna and her colleagues in Warsaw are using new techniques like CT scanning to restudy these famous Gobi specimens discovered in the 1960s.
@dafoxxa @ohio.university @ouhcom @ohiobiosciences #Tarbosaurus #tyrannosaur #Ctscan #3dvisualization

Excited to welcome to WitmerLab Justyna Słowiak of the Institute of Paleobiology at the Polish Academy of Sciences in Warsaw for a couple weeks. We're collaborating on aspects of skull evolution of the Mongolian tyrannosaurid Tarbosaurus. Stay tuned for more from Dr. Słowiak—and from our collaboration! 🦖
@dafoxxa @ohio.university @ouhcom @ohiobiosciences #Tarbosaurus #tyrannosaur #Trex #dinosaurskull

Had a great time this week at the Royal Tyrrell Museum of Palaeontology, culminating in the CurrieFest symposium yesterday, celebrating Phil Currie's 50 years in Alberta and honoring his contributions to paleontology and his profound influence on so many people, myself included!! It was a special day—and a total surprise for Phil! Otherwise, I was in the collections and had a full day on my own in the exhibits! The photos show an amazing complete skeleton of the tyrannosaurid Gorgosaurus (TMP 1999.33.1 ) in the collections of the Tyrrell Museum. This specimen is notable for a number of reasons, especially for having a complete gastral basket (that is, belly ribs called gastralia). Also, having a full day in the exhibits on Monday when the Tyrrell Museum is closed to the public allowed me to climb into several exhibits to study original fossil specimens and also take some great photos of the wonderful exhibits without museum patrons in the way.
@royaltyrrell @ohio.university @ouhcom @ohiobiosciences #museum #Gorgosaurus #museumcollections

Had a great time this week at the Royal Tyrrell Museum of Palaeontology, culminating in the CurrieFest symposium yesterday, celebrating Phil Currie's 50 years in Alberta and honoring his contributions to paleontology and his profound influence on so many people, myself included!! It was a special day—and a total surprise for Phil! Otherwise, I was in the collections and had a full day on my own in the exhibits! The photos show an amazing complete skeleton of the tyrannosaurid Gorgosaurus (TMP 1999.33.1 ) in the collections of the Tyrrell Museum. This specimen is notable for a number of reasons, especially for having a complete gastral basket (that is, belly ribs called gastralia). Also, having a full day in the exhibits on Monday when the Tyrrell Museum is closed to the public allowed me to climb into several exhibits to study original fossil specimens and also take some great photos of the wonderful exhibits without museum patrons in the way.
@royaltyrrell @ohio.university @ouhcom @ohiobiosciences #museum #Gorgosaurus #museumcollections

Had a great time this week at the Royal Tyrrell Museum of Palaeontology, culminating in the CurrieFest symposium yesterday, celebrating Phil Currie's 50 years in Alberta and honoring his contributions to paleontology and his profound influence on so many people, myself included!! It was a special day—and a total surprise for Phil! Otherwise, I was in the collections and had a full day on my own in the exhibits! The photos show an amazing complete skeleton of the tyrannosaurid Gorgosaurus (TMP 1999.33.1 ) in the collections of the Tyrrell Museum. This specimen is notable for a number of reasons, especially for having a complete gastral basket (that is, belly ribs called gastralia). Also, having a full day in the exhibits on Monday when the Tyrrell Museum is closed to the public allowed me to climb into several exhibits to study original fossil specimens and also take some great photos of the wonderful exhibits without museum patrons in the way.
@royaltyrrell @ohio.university @ouhcom @ohiobiosciences #museum #Gorgosaurus #museumcollections

Had a great time this week at the Royal Tyrrell Museum of Palaeontology, culminating in the CurrieFest symposium yesterday, celebrating Phil Currie's 50 years in Alberta and honoring his contributions to paleontology and his profound influence on so many people, myself included!! It was a special day—and a total surprise for Phil! Otherwise, I was in the collections and had a full day on my own in the exhibits! The photos show an amazing complete skeleton of the tyrannosaurid Gorgosaurus (TMP 1999.33.1 ) in the collections of the Tyrrell Museum. This specimen is notable for a number of reasons, especially for having a complete gastral basket (that is, belly ribs called gastralia). Also, having a full day in the exhibits on Monday when the Tyrrell Museum is closed to the public allowed me to climb into several exhibits to study original fossil specimens and also take some great photos of the wonderful exhibits without museum patrons in the way.
@royaltyrrell @ohio.university @ouhcom @ohiobiosciences #museum #Gorgosaurus #museumcollections

