Academic literature on the topic 'American history|Paleontology|History'

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Journal articles on the topic "American history|Paleontology|History"

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Morgan, Vincent L., and Katherine R. Morgan. "Walter Granger and the History of American Paleontology." Paleontological Society Special Publications 8 (1996): 282. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s2475262200002847.

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BRINKMAN, PAUL D. "Establishing vertebrate paleontology at Chicago's Field Columbian Museum, 1893—1898." Archives of Natural History 27, no. 1 (February 2000): 81–114. http://dx.doi.org/10.3366/anh.2000.27.1.81.

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By the late nineteenth century, as a consequence of the costly, far-flung, labor-intensive, and specimen-centered nature of the discipline, American vertebrate paleontology had become centralized at large collections maintained by a few universities and major natural history museums. Foremost among the latter group were the Academy of Natural Sciences, Philadelphia; the American Museum of Natural History, New York; the National Museum of Natural History, Washington, DC; the Carnegie Museum, Pittsburgh; and the Field Columbian Museum, Chicago. There is an extensive body of popular and historical literature reviewing the establishment and early development of the vertebrate paleontology programs at most of these institutions, especially the American Museum. The Field Columbian Museum, however, has received relatively little attention in this literature. The present paper begins to redress this imbalance by reviewing the establishment of vertebrate paleontology at the Field Columbian Museum from the museum's foundation in 1893, through the end of 1898, when the museum added a vertebrate paleontologist to its curatorial staff. An account of the Field Columbian Museum's first expedition for fossil vertebrates in the summer of 1898 is included.
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Rainger, Ronald. "Collectors and Entrepreneurs: Hatcher, Wortman, and the Structure of American Vertebrate Paleontology Circa 1900." Earth Sciences History 9, no. 1 (January 1, 1990): 14–21. http://dx.doi.org/10.17704/eshi.9.1.l1n05k0783584203.

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John Bell Hatcher (1861-1904) and Jacob L. Wortman (1856-1926) were two of the most prominent figures in late nineteenth-century American vertebrate paleontology. Working at leading centers for the science, including Yale's Peabody Museum, the American Museum of Natural History, and the Carnegie Museum of Pittsburgh, each was responsible for significant discoveries of fossil vertebrates and notable contributions to taxonomy and biostratigraphy. Yet both had itinerant and, by their own admissions, highly frustrating careers. Traditionally their problems have been explained in terms of personality, as a result of their sensitive, volatile temperaments. Yet their careers and difficulties also reflect the structure of American vertebrate paleontology at the time, a discipline centered in museums and under the direction of wealthy, powerful entrepreneurs. Men such as Othniel Charles Marsh and Henry Fairfield Osborn financed and helped to promote work in vertebrate paleontology, but the context within which such work was conducted also limited opportunities for Hatcher, Wortman, and others.
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Batten, Roger. "Robert Parr Whitfield: Hall's Assistant Who Stayed too Long." Earth Sciences History 6, no. 1 (January 1, 1987): 61–71. http://dx.doi.org/10.17704/eshi.6.1.d36v317p64885205.

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R. P. Whitfield was born near Utica in 1828. He had no formal education. He was deeply committed to natural history and joined a Utica society at 17 and bought a microscope and soon became well known as a naturalist illustrator. At 20 years of age he began working in a scientific instrument business at Utica and within a year became a partner. He caught the attention of Col. Jewett, a curator of the State Cabinet and joined the Hall paleontology group in 1856. He was Hall's chief illustrator for 10 years, gradually learning the trade and becoming Hall's chief assistant. In 1869, trouble developed over the authorship of a paper on Devonian clams and their relationship quickly deteriorated to the point that Whitfield looked for a position elsewhere, securing such at the American Museum of Natural History in 1877. Even when he left, Hall accused him of breach of contract but evidence indicates that Hall knew that he had the job in New York following the purchase of Hall's collection by the American Museum of Natural History. Whitfield became an active producer of papers on a wide variety of paleontology averaging 3-4 per year and became a major influence in Paleontology in the 1880-1900 period. He died shortly after he was retired at the age of 82 in 1910.
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Colbert, Edwin. "W. D. Matthew's Early Western Field Trips." Earth Sciences History 9, no. 1 (January 1, 1990): 41–44. http://dx.doi.org/10.17704/eshi.9.1.ng758437p6253341.

