Date Posted: March 26, 2008
The first circular for the SVP 68th Annual Meeting - held October 15-18, 2008 at the Renaissance Cleveland Hotel, Cleveland, Ohio, - has been mailed out to all SVP members. The circular is also available on the SVP Web site.
We hope to see you there!
Highlights of the Meeting
Special Events:
• Neil Shubin speaking at the Cleveland Museum of Natural History (CMNH)
A pre-meeting event sponsored by Case Western Reserve University and the CMNH in celebration of the 200th anniversary of Charles Darwin's birth.
• Frans Lanting, a presentation on Life: A Journey Through Time
Lanting is one of the greatest nature photographers of our time.
• Global Climate Change: Past and Future (a forum)
• Field trips: Classic Cleveland Shale Fossil-Fish Localities; The Laboratory of Physical Anthropology at the CMNH; Rocks and Fossils of Downtown Cleveland.
• Workshops: Introduction to Basic Casting and Molding Techniques; Evolution Education; Communicating with the Media; Digital Media Basics for Publication.
• "National Science Foundation Funding," as the topic for the Women in Paleontology Luncheon. Men are encouraged to attend.
Annual Events:
• Welcome Reception (at the CMNH)
• SVP Town Hall Meeting on Evolution VI
• Symposia, regular sessions, Romer Session, Preparators' Session and poster sessions (including the Edwin H. and Margaret M. Colbert Award portion of one of the poster sessions, formerly known as the Student Poster Prize Session)
• Annual Business Meeting
• Press Conference
• Student Roundtable Forum and Reprint Exchange
• Annual Benefit Auction
• Open Executive Business Meeting
• Awards Banquet
• After-Hours Party
And, NEW! Discounted flights to the SVP 68th Annual Meeting from Continental Airlines.
Date Posted: March 21, 2008
Explore the paleontology-themed sessions taking place at this year's regional Geological Society of America meetings. For more information, including registration and housing, visit www.geosociety.org/meetings/
CORDILLERAN / ROCKY MOUNTAIN GSA MEETING (combined meeting)
19-21 March 2008, Las Vegas, Nevada
-Rancholabrean Paleoecology of Western North America
early registration deadline: 18 Feb.
abstracts deadline: 18 Dec.
To find out more: www.geosociety.org/sectdiv/cord/08mtg/index.htm
NORTHEASTERN GSA MEETING
27-29 March 2008, Buffalo, New York
-Lakes, Climate and Environmental Change: Paleolimnological Studies of the Holocene and “Anthropocene.”
early registration deadline: 25 Feb.
abstracts deadline: 18 Dec.
SOUTH-CENTRAL GSA MEETING
30 March-1 April 2008, Hot Springs, Arkansas
-Marine Vertebrate Faunas of the Gulf Coastal Plain
early registration deadline: 25 Feb.
abstracts deadline: 15 Jan.
SOUTHEASTERN GSA MEETING
10-11 April 2008, Charlotte, North Carolina
-Cenozoic and Echinoderm Paleontology of the Southeastern United States: Symposium in Honor of Craig Oyen
-Current Research in the Triassic-Jurassic Newark Supergroup Basins
early registration deadline: 10 March
abstracts deadline: 15 Jan.
NORTH-CENTRAL GSA MEETING
24-25 April 2008, Evansville, Indiana
-Late Neogene Continental Ecosystems of North America
-Organisms and Sedimentation: Biotic Controls and Adaptations to Turbidity, Sedimentation and Substrate in the Fossil Record
early registration deadline: 24 March
abstracts deadline: 29 Jan.
SALTILLO, COAHUILA, MEXICO
AUGUST-SEPTEMBER 2009
The Government of Coahuila State, Mexico, through the Secretaría de Educación y Cultura and the Museo del Desierto, with the support of the Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, through the Instituto de Geología, and the Universidad Autónoma del Estado de Hidalgo, are pleased to host the FIFTH INTERNATIONAL MEETING ON MESOZOIC FISHES. The international meeting will be hosted at the “Museo del Desierto,” Saltillo City, Coahuila State, Northern Mexico.
Scientific sessions will take place from August 31 to September 3, 2009, at the Museo del Desierto. We plan to have a short visit to some of the fossil localities in the Saltillo region on September 4. In addition, we will offer two excursions to the most important Mexican fossil fish localities: 1) the Tlayúa quarry in Tepexi de Rodríguez, Puebla (some days before the scientific sessions), and 2) Vallecillos, Nuevo León (after the scientific sessions). The first excursion will also include a visit to the paleoichthyological Mexican collections housed in the Colección Nacional de Paleontología at México City (see below).