It was great to meet up with Jared Voris today at the Royal Tyrrell Museum and study some beautiful juvenile specimens of the tyrannosaurid Gorgosaurus (this one is TMP 2016.014.0001). I'm happy to have played a role in two awesome articles led by Jared: https://doi.org/10.1080/02724634.2021.2041651 & https://doi.org/10.1002/cne.70056. 🦖
@jared_voris @royaltyrrell @ohio.university @ouhcom @ohiobiosciences @darlaz_dinosaurs @svp_vertpaleo #tyrannosaur #gorgosaurus #museumcollections #dinosaurskull

It was great to meet up with Jared Voris today at the Royal Tyrrell Museum and study some beautiful juvenile specimens of the tyrannosaurid Gorgosaurus (this one is TMP 2016.014.0001). I'm happy to have played a role in two awesome articles led by Jared: https://doi.org/10.1080/02724634.2021.2041651 & https://doi.org/10.1002/cne.70056. 🦖
@jared_voris @royaltyrrell @ohio.university @ouhcom @ohiobiosciences @darlaz_dinosaurs @svp_vertpaleo #tyrannosaur #gorgosaurus #museumcollections #dinosaurskull

It was great to meet up with Jared Voris today at the Royal Tyrrell Museum and study some beautiful juvenile specimens of the tyrannosaurid Gorgosaurus (this one is TMP 2016.014.0001). I'm happy to have played a role in two awesome articles led by Jared: https://doi.org/10.1080/02724634.2021.2041651 & https://doi.org/10.1002/cne.70056. 🦖
@jared_voris @royaltyrrell @ohio.university @ouhcom @ohiobiosciences @darlaz_dinosaurs @svp_vertpaleo #tyrannosaur #gorgosaurus #museumcollections #dinosaurskull

Congratulations to Ohio University graduating senior Grace Vance who defended her honors thesis on cranial vascular adaptations for deep diving in seals this week and submitted it today! We'll send it off for publication soon. She's won all kinds of awards here at OHIO. Grace is a truly impressive person with a very bright future! She's got a summer internship at Friday Harbors Labs in Washington State and then heads off to Purdue to start her PhD this fall!
1. Grace holds her complete and submitted senior honors thesis on cranial vascular adaptations for deep diving in seals. In front of her on a table is the skull of an adult male hooded seal.
2. Grace presented her senior honors thesis research earlier this week
3. Grace presented her seal research poster to Dr. Kenneth C. and Gayle A. Reed at today's Research Fair for our Ohio Center for Ecology and Evolutionary Studies (OCEES). Dr. Reed is a generous donor to our OCEES student programs, funding multiple fellowships.
4. Grace holds her honors thesis. Standing next to her is Witmer, Grace's proud research mentor.
@grace.vance13 @graceful.bio @ohio.university @ouhcom @ohiobiosciences @bobcatsdiscover @ohiohonors @ohiotribeta @fridayharborlabs @purduebio #undergradresearch #phdlife #honorsthesis #seals #hoodedseal

Congratulations to Ohio University graduating senior Grace Vance who defended her honors thesis on cranial vascular adaptations for deep diving in seals this week and submitted it today! We'll send it off for publication soon. She's won all kinds of awards here at OHIO. Grace is a truly impressive person with a very bright future! She's got a summer internship at Friday Harbors Labs in Washington State and then heads off to Purdue to start her PhD this fall!
1. Grace holds her complete and submitted senior honors thesis on cranial vascular adaptations for deep diving in seals. In front of her on a table is the skull of an adult male hooded seal.
2. Grace presented her senior honors thesis research earlier this week
3. Grace presented her seal research poster to Dr. Kenneth C. and Gayle A. Reed at today's Research Fair for our Ohio Center for Ecology and Evolutionary Studies (OCEES). Dr. Reed is a generous donor to our OCEES student programs, funding multiple fellowships.
4. Grace holds her honors thesis. Standing next to her is Witmer, Grace's proud research mentor.
@grace.vance13 @graceful.bio @ohio.university @ouhcom @ohiobiosciences @bobcatsdiscover @ohiohonors @ohiotribeta @fridayharborlabs @purduebio #undergradresearch #phdlife #honorsthesis #seals #hoodedseal

