Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The New Mexico Museum of Natural History and Science is a natural history and science museum in Albuquerque, New Mexico near Old Town Albuquerque. The Museum was founded in 1986. [1] It operates as a public revenue facility of the New Mexico Department of Cultural Affairs.
The location of the state of New Mexico. Paleontology in New Mexico refers to paleontological research occurring within or conducted by people from the U.S. state of New Mexico. The fossil record of New Mexico is exceptionally complete and spans almost the entire stratigraphic column. [1] More than 3,300 different kinds of fossil organisms have ...
Spencer G. Lucas. Spencer George Lucas is an American paleontologist and stratigrapher, and curator of paleontology at the New Mexico Museum of Natural History and Science. His main areas of study are late Paleozoic, Mesozoic and early Cenozoic vertebrate fossils, stratigraphy, and continental deposits, particularly in the American Southwest.
The fossils were given to the New Mexico Museum of Natural History and Science in 1980, and it was designated the state fossil in 1981 under former-Gov. Bill Richardson.
Paleontologist Anthony Fiorillo, executive director of the New Mexico Museum of Natural History & Science and one of the authors of the study published in the journal Scientific Reports, said ...
New Mexico Museum of Natural History and Science Bulletin] 51. 244 pp. 2011 Lockley, M. G., Colorado's Dinosaur Artist. Friends of Dinosaur Ridge and Dinosaur Designs 60 pp. 2014 Lockley, M. G. and Lucas, S.G. Fossil Footprints of Western North America. New Mexico Museum of Natural History and Science Bulletin 62. 2014 Lockley, M. G. and ...
Aug. 11—You can't count on grizzly bears to help out with research in paleontology. But it can happen, according to Anthony "Tony" Fiorillo, executive director of the New Mexico Museum of ...
New Mexico Geological Society Guidebook, 54: 375-383. 2006. (Robert M. Sullivan and Spencer G. Lucas). The Kirtlandian land-vertebrate "age"—faunal composition, temporal position and biostratigraphic correlation in the nonmarine Upper Cretaceous of western North America. New Mexico Museum of Natural History and Science, Bulletin 35: 7-29. 2013.