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William Diller Matthew, who entered Columbia College in 1891 with the avowed intention of becoming a mining geologist, was influenced by Henry Fairfield Osborn to change his interests to vertebrate paleontology. In 1895 Osborn hired Matthew as assistant curator at the American Museum of Natural History, where he began his lifelong studies of fossil mammals. In line with his chosen field of research, Matthew made a series of collecting trips to western North America, from 1897 to 1908, devoted largely to the accumulation of fossil mammals, thus establishing a basis for much of his research.
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Jia, Hepeng. "Paleontology: advancing China's international leadership." National Science Review 6, no. 1 (November 12, 2018): 171–76. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/nsr/nwy132.

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Abstract In recent years, Chinese scientists have achieved significant progress in paleontological discoveries and scientific studies. Series of studies published in top journals, such as Science, Nature and Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America (PNAS), have astonished the world by presenting beautiful fossils that furnish robust evidence to enrich the understanding of organismic evolution, major extinctions and stratigraphy. It has been portrayed as the heyday in the paleontology of China. What is the status of the field? What factors have caused the avalanche of fossil discoveries in China? What implications can these new discoveries provide for our understanding of current evolution theories? How, given their significant contribution to the world's paleontology scholarship, can Chinese scientists play a due leadership role in the field? At an online forum organized by the National Science Review (NSR), its associate editor-in-chief, Zhonghe Zhou, asked four scientists in the field as well as NSR executive editor-in-chief Mu-ming Poo to join the discussion. Jin Meng Paleobiologist at American Museum of Natural History Mu-ming Poo Neurobiologist at Center for Excellence in Brain Science and Intelligence Technology, Chinese Academy of Sciences Shuzhong Shen Stratigrapher at Nanjing Institute of Geology and Paleontology, Chinese Academy of Sciences Shuhai Xiao Paleobiologist and geobiologist at Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University Zhonghe Zhou (Chair) Paleobiologist at Institute of Vertebrate Paleontology and Paleoanthropology (IVPP), Chinese Academy of Sciences
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PEMBERTON, S. GEORGE, and ERIN A. PEMBERTON. "ROLE OF ICHNOLOGY IN THE HISTORY OF PHOTOGRAPHY." Earth Sciences History 37, no. 1 (January 1, 2018): 63–87. http://dx.doi.org/10.17704/1944-6178-37.1.63.

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ABSTRACT Vertebrate ichnology in North America has a long and distinguished history, starting with the remarkable discoveries by Edward Hitchcock of dinosaur footprints and trackways in the Connecticut River Valley. Hitchcock assembled a unique collection that is currently housed in the Beneski Museum of Natural History, Amherst College, and his work essentially constituted the beginnings of ichnology as a viable sub-discipline of paleontology. Although his original interpretation that these Late Triassic locomotion traces were bird tracks was incorrect, he indirectly linked birds and dinosaurs. Other talented amateurs including John Collins Warren, James Deane, Dexter Marsh and Roswell Field worked on these track sites and some were prolific authors. Three major books have significance, Dr. John Collins Warren published his book Remarks on Some Fossil Impressions in the Sandstone Rocks of Connecticut River in 1854 making it the second book ever published exclusively on ichnology and the second American publication (and first American scientific publication) to be illustrated with a photograph, a salt print, used as the frontispiece depicting what he interpreted as the fossilized tracks of prehistoric birds. James Deane published a book in 1861entitled Ichnographs from the Sandstone of Connecticut River containing photographs and etchings. Finally, Edward Hitchcock published The Supplement to the Ichnology of New England in 1865 that contained seven albumen prints by the professional photographer J. Lovell of Amherst. These volumes pioneered the use of photography in American scientific publications.
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Dutro, J. Thomas. "Brachiopods Between Treatises—A North American Perspective 1965–2000." Paleontological Society Papers 7 (November 2001): 5–10. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1089332600000863.

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The Paleontological Society Short Course this year features the history of brachiopod research, especially since the beginning of the revision of Part H, Treatise on Invertebrate Paleontology, in the early 1990s. The first version of Part H was published in 1965 and the only previous Paleontological Society Short Course to deal with brachiopods was held in 1981 at the Cincinnati meeting of the Geological Society of America. At that time, the day was split between the bryozoans and brachiopods, with a nod to the phoronids, under the rubric of lophophorates.
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Laporte, Léo. "George G. Simpson (1902-1984): Getting Started in the Summer of 1924." Earth Sciences History 9, no. 1 (January 1, 1990): 62–73. http://dx.doi.org/10.17704/eshi.9.1.1t25282v8vp24w08.

