
Published online:
21 February 2013
Published in print:
15 June 2009
Online ISBN:
9780226748597
Print ISBN:
9780226748610
Contents
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Paleontology after Darwin Paleontology after Darwin
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Paleontology and the Modern Evolutionary Synthesis Paleontology and the Modern Evolutionary Synthesis
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The Development of Paleobiology The Development of Paleobiology
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The Paleobiological Revolution The Paleobiological Revolution
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Notes Notes
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References References
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Chapter
One The Emergence of Paleobiology
Get access
Pages
15–42
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Published:June 2009
Cite
OXFORD ACADEMIC STYLE
Sepkoski, David, 'The Emergence of Paleobiology', in David Sepkoski, and Michael Ruse (eds), The Paleobiological Revolution: Essays on the Growth of Modern Paleontology (Chicago, IL , 2009; online edn, Chicago Scholarship Online, 21 Feb. 2013), https://doi.org/10.7208/chicago/9780226748597.003.0002, accessed 24 Apr. 2025.
CHICAGO STYLE
Sepkoski, David. "The Emergence of Paleobiology." In The Paleobiological Revolution: Essays on the Growth of Modern Paleontology. Edited by David Sepkoski, and Michael Ruse (eds). University of Chicago Press, 2009. Chicago Scholarship Online, 2013. https://doi.org/10.7208/chicago/9780226748597.003.0002.
Abstract
This chapter provides an historical overview of paleobiology, from the origin of the term itself through the emergence of a distinct set of paleobiological methods and questions in the 1950s and 1960s. It suggests that while paleobiology experienced an accelerated period of activity during the 1970s and 1980s, its roots were firmly established by the work of the previous generation of paleontologists, particularly by George Gaylord Simpson and Norman Newell. This chapter also mentions that it was in the 1980s that paleobiology was established as a mainstay in many university and museum departments.
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