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The name "Brontosaurus" might be accepted as correct after all.

Pluto, you're just too small to be a planet even though you have a moon.
Five moons, at least.

As for brontosaurus, that was my favorite dino as a child. Should be interesting to see if it comes back!
 
Meanwhile Pluto gets no action on its appeal to be reclassed as a planet again.

WrHs8G5.jpg
 
I seem to be out of the loop, when did the Brontosaurus become a nonexistant thing?

In 1903, and it's been fairly consistently thought to be the same as Apatosaurus since (the only exception I see is Romer, 1966 who treated Brontosaurus as a valid name).
 
A lot of the old Brontosaurus reconstructions and illustrations were actually based on a fossil that was incorrectly fitted with with that of the Camerasaurus as the Apatosaurus skull was not available until later years. Hence a lot of the older books have it with a short head instead of a more slender/accurate representation.
 
I guess it never came up in the early 80s when I was looking. I seem to remember Brontosaurus being in use and no effort being made to correct it.
 
And in my book, Pluto is still a planet!

What about Sedna and Eris and all the others classified the same as Pluto? Do they become planets, too, or is Pluto special just because you learned it was a planet as a child?

At least brontosaurus has a kind of onomatopoeia about it.

Fair point, with a half a point taken away on the second half of the question ;).

I still view it as such since it's what I'm used to. I don't think there's anything wrong with it. *shrug* No specialness attached.

Hell they're all planets as far as I'm concerned.
 
Gotta love paleontology. There's a lot of back and forth that goes on behind the scenes that's kind of humorous.
 
Sorry to be a wet blanket, but it appears to be a SINGLE PAPER at this point, hardly a scientific consensus. We'll see where this ends up, but it's not as certain as the headlines paint it. But, then, clickbait.
 
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