Congratulations to Ohio University graduating senior Grace Vance who defended her honors thesis on cranial vascular adaptations for deep diving in seals this week and submitted it today! We'll send it off for publication soon. She's won all kinds of awards here at OHIO. Grace is a truly impressive person with a very bright future! She's got a summer internship at Friday Harbors Labs in Washington State and then heads off to Purdue to start her PhD this fall!
1. Grace holds her complete and submitted senior honors thesis on cranial vascular adaptations for deep diving in seals. In front of her on a table is the skull of an adult male hooded seal.
2. Grace presented her senior honors thesis research earlier this week
3. Grace presented her seal research poster to Dr. Kenneth C. and Gayle A. Reed at today's Research Fair for our Ohio Center for Ecology and Evolutionary Studies (OCEES). Dr. Reed is a generous donor to our OCEES student programs, funding multiple fellowships.
4. Grace holds her honors thesis. Standing next to her is Witmer, Grace's proud research mentor.
@grace.vance13 @graceful.bio @ohio.university @ouhcom @ohiobiosciences @bobcatsdiscover @ohiohonors @ohiotribeta @fridayharborlabs @purduebio #undergradresearch #phdlife #honorsthesis #seals #hoodedseal

Congratulations to Ohio University graduating senior Grace Vance who defended her honors thesis on cranial vascular adaptations for deep diving in seals this week and submitted it today! We'll send it off for publication soon. She's won all kinds of awards here at OHIO. Grace is a truly impressive person with a very bright future! She's got a summer internship at Friday Harbors Labs in Washington State and then heads off to Purdue to start her PhD this fall!
1. Grace holds her complete and submitted senior honors thesis on cranial vascular adaptations for deep diving in seals. In front of her on a table is the skull of an adult male hooded seal.
2. Grace presented her senior honors thesis research earlier this week
3. Grace presented her seal research poster to Dr. Kenneth C. and Gayle A. Reed at today's Research Fair for our Ohio Center for Ecology and Evolutionary Studies (OCEES). Dr. Reed is a generous donor to our OCEES student programs, funding multiple fellowships.
4. Grace holds her honors thesis. Standing next to her is Witmer, Grace's proud research mentor.
@grace.vance13 @graceful.bio @ohio.university @ouhcom @ohiobiosciences @bobcatsdiscover @ohiohonors @ohiotribeta @fridayharborlabs @purduebio #undergradresearch #phdlife #honorsthesis #seals #hoodedseal

Amazing photo credit: @witmerlab 📸
Thank you for an awesome day Dr. Witmer 🦕
#pinkysdinosauradventure #dinosaurs #fossils #ohiouniversity #bobcats 🐾

#FossilFriday From the depths of the pandemic to a wonderful #OA article out this week in the Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology — https://bit.ly/48oGPZG — congratulations to Marissa Livius, Jordan Mallon, and the whole team! It's been a blast to dig back into ankylosaurs to sort out the Panoplosaurus-Edmontonia mess. CT scan data wound up being critical to tease apart the nuances among the various specimens referred to these genera. Marissa did a spectacular job with the quite difficult CT data for the main specimen: the holotype skull of Panoplosaurus mirus (CMN 2759). I was able to contribute to the project information based on scans we did of three other specimens referred to these genera (as well as more distantly related ankylosaurs). I'm grateful to have been able to work with Marissa, Jordan, Michael Ryan, and Hillary Maddin!
1. First page of the Livius et al. (2026) article in JVP. Superimposed on the page is a Zoom screen capture of Marissa' master's proposal defense from May 2021 with Jordan , me (Witmer), Hillary, Michael, and Marissa.
2. Photograph of a cast of the holotype skull of Panoplosaurus mirus in the foreground, with some other ankylosaurs lurking in the background (Gastonia, Ankylosaurus, Pawpawsaurus).
3. CT-scan-based volume renders of the P. mirus holotype skull (top), a referred specimen of P. mirus ROM 1215 (middle), and a referred skull of Edmontonia rugosidens AMNH 5381 along with a slice through the snout (bottom).
4. Photos from a May 2025 post (while finalizing details for the manuscript) focusing on the E. rugosidens holotype (USNM 11868). At top right, I'm studying our archaic x-ray film-based versions of the 1998 CT scans. The middle photo shows lateral views of the skull, and the bottom photo shows stereoscopic photos of the ventral surface of the skull.
@marissalivius panel.ontologist @hcmaddin @museumofnature @smithsoniannmnh @ohio.university @ouhcom @ohiobiosciences #ankylosaur #Panoplosaurus #Edmontonia #ctscan

