https://blogs.scientificamerican.com/laelaps/the-making-of-an-allosaurus-graveyard/
this gets into some deep paleoecology studies that *fascinate* me. it's not enough just to dig up and study what amounts to the "charismatic megafauna" of a given time/place... how much sense would it make trying to reconstruct a modern African Savannah ecosystem by only studying lions and wildebeest?
that's why (getting into some woo-woo background story, lol) my job was using the equivalent of a scanning electron microscope to catalog and count microbes in Martian fossil sediments. we were trying to recreate the *entire ecosystem*, and knowing the chemical balances and bacterial percentages was vital to recreating it properly, rather than just sticking the charismatic megafauna in and faking the rest.
... is it weird to be homesick for a possibly fictional headcanon construct world? among this crowd, I suspect very much not...
@green I think it's perfectly understandable!
Perhaps a bit cynically, I might note that anyone who unironically uses the phrase "good old days" is homesick for a fiction made up of positive memories of questionable accuracy. At least we know where we stand, aye?