Assistant Curator of Vertebrate Paleontology, University of Florida
I am currently the Assistant Curator of Vertebrate Paleontology at the Florida Museum of Natural History. I received his masters and PhD in Environmental Science and Policy from George Mason University and a Bachelors in Biology from Reed College. Before coming to Florida, I was the Lecturer of Paleontology at the University of Arizona, a Gaylord Donnelley Postdoctoral Fellow at Yale, and a Deep Time Peter Buck Postdoctoral Fellow at the Smithsonian’s National Museum of Natural History.
My research focusses on the ecology and evolution of terrestrial ecosystems. Much of my research has centered on the paleoecology and systematics of subtropical and tropical mammals from the Indian Subcontinent, but I have also conducted several studies on the causes and consequences of the extinction of large vertebrates in North America and South Asia. In addition to my work on mammals, I also study dinosaur ecosystems in North America and India. I have conducted field work most recently in India, but also in Georgia, New Jersey, and Montana. I also have a soft spot for the fossil record of elephants and their kin, and the history of paleontology.
In addition to this research, I have helped design museum exhibitions at the Yale Peabody Museum and for the Smithsonian’s Deep Time fossil halls. I have also developed public outreach activities on the evolution of elephants, dinosaurs, and whales, have advised the Indian government on establishing museums, and am actively involved in the world of biodiversity policy.