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In the middle of his first year of graduate work in vertebrate paleontology at Yale, George Gaylord Simpson began looking about for employment for the coming summer. He needed a job that would not only further his paleontological education, but also, with a wife and infant daughter to support, one that would pay him a salary, however modest. He eventually obtained a position prospecting for Tertiary mammals in Texas and New Mexico as a field assistant to William Diller Matthew of the American Museum of Natural History. By the end of the summer, Simpson established himself as an energetic and highly successful field man, having made two major fossil discoveries, thereby impressing both Richard Swan Lull, his major advisor at Yale, and Matthew, whom he would eventually succeed at the American Museum as curator of fossil mammals. When Simpson returned to Yale in the fall, Lull, despite his earlier refusal, permitted him to study the Marsh Collection of Mesozoic mammals for his dissertation. Matthew, too, was enthusiastic about Simpson's demonstrated abilities for he became Simpson's mentor, acting as informal off-campus advisor for his dissertation and eventually an advocate for Simpson's appointment at the American Museum. Simpson also learned, the hard way, about scientific protocol and professional territoriality when a short paper he wrote describing the geologic results of his work in New Mexico was suppressed by Childs Frick, honorary curator of the Department of Vertebrate Paleontology who had supported the New Mexico (and Texas) excursion with his own funds. Frick's financial support of the Museum apparently gave him greater influence than Matthew who, as chairman of Vertebrate Paleontology, had initially approved Simpson's paper for publication in the Museum Bulletin.
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Vetter, Jeremy. "Field science in the Railroad Era: the tools of knowledge empire in the American West, 1869-1916." História, Ciências, Saúde-Manguinhos 15, no. 3 (September 2008): 597–613. http://dx.doi.org/10.1590/s0104-59702008000300003.

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Focusing on the field sciences during the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, this paper analyzes how railroads served as tools of knowledge empire in the American West. The political economy of this region, shaped by the rise of Populism and capitalist development with federal and state government support, provided the context for cooperation between field scientists and railroad companies. Early on, the displacement of American Indians and their concentration on reservations was intertwined with the research of the Bureau of Ethnology under John Wesley Powell. Later, railroad companies became important patrons of field research, primarily through their provision of free or reduced-fare passes for travel. This research ranged from state universities undertaking research in horticulture and irrigation engineering to metropolitan natural history museums whose field work in paleontology had cultural or symbolic value.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "American history|Paleontology|History"

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Collin, Yvette Running Horse. "The Relationship Between the Indigenous Peoples of the Americas and the Horse| Deconstructing a Eurocentric Myth." Thesis, University of Alaska Fairbanks, 2017. http://pqdtopen.proquest.com/#viewpdf?dispub=10266897.

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This research project seeks to deconstruct the history of the horse in the Americas and its relationship with the Indigenous Peoples of these same lands. Although Western academia admits that the horse originated in the Americas, it claims that the horse became extinct in these continents during the Last Glacial Maximum (between roughly 13,000 and 11,000 years ago). This version of “history” credits Spanish conquistadors and other early European explorers with reintroducing the horse to the Americas and to her Indigenous Peoples. However, many Native Nations state that “they always had the horse” and that they had well established horse cultures long before the arrival of the Spanish. To date, “history” has been written by Western academia to reflect a Eurocentric and colonial paradigm. The traditional knowledge (TK) of the Indigenous Peoples of the Americas, and any information that is contrary to the accepted Western academic view, has been generally disregarded, purposefully excluded, or reconfigured to fit the accepted academic paradigm. Although mainstream academia and Western science have not given this Native TK credence to date, this research project shows that there is no reason—scientific or otherwise—that this traditional Native claim should not be considered true. The results of this thesis conclude that the Indigenous horse of the Americas survived the “Ice Age” and the original Peoples of these continents had a relationship with them from Pleistocene times to the time of “First-Contact.” In this investigation, Critical Indigenous Research Methodologies (CIRM) and Grounded Theory (GT) are utilized in tandem to deconstruct the history of the horse in the Americas and reconstruct it to include cross-cultural translation, the TK of many Indigenous Peoples, Western scientific evidence, and historical records. This dissertation suggests that the latest technology combined with guidance and information from our Indigenous Peoples has the power to reconstruct the history of the horse in the Americas in a way that is unbiased and accurate. This will open new avenues of possibility for academia as a whole, as well as strengthen both Native and non-Native communities.

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Starr, Talcott Copeland. "Rescue Archaeology." Miami University / OhioLINK, 2008. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=miami1217341314.

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Shaw, Leslie Carol. "The articulation of social inequality and faunal resource use in the Preclassic community of Colha, northern Belize." 1991. https://scholarworks.umass.edu/dissertations/AAI9132913.

