Notable paleontologists
Paleontologists are among the more colorful and eccentric figures in the history of science.
Important figures include the Englishman William Smith who first noted that similar fossil sequences were found regionally and Georges Cuvier who initiated the study of ancient animals based on living animals.
Legendary Americann figures include Edward Drinker Cope, Othniel Marsh, Henry Fairfield Osborn, Louis Agassiz and Charles Walcott.
Legendary European paleontologists include the Swedish-speaking Finn Björn Kurtén.
History includes a number of prominent paleontologists. Charles Darwin collected fossils of South American mammals during his trip on the Beagle and examined petrified forests in Patagonia. Thomas Jefferson took a keen interest in mammoth bones. Besides looking at mammal teeth and digging up penguins, George Gaylord Simpson played a crucial role in bringing together ideas from biology, paleontology, and genetics to help create the "Modern Synthesis" of evolutionary biology; his book "Tempo and Mode" is a classic in the field. Prominent names in invertebrate paleontology include Steven Stanley, Stephen Jay Gould, David Raup, Geerat Vermeij, and Jack Sepkoski who have done much to expand our understanding of long-term patterns in the evolution of life on earth.
Other paleontologists include Yves Coppens. More modern figures in paleontology include John Ostrom, Bob Bakker and Jack Horner.
Research
The work done in paleontology can be divided into field work, collections management, fossil preparation and systematic description of new species.
See also
External links
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