The Society of
Vertebrate Palaeontology sponsors two awards of 200 € each. To be eligible, you
have to be the first author of at least one of the contributions to the
congress, and fill the form available here. The priority will be given to SVP
members, people coming from long distances and students who do not benefit from
any other grant.
Monday, 28 March 2016
Monday, 14 March 2016
Lecturers on 1st IMERP-XIV EJIP: Marc Furió
Workshop "New insights on Quaternary ecosystems" lecturers.
Marc Furió (Full researcher at Institut Català de
Paleontologia Miquel Crusafont) is the leading specialist in Neogene and
Quaternary insectivores (nowadays represented by shrews, moles and hedgehogs)
in Spain, with tens of SCI papers authored, and more than one hundred written
contributions in the field of paleontology and related areas. His PhD was
focused on the evolution of the Late Neogene and Early Pleistocene insectivore
assemblages in Spain, creating a solid taxonomical framework for this group.
His posterior works have not been limited to taxonomy, but they unraveled
significant patterns in paleobiogeography, paleobiology and
biostratigraphy. His
field experience, among others, includes the active participation at the
outstanding early-human site of Dmanisi (Georgia, Southern Caucasus) for more
than ten years. Other than his specialized research, Dr. Furió is
skilled in teaching and designing outreach activities, something that he has
been doing for almost 15 years. His outputs in this field include conferences,
popular science articles, book chapters, physical activities, experimental
teaching support for elementary school and a personal blog.
Friday, 11 March 2016
The third circular and "How to arrive" document are now available
Dear colleagues,
We are pleased to announce the Third Circular and the "How to arrive" document are now available.
We will continue to keep informed of any developments,
We are pleased to announce the Third Circular and the "How to arrive" document are now available.
We will continue to keep informed of any developments,
1st IMERP-XIV EJIP Organizing Committee
Thursday, 10 March 2016
Lecturers on 1st IMERP-XIV EJIP: Israel M. Sánchez
Workshop "Tertiary ecosystems: evolution and palaeoenvironments" lecturers.
Israel M. Sánchez (collaborator at the Museo Nacional
de Ciencias Naturales-CSIC, Madrid, Spain) is one of the world authorities in
ruminant phylogenetics and evolution, with special regard in musk-deer
(Moschidae), mouse-deer and chevrotains (Tragulidae), and giraffomorphs. He has
produced an extensive amount of work on this subject. His PhD was focused on
the phylogeny and systematics of the Moschidae with special reference to the
Miocene forms, the deep-time evolution of the group, and the origins of the
clade Bovoidea. This work and the subsequent published papers changed moschids
from being a very poorly understood group to becoming one of the best-known of
the pecoran ruminants, and established a phylogenetic framework for future
works. His following papers have been always pointed to resolve the phylogeny
and evolution of ruminants, with special focus in poorly-known groups such as
tragulids and giraffes and their fossil relatives. His field experience
includes his participation at the impressive upper Miocene sites of Cerro de
los Batallones (Madrid, Spain) among others, and also involves his
collaboration as an active member of the French-Spanish ‘Namibia
Paleontological Expedition’. Besides his technical scientific work, Israel M.
Sánchez has dedicated a great deal of his time to the scientific divulgation,
both through his career as a paleo-artist and by means of conferences, courses
and scientific advising for several Spanish museum exhibitions.
Wednesday, 9 March 2016
Lecturers on 1st IMERP-XIV EJIP: Mauricio Antón
Workshop "Tertiary ecosystems: evolution and palaeoenvironments" lecturers.
Mauricio Antón has been
a professional paleoartist since 1987. He works in collaboration with the
Paleobiology department at the Museo Nacional de Ciencias Naturales, Madrid.
His illustrations are exhibited in museums in several countries, including the Museo
Nacional de Ciencias Naturales (Madrid), The National Museum of Natural History
(Washington, D. C.) and the American Museum of Natural History (New York) among
many others. He is the author and/or illustrator of many books, including
“Sabertooth”, “El Secreto de los Fósiles”, “The Big Cats and Their Fossils
Relatives”, “Mammoths, Sabertooths, and Hominids”, “Evolving Eden”, “La Especie
Elegida”, and “The National Geographic Book of Prehistoric Mammals”, among
others. He has collaborated with the BBC, National Geographic and Discovery
Channel in the production of documentary films, including “Wild New World”,
“Sabretooth” and “Walking with Beasts”. He also keeps the blog “Chasing
Sabretooths”. He works in the application of 3D modelling and animation to the reconstruction
of past life, and has created animated films in collaboration with the
Madrid-based studio “The Fly Factory”.His research on the evolution and anatomy
of carnivorans and other mammals has resulted in many academic papers in
journals including the Journal
of Vertebrate Paleontology and Journal of Human Evolution. And Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences among others. He has given lectures in Spain,
Denmark, the UK and the USA. He travels extensively to wildlife areas in order
to observe extant wild mammals in their environments, and has led several
art-training trips to Botswana.