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This dissertation evaluated the interactional dynamics of emerging social inequality and the economics of basic necessities during the early development of Lowland Maya civilization. Basic necessities, including clothing, shelter, and utilitarian tools, were all affected in some way by the changes in access to and distribution of resources, technology, and information. This study focuses on one specific relationship: that between increasing social inequality and the procurement and distribution of animal resources. This research problem is addressed using faunal remains from the site of Colha in northern Belize. The faunal assemblage (totaling 14,553 bones/bone fragments) was recovered from Preclassic Period (1,000 B.C.-A.D. 250) residential deposits. The 1,250 years represented in the assemblage cover the time when the Maya shifted from small autonomous communities to hierarchically ranked centers, many of which specialized in the production and/or exchange of goods for regional consumption. The faunal data from Colha were evaluated against the changes in social complexity documented for this period. A distinct patterning in the use of faunal resources during the Preclassic was observed. The early settlers of Colha (roughly 1,000-600 B.C.) utilized low-bush terrestrial, wetland, and aquatic species nearly equally. The prominent use of wetland and aquatic resources suggests that wetland agriculture may have been used. The five hundred years that followed saw a gradual shift toward a heavier use of wetland and aquatic resources, probably due to wetter conditions and to the biodegradation caused by land clearing and heavy faunal exploitation. In the Late Preclassic there was a marked change in faunal use, beginning approximately 100 B.C. This includes a heavier reliance on terrestrial species, an increased use of dog for food, and a greater utilization of distant habitats, such as marine and high-forest environments. These changes required modifications in the social aspects of food procurement and distribution, including exchange relationships, and not simply an intensification of past strategies. It is proposed that households could use their elevated status (and accompanying accumulation of wealth and power) to shift from a strategy of direct food procurement to one in which food could be acquired indirectly through exchange and/or tribute.
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Books on the topic "American history|Paleontology|History"

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Hedeen, Stanley. Big Bone Lick: The cradle of American paleontology. Lexington: University Press of Kentucky, 2008.

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Big Bone Lick: The cradle of American paleontology. Lexington: University Press of Kentucky, 2008.

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Rainger, Ronald. An agenda for antiquity: Henry Fairfield Osborn & vertebrate paleontology at the American Museum of Natural History, 1890-1935. Tuscaloosa: University of Alabama Press, 1991.

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Holmes, Thom. Fossil feud: The rivalry of the first American dinosaur hunters. Parsippany, N.J: J. Messner, 1998.

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Paleontological Research Institution (Ithaca, N.Y.), ed. New York Natural History Survey, 1836-1845: A chapter in the history of American science. Ithaca, N.Y: Paleontological Research Institution, 2000.

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History, American Museum of Natural. Catalog of recent mammal types in the American Museum of Natural History. New York: American Museum of Natural History, 1993.

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Society of Vertebrate Paleontology. Meeting. Abstracts of papers: Fifty-sixth Annual Meeting, Society of Vertebrate Paleontology, American Museum of Natural History, New York, New York, October 16-19, 1996. Lincoln, Neb: Society of Vertebrate Paleontology, 1996.

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Mick, Ellison, and American Museum of Natural History. Division of Paleontology., eds. Unearthing the dragon: The great feathered dinosaur discovery. New York: Pi Press, 2005.

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Chapman, Roy. The new conquest of Central Asia: A narrative of the explorations of the Central Asiatic expeditions in Mongolia and China, 1921-1930. Mansfield Centre, CT: Martino Pub., 2007.

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illustrator, Lambert Jonathan, Norell, Mark, writer of added text, Ran Hao translator, Wang Hongbin translator, and American Museum of Natural History, eds. He kong long yi yang ku de shi qian dong wu. Beijing Shi: Beijing lian he chu ban gong si, 2017.

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Book chapters on the topic "American history|Paleontology|History"

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Brinkman, Paul D. "Paleontology." In A Companion to the History of American Science, 228–40. Chichester, UK: John Wiley & Sons, Ltd, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/9781119072218.ch18.

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Grande, Lance. "The Eocene Green River lake system, Fossil Lake, and the history of the North American fish fauna." In Mesozoic/Cenozoic Vertebrate Paleontology: Classic Localities, Contemporary Approaches. Salt Lake City, Utah to Billings, Montana, July 19–27, 1989, 18–28. Washington, D. C.: American Geophysical Union, 1989. http://dx.doi.org/10.1029/ft322p0018.

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Rainger, Ronald. "7. Vertebrate Paleontology as Biology: Henry Fairfield Osborn and the American Museum of Natural History." In The American Development of Biology, edited by Ronald Rainger, Keith R. Benson, and Jane Maienschein. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 1988. http://dx.doi.org/10.9783/9781512805789-010.

