Dictionary Definition
paleontologist n : a specialist in paleontology
[syn: palaeontologist,
fossilist]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Alternative forms
Noun
- one who studies paleontology
Translations
- Bosnian: paleontolog
- Croatian: paleontolog
- Czech: paleontolog
- Portuguese: paleontologista m|f, paleontólogo
- Serbian:
- Cyrillic:
палеонтолог
- Roman: paleontolog
- Cyrillic:
палеонтолог
Extensive Definition
- Palaeontology redirects here. For the scientific journal, see Palaeontology (journal).
Paleontology, palaeontology or palæontology (from
Greek: παλαιό (palaeo), "old, ancient"; όν (on), "being"; and
logos, "speech, thought") is the study of prehistoric life forms on
Earth through the examination of fossils. This includes the study
of body
fossils, tracks (ichnites), burrows, cast-off parts,
fossilised faeces
(coprolites), palynomorphs and chemical
residues. Studies of prehistoric hominins, their culture and
their behaviour are the purview of two other disciplines, archaeology and paleoanthropology.
Background
Modern paleontology sets ancient
life in its context by studying how long-term physical changes
of global geography paleogeography
and climate paleoclimate have affected
the evolution of life,
how ecosystems have responded to these changes and have adapted the
planetary environment in turn and how these mutual responses have
affected today's patterns of biodiversity. Hence,
paleontology overlaps with geology (the study of rocks and
rock formations) as well as with botany, biology, zoology and ecology – fields concerned with
life forms
and how they interact.
The major subdivisions of paleontology include
paleozoology
(animals), paleobotany (plants) and
micropaleontology
(microfossils). Paleozoologists may specialise in invertebrate
paleontology, which deals with animals without backbones or in
vertebrate
paleontology, dealing with fossils of animals with backbones,
including fossil hominids (paleoanthropology).
Micropaleontologists study microscopic fossils, including
organic-walled microfossils whose study is called palynology.
There are many developing specialties such as
paleobiology,
paleoecology,
ichnology (the study
of tracks and burrows) and taphonomy (the study of what
happens to organisms after they expire). Major areas of study
include the correlation of rock strata
with their geologic
ages and the study of evolution of lifeforms.
Paleontology utilises the same classic binomial
nomenclature scheme, devised for the biology of living things
by the mid-18th century Swedish
biologist Carolus
Linnaeus and increasingly sets these species in a genealogical
framework, showing their degrees of interrelatedness using the
still somewhat controversial technique of 'cladistics'.
The primary economic importance of paleontology
lies in the use of fossils to determine the age and nature of the
rocks that contain them or the layers above or below. This
information is vital to the mining industry and especially
the petroleum
industry. Simply looking at the fossils contained in a rock remains
one of the fastest and most accurate means of telling how old that
rock is.
Fossils were known by primitive humans and were
sometimes identified correctly as the remains of ancient lifeforms.
The organised study of paleontology dates from the late 18th
century. For a more complete historical overview see the article
History
of paleontology.
Notable paleontologists
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. Mary Anning was a notable early paleontologist. She found several landmark fossils, in her home town of Lyme Regis. Although self-taught, she collected and described them in a very systematic way. William Buckland, Richard Owen, Gideon Mantell, Georges Cuvier and Thomas Huxley were important early pioneers, in the field of paleontology. Thomas Jefferson took a keen interest in mammoth bones. Edward Drinker Cope and Othniel Charles Marsh waged a famously fierce competition known as the Bone Wars in the late 19th century that involved some questionable practices, but which significantly advanced the understanding of the natural history of North America and vertebrate paleontology. Professor Earl Douglass of the Carnegie University in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, opened the fossil quarry protected today by Dinosaur National Monument in Utah. Douglass' fossils are in several Natural History Museums. Meanwhile, Baron Franz Nopcsa, a pioneer paleobiologist, argued that dinosaurs might have been both warm-blooded and ancestral to birds.Besides looking at mammal teeth and unearthing
penguin skeletons,
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 M.
Stanley, Stephen
Jay Gould, David Raup,
Rousseau
H. Flower and Jack
Sepkoski, who have done much to expand our understanding of
long-term patterns in the evolution of life on earth. Large names
in the field of paleoanthropology
include Louis,
Mary
and Richard
Leakey, Raymond
Dart, Robert
Broom, C.K.