#FossilFriday From the depths of the pandemic to a wonderful #OA article out this week in the Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology — https://bit.ly/48oGPZG — congratulations to Marissa Livius, Jordan Mallon, and the whole team! It's been a blast to dig back into ankylosaurs to sort out the Panoplosaurus-Edmontonia mess. CT scan data wound up being critical to tease apart the nuances among the various specimens referred to these genera. Marissa did a spectacular job with the quite difficult CT data for the main specimen: the holotype skull of Panoplosaurus mirus (CMN 2759). I was able to contribute to the project information based on scans we did of three other specimens referred to these genera (as well as more distantly related ankylosaurs). I'm grateful to have been able to work with Marissa, Jordan, Michael Ryan, and Hillary Maddin!
1. First page of the Livius et al. (2026) article in JVP. Superimposed on the page is a Zoom screen capture of Marissa' master's proposal defense from May 2021 with Jordan , me (Witmer), Hillary, Michael, and Marissa.
2. Photograph of a cast of the holotype skull of Panoplosaurus mirus in the foreground, with some other ankylosaurs lurking in the background (Gastonia, Ankylosaurus, Pawpawsaurus).
3. CT-scan-based volume renders of the P. mirus holotype skull (top), a referred specimen of P. mirus ROM 1215 (middle), and a referred skull of Edmontonia rugosidens AMNH 5381 along with a slice through the snout (bottom).
4. Photos from a May 2025 post (while finalizing details for the manuscript) focusing on the E. rugosidens holotype (USNM 11868). At top right, I'm studying our archaic x-ray film-based versions of the 1998 CT scans. The middle photo shows lateral views of the skull, and the bottom photo shows stereoscopic photos of the ventral surface of the skull.
@marissalivius panel.ontologist @hcmaddin @museumofnature @smithsoniannmnh @ohio.university @ouhcom @ohiobiosciences #ankylosaur #Panoplosaurus #Edmontonia #ctscan

#FossilFriday From the depths of the pandemic to a wonderful #OA article out this week in the Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology — https://bit.ly/48oGPZG — congratulations to Marissa Livius, Jordan Mallon, and the whole team! It's been a blast to dig back into ankylosaurs to sort out the Panoplosaurus-Edmontonia mess. CT scan data wound up being critical to tease apart the nuances among the various specimens referred to these genera. Marissa did a spectacular job with the quite difficult CT data for the main specimen: the holotype skull of Panoplosaurus mirus (CMN 2759). I was able to contribute to the project information based on scans we did of three other specimens referred to these genera (as well as more distantly related ankylosaurs). I'm grateful to have been able to work with Marissa, Jordan, Michael Ryan, and Hillary Maddin!
1. First page of the Livius et al. (2026) article in JVP. Superimposed on the page is a Zoom screen capture of Marissa' master's proposal defense from May 2021 with Jordan , me (Witmer), Hillary, Michael, and Marissa.
2. Photograph of a cast of the holotype skull of Panoplosaurus mirus in the foreground, with some other ankylosaurs lurking in the background (Gastonia, Ankylosaurus, Pawpawsaurus).
3. CT-scan-based volume renders of the P. mirus holotype skull (top), a referred specimen of P. mirus ROM 1215 (middle), and a referred skull of Edmontonia rugosidens AMNH 5381 along with a slice through the snout (bottom).
4. Photos from a May 2025 post (while finalizing details for the manuscript) focusing on the E. rugosidens holotype (USNM 11868). At top right, I'm studying our archaic x-ray film-based versions of the 1998 CT scans. The middle photo shows lateral views of the skull, and the bottom photo shows stereoscopic photos of the ventral surface of the skull.
@marissalivius panel.ontologist @hcmaddin @museumofnature @smithsoniannmnh @ohio.university @ouhcom @ohiobiosciences #ankylosaur #Panoplosaurus #Edmontonia #ctscan