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Yen, Hsiao-Pei. "Science with Boundaries: Yang Zhongjian and Vertebrate Paleontology in Republican China, 1919–1950." In History of Universities: Volume XXXIV/1, 304–20. Oxford University Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780192844774.003.0015.

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The rapid development of paleontology–especially vertebrate paleontology and dinosaurology–has made ‘Chinese Paleontology’ an important subfield of paleontology since the 1990s, resulting in China becoming a powerhouse of paleontological research. This chapter focuses on YANG Zhongjiang (1897–1979), often celebrated as the father of Chinese vertebrate paleontology, to examine how the field of his specialty was established and developed as a scientific discipline in his country. It traces Yang’s early academic experience from a geology major at Peking University in the early 1920s to his graduate years in Germany under the famous paleontologist Ferdinand Broili. Yang’s professional study and training was strengthened by his rich field experience after returning to China in the late 1920s. He participated not only in the joint Sino-American Central Asiatic Expedition to Mongolia in 1930, but also in the extensive excavation project of the Peking Man fossils conducted by the Cenozoic Research Laboratory. His more independent work took place during the Second Sino-Japanese War, when he discovered, studied, and constructed China’s first complete dinosaur fossils (the Lufengosaurus). Besides describing the making of a professional paleontologist in China in the first half of the 20th century, this chapter also illuminates questions that are intrinsic to the development of scientific disciplines at a time when the rise of Chinese nationalism intersected with scientific internationalism and imperialism. How did the academic practice of paleontology reflect unequal political realities? Is paleontology a ‘local science’? Could the endeavor for ‘local science’ empower scientists from developing nations?
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Lyman, R. Lee. "Early History of Archaeology Graphs." In Graphing Culture Change in North American Archaeology, 72–101. Oxford University Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198871156.003.0005.

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The earliest archaeological spindle graph was published in 1883 by natural historian and avocational archaeologist Charles C. Abbott. Evidence that he obtained the idea from paleontology, which first published spindle graphs in the 1830s and 1840s, is circumstantial at best, and differences in graph styles weigh against such borrowing. Several spindle graphs published in the 1890s and early 1900s by archaeologist William Henry Holmes either depict his views on inevitable progressive evolution—a theory rapidly falling from anthropological favor—or were so speculative as to likely have had little influence on the discipline. During the first couple decades of the twentieth century, physicist/geographer/anthropologist Franz Boas (often referred to as the father of anthropology) published numerous line graphs of quantitative data. He influenced archaeologists Leslie Spier and Manual Gamio who used line graphs to display temporally varying frequencies of artifacts. About the same time, the wife and husband team of Madeleine Kidder and Alfred V. Kidder published several line graphs of relative frequencies of pottery types against stratigraphic provenience, seemingly largely as a result of Madeleine’s influence because Alfred never again published such a graph and instead favored phyletic seriation graphs of a type reminiscent of Sir William Flinders Petrie’s sequence dating graphs from the turn of the century.
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Conference papers on the topic "American history|Paleontology|History"

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Stricker, Beth. "DARING TO DIG: A TRAVELING EXHIBITION ON THE HISTORY OF WOMEN IN AMERICAN PALEONTOLOGY." In GSA Annual Meeting in Denver, Colorado, USA - 2016. Geological Society of America, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1130/abs/2016am-277954.

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Dettman, Minda C., Alexander V. Hernandez, Ryan Alejandro Bozer, Keara Y. Drummer, Sarah E. Rubin, Ernesto E. Vargas-Parra, Ruth O'Leary, Neil H. Landman, Melanie Hopkins, and Bushra M. Hussaini. "CURATION OF THE ROYAL H. MAPES INVERTEBRATE PALEONTOLOGY COLLECTION AT THE AMERICAN MUSEUM OF NATURAL HISTORY: STRATEGIES FOR DIGITIZATION AND OUTREACH." In GSA Annual Meeting in Seattle, Washington, USA - 2017. Geological Society of America, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1130/abs/2017am-300740.

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Powell, Lindsey Renee, Vanessa Delnavaz, Isabel Andie Novick, Abigail Taylor Uehling, and Eva Marie V. Larsen. "CURATION OF THE ROYAL H. AND GENE MAPES INVERTEBRATE PALEONTOLOGY COLLECTION AT THE AMERICAN MUSEUM OF NATURAL HISTORY: TYPE SPECIMENS, CURATION PROGRESS AND COMPLETION." In GSA Annual Meeting in Indianapolis, Indiana, USA - 2018. Geological Society of America, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1130/abs/2018am-317573.

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