Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Dale_RussellDale Russell - Wikipedia

    Dale Alan Russell (27 December 1937 – 21 December 2019) [1] was an American-Canadian geologist and palaeontologist. Throughout his career Russell worked as the Curator of Fossil Vertebrates at the Canadian Museum of Nature, [2] Research Professor at the Department of Marine Earth and Atmospheric Sciences (MEAS) at North Carolina ...

  2. 7 de dic. de 2020 · The museum was named after Joseph B. Tyrrell, a geologist who found the holotype of Albertosaurus in Drumheller in 1884. Dale had studied that specimen in the Canadian Museum of Nature, and it became a focal specimen in his study of tyrannosaurids of Canada ( Russell 1970 a ).

  3. 7 de dic. de 2020 · Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences (2021) 58 (9): 731–740. https://doi.org/10.1139/cjes-2020-0163. Article history. Cite. Share. Permissions. We review the distinguished and varied career of our friend and colleague, palaeontologist Dr. Dale A. Russell, following the recent news of his death.

  4. Dale Russell es uno de los científicos más importantes del mundo de la paleontología, pero además es el padre del Dinosauroide, un equivalente reptiliano del homo sapiens.

  5. www.wikiwand.com › en › Dale_RussellDale Russell - Wikiwand

    Dale Alan Russell was an American-Canadian geologist and palaeontologist. Throughout his career Russell worked as the Curator of Fossil Vertebrates at the Canadian Museum of Nature, Research Professor at the Department of Marine Earth and Atmospheric Sciences (MEAS) at North Carolina State University, and Senior Paleontologist at the North ...

  6. 29 Dale Alan Russell (Figure 1) died on December 21, 2019, six days short of his 82nd 30 birthday. Dale was the first modern student of Canadian dinosaurs, revitalizing their study 31 following the fabled decades of collection by Charles M. Sternberg and his contemporaries.

  7. 31 de ago. de 2021 · Much like the asteroid that struck Chicxulub, Mexico, 66 million years ago, Dale A. Russell had a massive impact on dinosaurs and other fossil vertebrates, or at least on our understanding of them.