We look forward to offering you a nice environment during the Fifth Mesozoic Fishes Meeting in northern Mexico, and to share all together our knowledge of diversity and evolutionary patterns of all kind of Mesozoic fishes, surrounded by the famous Mexican hospitality. We also hope you will enjoy some of our cultural background (the region is well known because of its archaeological as well as paleontological sites), and the characteristic nature of Coahuila’s desert.
Contact
Rosario Gómez
grosariomesozoicfishes@yahoo.com
Date Posted: March 18, 2008
SVP Abstract Submission Site Now OPEN!
SVP Award Submission Site Open
SVP Abstract Submission Site Now OPEN!
The abstract submission site for the 68th Annual Meeting of the Society of Vertebrate Paleontology is open Tuesday, March 18, 2008 at NOON Central Time Zone (USA), through Wednesday, May 21, 2008 at NOON, Central Time Zone (USA). All presentations/abstracts, including regular sessions, Romer Prize, the Edwin H. and Margaret M. Colbert Award (formerly the Student Poster Prize), Preparators' Session and all symposia presentations, must be submitted within this interval. Late submissions will not be considered under any circumstances.
Complete Presentation/Abstract Guidelines are available on the SVP Web site.
A link to the Abstract Submission Site is reached through the SVP Web site.
SVP Award Submission Site Open
As of Wednesday, March 5, 2008 at 2:00 p.m. Central Time Zone (USA), through Monday, May 5, 2008 at noon Central Time Zone (USA), applications and nominations for most* 2008 Society of Vertebrate Paleontology (SVP) awards can be submitted.
New for 2008 awards:
-- Applications and nominations for most* SVP awards will now be submitted using the new SVP Online Award Submission System.
-- The prize amounts for all SVP awards have been increased for 2008.
-- The Student Poster Prize has been renamed the Edwin H. and Margaret M. Colbert Award.
* Awards not using the new SVP Online Award Submission System are the Colbert Award, the Lanzendorf PaleoArt Prize, the Patterson Memorial Grant and the Romer Prize.
Go to the SVP Award Page to find out more about the individual award guidelines and to link to the new SVP Online Awards Submission Site.
Date Posted: March 17, 2008
Hanna Basin Field Conference Application Deadline is April 15
Only Eight Days Left to Apply!
The Society of Vertebrate Paleontology Development Committee announces the SVP North American Summer Field Conference, August 5-7, 2008, in the Hanna and Carbon Basins of south-central Wyoming. The conference will address field-based geological documentation to paleobiological research.
The 2008 field conference will involve three day-trips (conducted from the town of Medicine Bow) to parts of the Hanna and Carbon Basins. These relatively tiny, Laramide basins in south-central parts of Wyoming have long been recognized for their astonishingly thick sections of marine and nonmarine, Upper Cretaceous and Paleocene strata.
This conference is co-sponsored by SVP and the Department of Geology and Geophysics, University of Wyoming, and co-organized by Jay Lillegraven, Jaelyn Eberle, Pennilyn Higgins and Mark Clementz.
Do not miss this unique field study opportunity. Applications for participation must be submitted electronically to Annalisa Berta by April 15, 2008.
More information is available on the SVP Web site.
SVP's First Field Conference is August 5-7, 2008
The Society of Vertebrate Paleontology Development Committee is pleased to announce an SVP Field Conference on August 5-7, 2008. The field conference, co-sponsored by SVP and the Department of Geology and Geophysics, University of Wyoming, will be held in the Hanna Basin, Wyoming.
Its general theme is the importance of field-based geological documentation to paleobiological research.
Jay Lillegraven, Jaelyn Eberle, Pennilyn Higgins and Mark Clementz are the co-organizers.
More information is available on the SVP Web site.
Now is the time to apply!
Bill Clemens, Chair, SVP Development Committee
Date Posted: March 15, 2008
The Society of Vertebrate Paleontology Executive Committee election for 2008 will be held by electronic ballot starting Thursday, June 5 at 12:01 a.m. Central Time Zone (USA) and end Friday, September 5, 2008 at midnight Central Time Zone (USA).
The SVP Nominating Committee, consisting of: Mary Dawson (chair), John Flynn and Farish Jenkins, hereby presents the following 2008 slate, for consideration by the SVP Membership:
For the position of Vice-President
The two candidates for this position are:
Phillip J. Currie Nicholas C. Fraser
For the position of Member-at-Large
The two candidates for this position are:
Anthony D. Barnosky Julia Clarke
A biography of each candidate can be found on the member home page of the SVP Web site.
