meml.yale.edu
People | Mammalian Evolutionary Morphology Lab
http://meml.yale.edu/people
Mammalian Evolutionary Morphology Lab. Department of Anthropology – Yale University. Students in my laboratory study the morphology of living and fossil mammals, including primates. They also utilize the Mammalogy and Vertebrate Paleontology collections at the Yale Peabody Museum of Natural History. As curator of these collections, I conduct summer field research to collect new specimens. Please contact me if you’re interested in conducting laboratory, museum, or paleontological field research. Morpholog...
meml.yale.edu
Fieldwork | Mammalian Evolutionary Morphology Lab
http://meml.yale.edu/fieldwork
Mammalian Evolutionary Morphology Lab. Department of Anthropology – Yale University. I have conducted fieldwork in Malaysia (1994), Indonesia (1994), Ethiopia (1996-1997), Florida (1999), Bolivia (2001), Peru (2001-2003), Madagascar (2003), Brazil (2005), Cambodia (2006), Wyoming (2007), North Dakota (2008), Alaska (2007, 2009-2010), and Montana (2003, 2010-2014, 2016). Paleontology in Montana (2016):. Late Cretaceous and Early Paleocene Vertebrates, including Mammals, from Camel Butte and the Wang Ranch.
meml.yale.edu
Collaborators | Mammalian Evolutionary Morphology Lab
http://meml.yale.edu/collaborators
Mammalian Evolutionary Morphology Lab. Department of Anthropology – Yale University. Systematics and Biogeography of Treeshrews (Scandentia). University of Alaska Museum. Holding a northern smooth-tailed treeshrew,. Scandentia, Tupaiidae), from Cambodia. Systematics and Conservation of. Field Museum; Kyndall Hildebrandt, University of Alaska Fairbanks; Tim Davenport. Wildlife Conservation Society; Link Olson. Photo by Alvaro del Campo/Field Museum 2008). Primate Origins and Supraordinal Relationships.