#FossilFriday From the depths of the pandemic to a wonderful #OA article out this week in the Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology — https://bit.ly/48oGPZG — congratulations to Marissa Livius, Jordan Mallon, and the whole team! It's been a blast to dig back into ankylosaurs to sort out the Panoplosaurus-Edmontonia mess. CT scan data wound up being critical to tease apart the nuances among the various specimens referred to these genera. Marissa did a spectacular job with the quite difficult CT data for the main specimen: the holotype skull of Panoplosaurus mirus (CMN 2759). I was able to contribute to the project information based on scans we did of three other specimens referred to these genera (as well as more distantly related ankylosaurs). I'm grateful to have been able to work with Marissa, Jordan, Michael Ryan, and Hillary Maddin!
1. First page of the Livius et al. (2026) article in JVP. Superimposed on the page is a Zoom screen capture of Marissa' master's proposal defense from May 2021 with Jordan , me (Witmer), Hillary, Michael, and Marissa.
2. Photograph of a cast of the holotype skull of Panoplosaurus mirus in the foreground, with some other ankylosaurs lurking in the background (Gastonia, Ankylosaurus, Pawpawsaurus).
3. CT-scan-based volume renders of the P. mirus holotype skull (top), a referred specimen of P. mirus ROM 1215 (middle), and a referred skull of Edmontonia rugosidens AMNH 5381 along with a slice through the snout (bottom).
4. Photos from a May 2025 post (while finalizing details for the manuscript) focusing on the E. rugosidens holotype (USNM 11868). At top right, I'm studying our archaic x-ray film-based versions of the 1998 CT scans. The middle photo shows lateral views of the skull, and the bottom photo shows stereoscopic photos of the ventral surface of the skull.
@marissalivius panel.ontologist @hcmaddin @museumofnature @smithsoniannmnh @ohio.university @ouhcom @ohiobiosciences #ankylosaur #Panoplosaurus #Edmontonia #ctscan

Excited to report that Ohio University Scripps School of Journalism student Eric Boll published his master's thesis research (which I helped supervise) on aspects of news coverage of paleontology in the 1990s in Historical Biology: https://bit.ly/41VMS4e. It even elicited an editorial: https://bit.ly/4spzQH9! Both are free to read for the next six months. 🦖
Eric's quantitative study focused on three major news sources (USA Today, The Associated Press, and The New York Times), developing a codebook including 16 paleo topics and eight metaphors or tropes and exploring themes such as 'agenda-setting topics' (like maybe Jurassic Park), the importance of tropes and 'mascot species' (like the T. rex in the photo), the role of 'visible scientists' (mostly white dudes portrayed as Indiana Jones types in the '90s), and other interesting topics focused on a decade where paleo was going in many exciting new directions just as the internet was starting to take off. He presented this research at the 2024 SVP meeting and hopes to present a new project at the 2026 SVP meeting in Cleveland.
@ericboll_ @ohio.university @scripps_jschool @ouhcom @ohiobiosciences @bobcatsdiscover @historicalbiology @nytimes @usatoday @apnews #journalism #1990s #JurassicPark #journalismresearch #trex

Today is the Ohio University Student Research & Creativity Expo! For the third year in a row OHIO Honors student Grace Vance took first place for her poster on her senior thesis research on vascular adaptations for deep diving in seals! Well done, Grace! 🦭🏆
@ohio.university @ohiohonors @ohiostudentexpo @ouhcom @ohiobiosciences @bobcatsdiscover @grace.vance13 @graceful.bio #ohiostudentexpo #postersession #undergradresearch #seal

Today is the Ohio University Student Research & Creativity Expo! For the third year in a row OHIO Honors student Grace Vance took first place for her poster on her senior thesis research on vascular adaptations for deep diving in seals! Well done, Grace! 🦭🏆
@ohio.university @ohiohonors @ohiostudentexpo @ouhcom @ohiobiosciences @bobcatsdiscover @grace.vance13 @graceful.bio #ohiostudentexpo #postersession #undergradresearch #seal

Today is the Ohio University Student Research & Creativity Expo! For the third year in a row OHIO Honors student Grace Vance took first place for her poster on her senior thesis research on vascular adaptations for deep diving in seals! Well done, Grace! 🦭🏆
@ohio.university @ohiohonors @ohiostudentexpo @ouhcom @ohiobiosciences @bobcatsdiscover @grace.vance13 @graceful.bio #ohiostudentexpo #postersession #undergradresearch #seal

Today is the Ohio University Student Research & Creativity Expo! For the third year in a row OHIO Honors student Grace Vance took first place for her poster on her senior thesis research on vascular adaptations for deep diving in seals! Well done, Grace! 🦭🏆
@ohio.university @ohiohonors @ohiostudentexpo @ouhcom @ohiobiosciences @bobcatsdiscover @grace.vance13 @graceful.bio #ohiostudentexpo #postersession #undergradresearch #seal