Members without e-mail addresses in the SVP database will be mailed paper ballots. Any member that will be without Internet access during the voting period, or preferring a paper ballot, may make a paper ballot request. Requests for paper ballots must be made by June 20, 2008, to the SVP business office at:
Phone: (847) 480-9095
Fax: (847) 480-9282
E-mail: svp@vertpaleo.org
Date Posted: March 13, 2008
SVP's Abstract Submission Dates for 2008. The Countdown Begins!
SVP's New Online Award Submission Site is Open
SVP's Abstract Submission Dates for 2008. The Countdown Begins!
The abstract submission site for the 68th Annual Meeting of the Society of Vertebrate Paleontology will be open from Tuesday, March 18, 2008 at NOON Central Time Zone (USA), through Wednesday, May 21, 2008 at NOON, Central Time Zone (USA). All abstracts, including regular sessions, Romer Prize, the Edwin H. and Margaret M. Colbert Award (formerly the Student Poster Prize), Preparators' Session, and all symposia presentations, must be submitted to this site within this interval. Late submissions will not be considered under any circumstances.
A link to the Abstract Submission Site will be active from the SVP Web site starting on March 18, 2008 at NOON Central Time Zone (USA). Presentation guidelines will be provided on the submission site and on the SVP Web site.
An e-mail notice, announcing the opening of the site, will be sent to all members on Tuesday, March 18, 2008.
SVP's New Online Award Submission Site is Open
As of Wednesday, March 5, 2008 at 2:00 p.m. Central Time Zone (USA), applications and nominations for most* 2008 Society of Vertebrate Paleontology (SVP) awards are being accepted through the new SVP Online Award Submission Site. Applications and nominations will be accepted through Monday, May 5, 2008 at noon Central Time Zone (USA),
New for 2008 awards:
-- Applications and nominations for most* SVP awards must now be submitted using the new SVP Online Award Submission System.
-- The prize amount for all SVP awards has been increased for 2008.
-- The Student Poster Prize has been renamed the Edwin H. and Margaret M. Colbert Award.
Go to the SVP Award page to find out more about the individual award guidelines and to link to the New SVP Online Awards Submission Site.
* Awards not using the new SVP Online Award Submission System are the Colbert Award, the Lanzendorf PaleoArt Prize, the Patterson Memorial Grant and the Romer Prize.
Date Posted: March 8, 2008
Malcolm Carnegie McKenna, Frick Curator Emeritus at the American Museum of Natural History, and Professor Emeritus of Earth and Environmental Sciences at Columbia University, died on March 3 in Boulder, Colorado. He was 77.
The author of hundreds of research papers collected in over a dozen volumes, Dr. McKenna was a world-renowned and influential paleontologist. He specialized in the history of mammalian evolution, but also published interdisciplinary work in cosmology, astrophysics, geology and molecular biology. He spent his 41-year career at the American Museum of Natural History in New York City. After retirement, he had adjunct positions at the University of Colorado and the University of Wyoming.
A Fellow of New York's Explorers Club, Dr. McKenna organized annual American Museum field expeditions to the western United States, Patagonia, the Andes, China, Mongolia, Greenland and the Canadian Arctic. He taught and mentored over 30 Ph.D. students in paleontology. The prominent evolutionist and writer Stephen Jay Gould once said that everything he ever learned about mammals, he learned from Malcolm McKenna.
McKenna was awarded the Romer-Simpson Medal of the Society of Vertebrate Paleontologists in 2001, and the Gold Medal of the Paleontological Society of America in 1992, the top honors in his profession.
McKenna was a proponent of a new classification paradigm, called cladistics, introduced in the 1960s. Through his affiliation with Columbia's Lamont-Doherty Lab, he was also an early supporter of continental drift theory, not yet widely accepted until after magnetic data of ocean floor samples were analyzed. He delighted most in interdisciplinary studies and exhorted his students and colleagues to synthesize knowledge as much as specialize in it.
In 1964, at the height of the cold war, he visited Mongolia as a tourist in order to arrange for the resumption of field work in the Gobi Desert initiated by the American Museum's expeditions of the 1920s that were led by Roy Chapman Andrews and subsidized in part by Childs and Henry Clay Frick. These museum expeditions were finally resumed in the 1990s, resulting in remarkable fossil discoveries.
McKenna's life's work was a new Classification of Mammals Above the Species Level—both living and extinct—that in 1997 he and Susan Bell of the American Museum of Natural History published in both book and database form. This succeeded the 1945 scientific classification of G. G. Simpson, his predecessor at the museum.
McKenna's current research concerned how small mammals and other animals survived the infrared 'baking event' theorized to have been caused by sub-orbital debris in the first few hours after the asteroid impact that wiped out the larger dinosaurs.
