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Michael
J. Novacek
Michael Novacek (PhD, Paleontology, University of California, Berkeley,
1978) has served since 1982 as a curator at the American Museum of Natural
History (New York) where he is currently Senior Vice President and Provost
of Science, and Curator of Paleontology. Other affiliations include the
City University of New York Graduate Program in Biology; and an adjunct
professorship in Zoology at San Diego State University.
Fields
of Specialization: Paleontology, systematics, evolution, biogeography
of mammals, including primates.
Awarded a doctoral degree (with honors for outstanding graduate research)
at the University of California, Berkeley, his studies concern patterns
of evolution and relationships among extinct and extant organisms. His
interests have ranged from paleontological evidence to new data on DNA
sequences. He has led paleontological expeditions to Baja California,
the Andes Mountains of Chile, Patagonia Argentina, the Yemen Arab Republic,
and Gobi Desert of Mongolia in search of fossil dinosaurs and mammals.
The Mongolian expeditions mark the first return of a western scientific
team to the country in over sixty years and have received world-wide scientific
and public attention for their spectacular findings.
Novacek is the author of over more than 150 titles, including articles
in the international scientific journals Science and Nature.
Since 1982 he has published a series of monographs and papers on the broader
evolution of mammals, culminating in a major review of molecular and morphological
evidence, featured as a cover article in Nature (March 1992). He
has co-edited Extinction and Phylogeny (1992), Mammal Phylogeny
(1993), and edited The Biodiversity Crisis: Losing what Counts
(2001). He is the author of a popular book on the Gobi expeditions, Dinosaurs
of the Flaming Cliffs (recognized by The New York Times as
one of the "Notable Books of 1996") and Time Traveler (2002). He
is a contributor to Natural History, Scientific American,
Smithsonian, and Time magazines. His research has been supported
by many agencies, including the National Science Foundation, National
Geographic Society, Sloan Foundation, Eppley Foundation, and the International
Research and Exchange Board (IREX).
Dr. Novacek is a frequent lecturer to both professional and popular audiences,
including events sponsored by the Nobel Foundation, the American Museum
of Natural History, Explorers' Club (where he is a Fellow), Cold Spring
Harbor Laboratory, NASA-Goddard Space Center, Cornell Medical College,
Carnegie Institute, Phi Beta Kappa, Morgan Stanley-Dean Witter, R.W. Johnson,
National Geographic Society, the Swedish Research Institute, and many
universities and scientific societies.
Dr. Novacek's research has been widely covered by educational outlets,
and by the popular press and media. His studies were highlighted in the
Encyclopedia Britannica Science Annuals for several years since
1992. The Mongolian expeditions have been featured in articles in The
New York Times and syndicated newspapers worldwide, Newsweek,
Time (cover article April, 1993), and were the subject of a television
special ("Dinosaurs," PBS, 1992) and an hour-long documentary by the BBC
Horizon program ("Dinosaurs of the Gobi") which aired on NOVA in January
1994. In 1996, further work of the Gobi expeditions was covered by National
Geographic Magazine and National Geographic Television ("Dinosaur
Hunters"). The 1997 Gobi expedition was the feature of the Discovery
Online website, which is visited by over 1.5 million people monthly.
He has been interviewed frequently on radio and television, including
guest appearances on the PBS Charlie Rose show, MSNBC, ABC News
, Science Friday, Late Night with Conan O'Brian, and Bill
Moyers.
In addition to his duties as Provost, Novacek has served as President
of the Society of Systematic Biologists, Chair of the Science Advisory
Committee for the Yale University Biospherics Institute, and the Bioadvisory
Committee for the National Science Foundation. In 1994 Dr Novacek was
elected to the Board of the AAAS, the principal organization representing
the professional scientific community. He received an Honorary Doctorate
from Long Island University in 1996.
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