Lab of Dr. Larisa DeSantis. Focused on Dietary Reconstructions and Ecological Assessments of Mammals. Dept of Bio. Sci. and EES, Vanderbilt University.
We're really excited for this week's Earth Day events with Sharon Strauss visiting on Wednesday at 3:30pm in Buttrick 101 and a booth at #earthdaynash2024 on Saturday! Here are some photos from Nashville Earth Day 2022
ALT Cartoon with text "Earth Day 22 April: around an earth with clouds on a gold background
ALT On-lookers look at the DeSantis DREAM Lab booth with skull casts of humans and extinct cats
ALT Two people sit behind a table showing children how to dig for candies in cookies - like excavating fossils!
ALT Some hominid skull casts and a mastadon tooth cast on display on a table.
Thanks for visiting @EvolutionVU, @DeSantisLab, and a special thanks to all the Vandy students who helped with the tour! We love studying ancient predators (@PredsNHL) @VanderbiltU and in Smashville (Nashville).
Chancellor Diermeier recently visited Vanderbilt's Evolutionary Studies Initiative for a tour and overview of the initiative's mission and research.
Learn more about the visit and the growth of the ESI: vu.edu/esi124
ALT Chancellor Diermeier (left) looking at tooth striations with undergraduate student Adi Kurre.
ALT Chancellor Diermeier talks with Larisa DeSantis about big cat teeth.
ALT Sola Johnson explains his research to Chancellor Diermeier.
ALT Chancellor Daniel Diermeier visits with Antonis Rokas and the Evolutionary Studies Initiative.
Fun story about coyotes as adaptable survivors and it includes some of our published research... and we (@SaberCatWoman @AislingLaBrea @DrPardi@paleojosh@ReganDunn5 and many others) are currently working on learning even more about these coyotes! Stay tuned!
How 𝙙𝙞𝙙 coyotes survive Ice Age extinction? As the era’s largest surviving predator and third-most large mammal found at the #TarPits, learn how found fossils help explain how coyotes outlasted their larger competitors: bit.ly/HowlinCoyotes
ALT A complete coyote skeleton from the La Brea Tar Pits & Museum collections.
Getting ready for The Grants to visit next week! This Friday's journal club features our trainees, Brynn and Samir talking about some of the Grants' work.
What a strange hybrid beast!
Cross-species hybridization is well known among the Canis (dogs/wolves/coyotes/jackals) but I've never heard of CROSS-GENUS hybridization
Here's a Dog X Pampas fox hybrid from the wild, two genera separated by 6.7 million yrs
mdpi.com/2076-2615/13/15/250…
Check out our story about new research on the Pleistocene extinctions in Southern California and the many parallels to today: tinyurl.com/2458sx7p This research is hot, hot, hot!🔥🔥🔥
ALT Flyer for "Building Religious Cultural Competence for Effective and Inclusive Evolution Education," by Liz Barnes on 9/8/23 in MRBIII 1220 at Vanderbilt's campus at 3:30pm. Photo of Liz smiling and QR code for vanderbilt.edu/evolution
Please join us during the virtual meeting for the Future Vertebrate Paleontology discussion panel! Moderator Dr. Laura Wilson will be chatting with a fantastic group of innovative researchers on their work, their outlooks, plus taking audience questions.
vertpaleo.org/2023-virtual-m…
ALT This panel will be discussing exciting new methods and research directions they are leading, and the impact that research may have on the future of vertebrate paleontology.
This event is part of the 2023 SVP Virtual Conference.
Join us for the September Seminar! Featuring Dr Steve Unwin and Dr Fiona Knox giving us an introduction to wildlife disease risk analyses.
Seminars are open to the public but please register at: us06web.zoom.us/meeting/regi…
📢JOB ALERT PLEASE RT📢 I am hiring a lab tech! Main responsibility will be segmenting and landmarking 🦎CT data as part of an NSF-funded project. I'll start reviewing applications on September 1, until the position is filled! to apply: bit.ly/3OJqynA
Shown here are the youngest dated specimens of Harlan’s ground sloth, western camel, western horse, dire wolf, antique bison, and saber-toothed tiger. These fossils are the last known surviving members of their species.
Learn more this week in Science: scim.ag/3LR
ALT (Clockwise from top left) Harlan’s ground sloth (Paramylodon harlani), western camel (Camelops hesternus), western horse (Equus occidentalis), dire wolf (Aenocyon dirus), antique bison (Bison antiquus), and saber-toothed tiger (Smilodon fatalis)
Shown here are the youngest dated specimens of Harlan’s ground sloth, western camel, western horse, dire wolf, antique bison, and saber-toothed tiger. These fossils are the last known surviving members of their species.
Learn more this week in Science: scim.ag/3LR
ALT (Clockwise from top left) Harlan’s ground sloth (Paramylodon harlani), western camel (Camelops hesternus), western horse (Equus occidentalis), dire wolf (Aenocyon dirus), antique bison (Bison antiquus), and saber-toothed tiger (Smilodon fatalis)
Tomorrow! Graham Slater will be giving our #EarthDay talk in Buttrick 101 at 3:10pm. "Predicting multivariate ecology of fossil taxa from morphological data." loom.ly/UhTh11k 🦴 #Fossils
Thanks @NCSE for such a nice article and willingness to collaborate on outreach events! Teaching evolution and climate change has never been so important!!!
DeSantis, a vertebrate paleontologist whose research lab's mission is to discover "ecological and evolutionary responses to global change," was the featured speaker at an evolution symposium co-sponsored by NCSE.
#SciChat#SciCommbuff.ly/3Zw3vjq