#HappyEaster🐰 from your friends at WitmerLab!
A crunchy take on that traditional favorite this #Easter — now with added calcium!
@ohio.university @ouhcom @ohiobiosciences #rabbit #easterbunny
Instagram Story Viewer to proste narzędzie, które pozwala na ciche oglądanie i zapisywanie historii Instagram, filmów, zdjęć lub IGTV. Dzięki tej usłudze możesz pobrać zawartość i cieszyć się nią offline, kiedy chcesz. Jeśli znajdziesz coś interesującego na Instagramie, co chcesz sprawdzić później, lub chcesz oglądać historie pozostając anonimowym, nasz Viewer jest idealny dla Ciebie. Anonstories oferuje doskonałe rozwiązanie do ukrywania swojej tożsamości. Instagram po raz pierwszy uruchomił funkcję historii w sierpniu 2023 roku, która szybko została zaadoptowana przez inne platformy ze względu na jej angażujący, czasowo ograniczony format. Historie pozwalają użytkownikom dzielić się szybkimi aktualizacjami, czy to zdjęciami, filmami, czy selfie, wzbogaconymi o tekst, emotikony lub filtry, i są widoczne tylko przez 24 godziny. Ten ograniczony czas sprawia, że historie cieszą się dużym zaangażowaniem w porównaniu do zwykłych postów. W dzisiejszym świecie historie to jeden z najpopularniejszych sposobów komunikacji na mediach społecznościowych. Jednak gdy oglądasz historię, twórca może zobaczyć Twoje imię na liście oglądających, co może stanowić problem związany z prywatnością. Co jeśli chcesz przeglądać historie, nie będąc zauważonym? Tutaj Anonstories staje się przydatne. Umożliwia oglądanie publicznej zawartości Instagram bez ujawniania tożsamości. Wystarczy wpisać nazwę użytkownika profilu, który Cię interesuje, a narzędzie wyświetli ich najnowsze historie. Cechy Anonstories Viewer: - Anonimowe przeglądanie: Oglądaj historie bez pojawiania się na liście oglądających. - Brak konta: Oglądaj publiczną zawartość bez logowania się na konto Instagram. - Pobieranie zawartości: Zapisuj dowolną zawartość historii bezpośrednio na swoje urządzenie do użytku offline. - Przeglądaj najważniejsze: Dostęp do Instagram Highlights, nawet po 24 godzinach. - Monitorowanie repostów: Śledź reposty lub poziom zaangażowania w historię na prywatnych profilach. Ograniczenia: - Narzędzie działa tylko z publicznymi kontami; konta prywatne pozostają niedostępne. Korzyści: - Przyjazne dla prywatności: Oglądaj zawartość Instagram bez bycia zauważonym. - Proste i łatwe: Brak potrzeby instalacji aplikacji lub rejestracji. - Ekskluzywne narzędzia: Pobieraj i zarządzaj zawartością w sposób, którego Instagram nie oferuje.
Śledź aktualizacje na Instagramie dyskretnie, chroniąc swoją prywatność i pozostając anonimowym.
Oglądaj profile i zdjęcia anonimowo za pomocą Prywatnego Viewera.
To darmowe narzędzie pozwala oglądać historie Instagram anonimowo, zapewniając, że Twoja aktywność pozostaje ukryta przed twórcą historii.
Anonstories pozwala użytkownikom oglądać historie na Instagramie bez informowania twórcy.
Funkcjonuje płynnie na iOS, Android, Windows, macOS i nowoczesnych przeglądarkach takich jak Chrome i Safari.
Priorytetem jest bezpieczne, anonimowe przeglądanie bez konieczności logowania się.
Użytkownicy mogą oglądać publiczne historie, wpisując nazwę użytkownika – bez konieczności zakładania konta.
Pobiera zdjęcia (JPEG) i filmy (MP4) z łatwością.
Usługa jest bezpłatna.
Treści z prywatnych kont mogą być dostępne tylko dla obserwujących.
Pliki są przeznaczone do użytku osobistego lub edukacyjnego i muszą być zgodne z przepisami dotyczącymi praw autorskich.
Wpisz publiczną nazwę użytkownika, aby oglądać lub pobrać historie. Usługa generuje bezpośrednie linki do zapis