Tuesday, 8 March 2016
Lecturers on 1st IMERP-XIV EJIP: Fabio Marco Dalla Vecchia
Workshop "Palaeodiversity and evolution in the Mesozoic world" lecturers
Fabio Marco
Dalla Vecchia (born 1964) graduated in Geological Sciences at the University of
Bologna (Italy), obtained a Ph.D. title in Vertebrate Palaeontology at the
University of Modena (Italy) with a dissertation on the Triassic pterosaurs
(1994).
He did post-doctoral work at the University of Padua (Italy) on the
Mesozoic terrestrial vertebrates of the northern Adriatic region (1995-97).
He has been Honorary
Curator of the Paleontological section of the Museum of Monfalcone (Gorizia,
Italy) since1994. He worked at the Institut Català de Paleontologia of Sabadell
(Spain) from 2009 to 2013.
He is consultant
of the Museo Friulano di Storia Naturale di Udine (Italy) and Ispettore
Onorario for Palaeontology for the Soprintendenza Archeologica of Friuli
Venezia Giulia Region (Italy). He was field work director at the Cretaceous
fossil site of Polazzo (Gorizia) from 1996 to 2014, and scientifical director
of the field work at the Villaggio del Pescatore dinosaur site (Trieste, Italy)
in 1998-1999. He participated to several field expeditions and surveys in Italy
and abroad (Croatia, Romania, Lebanon, Brazil, Iran and Spain).
Author of 32 technical
papers on journals with IF, 52 peer-reviewed articles on journals that were
without IF at the time of publication, 20 technical articles on journals
without peer-review, six peer-review chapters/articles about paleontology in
books, 11 non peer-review chapters/articles about paleontology in books, 38 published
abstracts, eight books about paleontology and more than 100 divulgative papers.
He was author of
scientific projects and texts of several exhibitions on geological and palaeontological
matter.
His main
scientific interest regards pterosaurs, above all the evolution of the earliest
(Triassic) pterosaurs, other Mesozoic sauropsids (mainly Triassic, and in
particular archosauriforms - crocodylomorphs included -, protorosaurs, placodonts,
eusauropterygians and ichthyosaurs), and the terrestrial ecosystems of the
European Archipelago during the Cretaceous, with focus on the hadrosauroid
dinosaurs and palaeoichnology. He worked also on dinosaur remains from Northern
Africa and Middle East, footprints and nesting structures of Carnian
terrestrial reptiles, Miocene mammal footprints, Palaeozoic and Mesozoic
chondrichthyes, Mesozoic osteichthyes, Triassic arthropods, and Mesozoic Fossil-Lagerstätten.
He named four
new dinosaur species (two as single author -Histriasaurus boscarollii and Tethyshadros
insularis- and two as coauthor - Sauroniops pachytholus and Canardia garonnensis);
three pterosaur species ('Cearadactylus' ligabuei, Austriadactylus cristatus and
Carniadactylus rosenfeldi); a marine reptile (Bobosaurus forojuliensis, the
most basal plesiosaur); and one spider and one crustacean species.
Sunday, 6 March 2016
Lecturers on 1st IMERP-XIV EJIP: Jim Kirkland
Workshop "Palaeobiodiversity and evolution in the Mesozoic world" lecturers.
Dr.
Jim Kirkland (born, August 24, 1954) following receiving Ph.D. at University of
Colorado, spent two years teaching at
the University of Nebraska and nine years as paleontologist with the Dinamation
Int’l Soc. He has spent the last 17 years as the Utah State Paleontologist with
the Utah Geological Survey. He issues
permits for paleontological research on Utah state lands, keeps tabs on
paleontological research and issues across the state, and promotes Utah’s paleontological
resources for the public good.