'Bob' Brain, Kenneth
Oakley, Robert
Ardrey and Donald
Johanson. In recent times, Mongolian
paleontologist Rinchen
Barsbold has done much to expand our understanding of dinosaur and bird evolution. Paul Sereno
of the University
of Chicago has made several important dinosaur finds in areas
such as the Sahara, where fossil
hunting has been uncommon.
See also
- paleorrota
- Timeline of paleontology
- Important publications in paleontology
- Synchrotron X-ray tomographic microscopy
- Fossils
- Prehistoric life
- Fossil Parks
- List of Fossil Parks
- Geology
- Dinosaurs
- Rockhounding
- Mary Anning
- Fossils and the geological timescale
- Fossil collecting
- List of transitional fossils
- List of notable fossils
- List of fossil sites (with link directory)
- Fossil fuels
- Lazarus taxon
- Elvis taxon
- Paleobiology
- History of paleontology
- Bioerosion
- Taphonomy
- Ichnology
References
External links
paleontologist in Afrikaans: Paleontologie
paleontologist in Arabic: علم الإحاثة
paleontologist in Bosnian: Paleontologija
paleontologist in Breton: Paleontologiezh
paleontologist in Bulgarian: Палеонтология
paleontologist in Catalan: Paleontologia
paleontologist in Czech: Paleontologie
paleontologist in Welsh: Paleontoleg
paleontologist in Danish: Palæontologi
paleontologist in German: Paläontologie
paleontologist in Estonian: Paleontoloogia
paleontologist in Modern Greek (1453-):
Παλαιοντολογία
paleontologist in Spanish: Paleontología
paleontologist in Esperanto: Paleontologio
paleontologist in Basque: Paleontologia
paleontologist in Persian: دیرینشناسی
paleontologist in French: Paléontologie
paleontologist in Western Frisian:
Paleontology
paleontologist in Galician: Paleontoloxía
paleontologist in Korean: 고생물학
paleontologist in Croatian: Paleontologija
paleontologist in Indonesian: Paleontologi
paleontologist in Interlingua (International
Auxiliary Language Association): Paleontologia
paleontologist in Interlingue:
Paleontologie
paleontologist in Ido: Paleontologio
paleontologist in Icelandic:
Steingervingafræði
paleontologist in Italian: Paleontologia
paleontologist in Hebrew: פליאונטולוגיה
paleontologist in Georgian: პალეონტოლოგია
paleontologist in Latin: Palaeontologia
paleontologist in Lithuanian:
Paleontologija
paleontologist in Hungarian: Őslénytan
paleontologist in Macedonian:
Палеонтологија
paleontologist in Mongolian: Палеонтологи
paleontologist in Dutch: Paleontologie
paleontologist in Japanese: 古生物学
paleontologist in Norwegian: Paleontologi
paleontologist in Norwegian Nynorsk:
Paleontologi
paleontologist in Novial: Paleontologia
paleontologist in Occitan (post 1500):
Paleontologia
paleontologist in Low German:
Paläontologie
paleontologist in Polish: Paleontologia
paleontologist in Portuguese:
Paleontologia
paleontologist in Romanian: Paleontologie
paleontologist in Russian: Палеонтология
paleontologist in Simple English:
Paleontology
paleontologist in Slovak: Paleontológia
paleontologist in Slovenian:
Paleontologija
paleontologist in Serbian: Палеонтологија
paleontologist in Serbo-Croatian:
Paleontologija
paleontologist in Finnish: Paleontologia
paleontologist in Swedish: Paleontologi
paleontologist in Tamil: தொல்லுயிரியல்
paleontologist in Thai: บรรพชีวินวิทยา
paleontologist in Vietnamese: Cổ sinh vật
học
paleontologist in Turkish: Paleontoloji
paleontologist in Ukrainian: Палеонтологія
paleontologist in Urdu: حفریات
paleontologist in Volapük: Fösilav
paleontologist in Yiddish: פאליאנטאלאגיע
paleontologist in Chinese:
古生物学