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    <title>A Neural Network Turned a Book of Flowers Into Shockingly Lovely Dinosaur Art</title>
    <dc:date>2017-06-21T10:40:31+00:00</dc:date>
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    <dc:creator>jm</dc:creator><description><![CDATA[DeepArt.io, 'powered by an algorithm developed by Leon Gatys and a team from the University of Tübingen in Germany', did a really amazing job here]]></description>
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    <title>the etymology of the anatomical term &quot;Thagomizer&quot;</title>
    <dc:date>2011-10-09T13:10:12+00:00</dc:date>
    <link>http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thagomizer#Etymology</link>
    <dc:creator>jm</dc:creator><description><![CDATA['The term was coined by Gary Larson in a 1982 Far Side comic strip, in which a group of cavemen in a faux-modern lecture hall are taught by their caveman professor that the spikes were named "after the late Thag Simmons". The term was picked up initially by Ken Carpenter, a palaeontologist at the Denver Museum of Nature and Science, who used the term when describing a fossil at the Society of Vertebrate Paleontology Annual Meeting in 1993. Thagomizer has since been adopted as an informal anatomical term, and is used by the Smithsonian Institution, the Dinosaur National Monument in Utah, the book The Complete Dinosaur and the BBC documentary series Planet Dinosaur.' (via John Looney)

]]></description>
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