An expert on the Mesozoic, he has spent forty years excavating fossils across the southwestern US and Mexico authoring and coauthoring more than 80 professional papers. The reconstruction of ancient marine and terrestrial environments, biostratigraphy, paleobiogeography, paleoecology, and mass extinctions are some of his interests. He has discovered and described numerous new dinosaurs including several new armored dinosaurs, bipedal plant-eaters, the oldest truly horned-dinosaur, North America’s first sickle-clawed therizinosaurid, and the giant dromaeosaur Utahraptor. His researches in the middle Cretaceous of Utah indicate that the origins of Alaska and the first great Asian-North American faunal interchange occurred about 100 million years ago, which his numerous trips to China and Mongolia have substantiated.
This lecture is possible thanks to Fundación Conjunto Paleontológico de Teruel - Dinópolis. We are very thankful to them.
An expert on the Mesozoic, he has spent forty years excavating fossils across the southwestern US and Mexico authoring and coauthoring more than 80 professional papers. The reconstruction of ancient marine and terrestrial environments, biostratigraphy, paleobiogeography, paleoecology, and mass extinctions are some of his interests. He has discovered and described numerous new dinosaurs including several new armored dinosaurs, bipedal plant-eaters, the oldest truly horned-dinosaur, North America’s first sickle-clawed therizinosaurid, and the giant dromaeosaur Utahraptor. His researches in the middle Cretaceous of Utah indicate that the origins of Alaska and the first great Asian-North American faunal interchange occurred about 100 million years ago, which his numerous trips to China and Mongolia have substantiated.
This lecture is possible thanks to Fundación Conjunto Paleontológico de Teruel - Dinópolis. We are very thankful to them.
Friday, 4 March 2016
II Somosaguas Prize
Dear participants,
We are glad to announce the second edition of the Somosaguas Prize to
the best work by a novel researcher. This award is sponsored by the Somosaguas
Team, from the Universidad Complutense de Madrid.
The requirements for the candidates are:
- Younger than 25 years old (included).
- 1st or 2nd participation on the EJIP.
- 1st or 2nd author of a work for an oral presentation.
The works will be evaluated by the organizing committee, based on their
scientific quality.
The prize includes:
- Shirt and pins with paleontological logos.
- Several books and journals dealing with palaeontology and geology.
- Prize winner certificate.
Thursday, 3 March 2016
1st IMERP - XIV EJIP in the world
Researches from all those countries come to 1stIMERP-XIV EJIP!! We are
waiting for you! See you in Alpuente!
Tuesday, 1 March 2016
Lecturers on 1st IMERP-XIV EJIP: Susan Turner
Let us with the presentation of the differents lecturers. Now it is the turn of the second lecturer of te workshop about Paleozoic.
Workshop "Life in Palaeozoic: an overview of land and sea ecosystems" lecturers.
Susan Turner (Geoscience consultant and
editor; Honorary Research Fellow at several institutions including Queensland
and New Brunswick museums, Curtin and Monash universities) is one of the world
authorities on agnathan and chondrichthyan fishes and especially their early
evolution, with special interest in thelodonts (Thelodonti), basal sharks (e.g.
Doliodus, Protodus, Mcmurdodus), and certain other groups (e.g. gyracanths,
xenacanths). She has produced an extensive amount of work in her nearly 50
years of research. Her PhD (begun when in Reading University under Bev
Halstead) focused on understanding the British thelodonts then known with
special reference to their applied biostratigraphy and palaeogeography (with a
first paper on the closure of Iapetus in Nature in 1970) she continued that
work worldwide over the years, pioneering Palaeozoic microvertebrate research
in Gondwana, collaborating on the Handbook of Paleoichthyology on the clade and
is now concerned with the origins as well as palaeobiology. Migrating to
Australia in 1980, she began to discover new taxa notably mid-Palaeozoic sharks
based on microfossils and this has led, especially with her students and
colleagues in international research projects, to finding out more about the
evolution of basal agnathans and gnathostomes.
One important work challenged the hypothesis that conodont animals were
vertebrates (they are not!). Discovery and recognition of the first
Carboniferous tetrapod in the southern hemisphere and the youngest-known
dicynodont led to new avenues of research and inclusion as a "Wizard of Oz".
Field experience includes work on four continents, with description of fossils
from many countries besides. Working always in a museum environment, she
created a major geology gallery in Newcastle upon Tyne and assisted in the
re-structuring of the Queensland Museum. She co-ran UNESCO:IUGS IGCP 328 and
was a member of the Paleobiological Fund, the IGCP Board and Global Geoparks
Expert Committee (helping to create the Australian Geopark Kanawinka and
assessing ones in China and Iran), and is on the current Australian IGCP
Committee.
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