As an active private pilot in the 1950s, McKenna would often do field work from the air, navigating the western United States solely by geologic features, sometimes landing his Cessna on remote dirt roads in Wyoming. From 1967 until 1975, he was an avid runner of rivers in the Colorado River basin, participating in a 100th anniversary John Wesley Powell expedition in 1969. He twice rowed a wooden boat through the Grand Canyon in the early 1970s. He had a prodigious cartographic memory and was an expert on the geology and fossil beds in the western United States, especially in Wyoming.
While traveling on an Arctic ice-breaker in the summer of 2000, Dr. McKenna and his wife took pictures of the North Pole's lack of sea ice. The pictures were prominently featured on the New York Times' front page, on the David Letterman show, as well as in Time Magazine and elsewhere, bringing global warming issues to wider attention. In his later years, McKenna traveled the world giving enthralling lectures on earth history and the fossil and biological evidence of evolution.
Never one to pass up a little mischief or to tweak authority, McKenna loved off-color limericks and good practical jokes, such as electrifying a toilet seat, building an unauthorized telephone line or funding an underground high-school newspaper. After winning a late-night poker game against a Wyoming rancher, McKenna and his field crew posted signs claiming the ranch as the property of the Regents of the University of California, which led to a friendly feud involving forklifts, trees, weather balloons and mail boxes. As recently as 2003, McKenna attended a public meeting at the Museum of Northern Arizona in disguise to help demonstrate that official deception was in the works.
Malcolm McKenna was born in Pomona, California, in 1930, the son of Donald and Bernice McKenna. He grew up in Claremont, California, where he attended Webb School. As a child, his imagination was fired by H. Rider Haggard's adventure tales. He installed a working water system in his large tree house. He was self-taught in electronics, physics, astronomy, chemistry, and metallurgy, which had been the family business for generations. As a teenager in 1945, McKenna built the first homemade television set in his town, using a WWII surplus radar tube. He was a ham radio enthusiast.
The founder of Webb School's paleontology museum, Raymond Alf, inspired McKenna as a teenager to become a paleontologist. At age 17, McKenna discovered his first fossil titanothere skull, nicknamed "Betsy," in Nebraska. McKenna initially attended Caltech and Pomona College, and then received his PhD from the University of California at Berkeley.
In addition to his scientific activities, Dr. McKenna was a board member of numerous educational institutions, including the Flat Rock Brook Nature Center, the Elizabeth Morrow School and Dwight-Englewood Schools, all in Englewood, New Jersey; the Raymond M. Alf Museum at the Webb School in Claremont, California; the Museum of Northern Arizona in Flagstaff, Arizona; and the Lemur Conservation Foundation in Myakka City, Florida.
McKenna's great-grandmother, Anna Hogan McKenna, was a cousin of Andrew Carnegie. His father, Donald, was one of the founding trustees of Claremont McKenna College in Claremont, Calif.
McKenna is survived by his wife of 55 years, Priscilla McKenna, of Boulder, Colorado; four children and their spouses, Douglas McKenna and Judith Houlding, of Boulder, Colorado; Andrew and Jacquie McKenna, of Boulder, Colorado; Katharine McKenna and Mark Braunstein, of Woodstock, New York; Bruce and Maureen McKenna, of Santa Fe, New Mexico; and nine grandchildren, Caitlin, Alison, Madeleine, Ian, Conor, Eliza, Dónal, Alexandra and Juliana McKenna.
Donations in memory of Malcolm McKenna may be sent to: The Malcolm C. McKenna Goler Research Fund, Raymond M. Alf Museum of Paleontology, 1175 West Baseline Rd., Claremont, CA 91711.
PHOTO
Photo courtesy of the © American Museum of Natural History / D. Finnin.
Date Posted: March 7, 2008
Beginning Wednesday, March 5, 2008 at 2:00 p.m. Central Time Zone (USA), through Monday, May 5, 2008 at noon Central Time Zone (USA), applications and nominations for most* 2008 Society of Vertebrate Paleontology (SVP) awards can be submitted.
New for 2008 awards:
- Applications and nominations for most* SVP awards will now be submitted using the new SVP Online Award Submission System.
- The prize amount for all SVP awards has been increased for 2008.
- The Student Poster Prize has been renamed the Edwin H. and Margaret M. Colbert Award.
* Awards not using the new SVP Online Award Submission System are the Colbert Award, the Lanzendorf PaleoArt Prize, the Patterson Memorial Grant, and the Romer Prize. Link to the Web pages of these awards below for submission guidelines.
Click on any of the links below for more information about each award and to link to the SVP Online Award Submission System.
Edwin H. and Margaret M. Colbert Award
for best student poster
Note: This award opens in mid-March. Submissions will be accepted through the SVP Online Abstract Submission System.
Richard Estes Memorial Grant
for graduate research in non-mammalian paleontology
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