My former site, the Vertebrate Notes, began as a set of notes on vertebrate paleontology and biology kept for personal use, but the project got completely out of hand. At some point, I ran into Alan Kazlev, who has never been in hand. After a year of discussion, two weeks of serious thought, and no actual planning, we started Palæos. I'm not sure what it is, but we spend a lot of time on it. I handle the vertebrates mostly. Alan was handling the rest of time and space, but I'm branching out.
I have no idea. Ask Alan.
All kinds of things: an alphabetical index of clades, cladograms showing the relationship of each group to the others, synapomorphies of the groups, other anatomical information, some images; often some quick information on ecological position, references and web links for further information, literature references; the names of typical or notable members of the taxon. Now and again, other material of interest in the form of notes or essays has been included in the entry. Another section takes a few vicious stabs at being an osteology of the vertebrates. There's a very home-grown glossary of vertebrate biology. I've got some other sections in mind for later. In forming Palæos, I've integrated most of Alan's vertebrate materials. Sometimes they complement the old material quite nicely. Then again, sometimes they don't. Some of the entries are, obviously, much more comprehensive than others. There is no real method to the selection. I've been trying to give a little coverage to all groups. So far the only group I find truly boring are the teleosts, and even they have their points.
Why not? Also because Fred Bervoets (DinoData) was kind enough to suggest and encourage it.
Yup but I cheat sometimes.
The bane of cladograms are meaningless nodes and stem species. If you've ever tried to draw a cladogram, you'll know what I mean. When an important group starts to radiate, it often throws out a bunch of taxa early on that don't last long and leave no daughter clades. Their relationships are often poorly understood because only a few, isolated specimens are known. They tend to obscure the main lines of a cladogram. Worse, they require a lot of work for me because they often have some weird mix of characters that requires a great deal of explanation for not much learned -- all of it for a group erected on 1 molar, half a vertebra and a burning to desire to finish the thesis before turning 30 (yes, I've been there). Sometimes the only solution is to erect a garbage taxon and throw the oddballs into it. Another approach is to allow nodes to include basal species. This would be wrong. The practice has no theoretical justification. It undermines the whole theoretical foundation of cladistics. It is sheer sloppiness. But I'm going to do it anyway.
The basic entries used to be drawn from RL Carroll (1988) Vertebrate Paleontology and Evolution, Freeman & Co.; PJ Currie & K Padian (eds.) (1997) Encyclopedia of Dinosaurs, Academic Press; JO Farlow & MK Brett-Surman (eds.) (1997), The Complete Dinosaur, Indiana; P Janvier (1996), Early Vertebrates Oxford; FH Pough, CM Janis, & JB Heiser (1999) Vertebrate Life, Prentice Hall (5th ed.); the Encyclopedia Britannica; as well as some marginally relevant professional experience long ago. As often as time permits, entries are revised from the primary literature, full citations to which are found on the References pages.
You don't.
I have many years of experience as a vertebrate.
I used to leave it at that, but someone (correctly) thought I was being evasive. A resume is included for the hopelessly nosy.
I'm not sure. I used to have a "no copyright" policy except for attributed images. But Alan doesn't have this quirk, and he's trying out a Creative Commons licensing scheme. Myself, I tend to think that (a) no one could possibly make any commercial use out of my stuff and (b) they're welcome to try. Also: remember that the material found at any links contained in Palæos is usually protected by copyrights belonging to the owners of those sites. All links in Palæos are included purely by way of reference or citation. No claim is made to any material at those sites, nor does their citation in Palæos constitute any form of license or permission, express or implied, to access, use or copy that material.
For professional advice, my fee is $240 an hour.

--Toby White
AUGUSTUS T. WHITE
5447 Jackwood
Houston, Texas 77096
Phone: 713-667-7002
augwhite@sbcglobal.net
Legal Practice:
Augustus T. White
2004 - present: Private practice of commercial and employment law. In recent
years, my practice has tended to emphasize ERISA litigation, litigation relating
to trade secrets and covenants not to compete, employment discrimination claims,
and arbitration.
Chamberlain, Hrdlicka, White,
Williams & Martin
1986-1989 & 1997-2004: Shareholder: 1200 Smith, Suite 1400, Houston,
Texas, 77002. Private practice of employment law.
Youngblood & White
1995-1997: Partner. 1800 West Loop South, Suite 1800, Houston, Texas.
Private practice of employment law, medical malpractice and benefit claims.
Keck, Mahin & Cate
1989-1994: Partner: 1001 Main, Suite 2400, Houston, Texas 77002. Private
practice of employment law.
Vinson & Elkins
1981-1986: Associate: 1001 Main, Houston, Texas 77002. Private practice of
employment law.
Arbitration:
American Arbitration Association
1992- Current: AAA employment panel. Approximately 12 arbitrations,
including benefit disputes, discrimination claims, non-subscriber personal
injuries, and employment contracts
National Arbitration and Mediation
2004-Current: NAM employment panel. Two arbitrations relating to claims of
discrimination and wrongful discharge.
Scientific:
Palaeos
·
Palaeos was selected by the National Institute of Biotechnical Information (NIH) as one of its core taxonomy providers for the MEDLINE/PUBMED Taxonomy Browser.· The site is used as supplementary course material at colleges and universities including Cambridge University (UK), the University of Helsinki (Fin.), the University of Washington (USA), Heidelberg University (Ger.), and the Universidad de Granada (Spain), as well as numerous smaller colleges, universities and high schools throughout the world.
·
During the 2002-03 year, the site was large part of the core curriculum at a paleontology course taught at the University of Helsinki.
Education:
Yale Law School
J.D. 1981, Yale Law School, New Haven, Connecticut.
Johns Hopkins University
Ph.D. (Biology) 1980, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, Maryland.
National Institutes of Health Pre-doctoral Fellow and Johns Hopkins Fellow. My
graduate work related to DNA cloning experiments and gene isolation, a field
which was then in its infancy.
New College
B.A. (Biology) 1973 New College, Sarasota, Florida.
Selected Publications and Media:
White, A.T. & M.A. Kazlev (2002-present), Palaeos, http://www.Palaeos.com/
White, A.T. (2000), Would you, could you in a box?: Hox genes and the rhythm of evolution. Lecture: Fla. Gulf Coast Univ.
White, A.T. (1999-2002), The Vertebrate Notes (former site)
White, A.T. (1998), The Boston fee party: Beck rights and project labor agreements, 19 J. Lab. Res. 89.
White, A.T. (1997), Litigation: Where has it been and where is it going? 18 J. Lab. Res. 65.
Northrup, H.C. & A.T. White (1996), Subsidizing contractors to gain employment: Construction union "job targeting", 17 Berkeley J. Employ. & Lab. Law 62
Northrup, H.C. & A.T. White, (1995), Construction union use of environmental regulation to win jobs: Cases, impact and legal challenges, 19 Harv. J. Law & Public Policy 55.
White, A.T., Employment arbitration in the non-union workplace, in Dispute Resolution at Work, Texas Employment Law Council Annual Meeting, June 29, 1994, Houston, Texas
White, A.T., Employment arbitration in the non-union workplace, in Fifth Annual ADR Institute, State Bar of Texas, September 30, 1993, Houston, Texas
Ono, M., M.D. Cole, A.T. White, & R.-C. Huang (1980), Sequence organization of cloned intracisternal a particle genes. Cell 21: 465.
Brade, W.P., A.T. White & L.S. Hnilica (1974), Early acetylation of mouse kidney histones after injection of folic acid. Deutsche Pharm. Gesell. 282 supp.: R12 (abstr.)
References: available on request.
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