Fossils & Evolution

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Posted: October 5, 2012 - 09:03 , by Kiron Mukherjee
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One of the greatest experiences of my life occurred when I was just 7 years old. My mom took me for a week-long adventure to Alberta to visit Drumheller and the Badlands.

Posted: October 4, 2012 - 12:10 , by Patti McCabe
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First introduced to dinosaurs through a plastic toy in a cerealbox, renowned palaeontologist Philip J. Currie embarked on a life-long journey to study these creatures of the past.

Galerie Reed de l'âge des mammifères

L’essor des mammifères après l’extinction massive des dinosaures

French

Palaeobiology, Palaeoecology, and Taphonomy

Studies on Paleozoic Arthropoda: Central Canada, including the Hudson Bay and James Bay Lowlands

Recent Publications

YearPublications

Burgess Shale Projects

The Cambrian radiation represents the sudden worldwide appearance and rapid diversification of animals. The record of this critical event is documented in a series of exceptional fossil deposits with preservation of soft-bodied animals, especially in China and Canada.

Recent Publications

YearPublications

Travelling Education Kits

It's like getting your own ROM expert in a suitcase! Relax in the comfort of your own classroom, and let us bring the Museum to you. Our EduKits Program is guaranteed to liven up your classroom learning environment.

The EduKits Program offers hands-on, object-oriented educational kits. Covering a variety of topics, based on common core curriculum, the ROM’s expertise and collections are the foundation of each kit – making it unique, engaging and most importantly fun!

Portrait of Jean-Bernard Caron-2012

Jean-Bernard Caron

Curator of Invertebrate Palaeontology

Interests: Burgess Shale, Cambrian Explosion, Evolution, Origin of animals, Palaeocology

Phone: 416.586.5593

B.Sc., Earth and Life Sciences, University Blaise Pascal, Clermont-Ferrand, 1997
M.Sc., Earth Sciences, University Claude-Bernard, Lyon, 1999
Ph.D., Zoology, University of Toronto, 2005

Jean-Bernard Caron is Curator of Invertebrate Palaeontology at the ROM.

Previous position held at the ROM: Associate Curator of Invertebrate Palaeontology (2006-2010)

A profound curiosity about fossils during his childhood led Jean-Bernard Caron to collect and curate his own personal fossil collection in his native France. By the age of 10, he knew he wanted to become a professional palaeontologist. As a teenager, he often joined various professional field crews across Europe for summer field expeditions collecting fossils, and the experience gained as a volunteer field assistant led to an invitation from Desmond Collins, then Curator of Invertebrate Palaeontology at the ROM, to join his field crew at the famous Burgess Shale fossil deposit in British Columbia. This was his first visit to Canada, and he returned to the Burgess Shale as a ROM volunteer for the following two summer field seasons.

His Master's thesis dealt with Banffia constricta, one of the most bizarre animals known from the Burgess Shale. This study was followed by a PhD on the taphonomy and paleoecology of the Burgess Shale community. By the end of his PhD project, Jean-Bernard had examined about half the Burgess Shale specimens (more than 70,000 fossils) stored at the ROM, which houses what can now be considered the world’s largest collection of its kind (over 150,000 specimens). After a short Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council post-doctoral fellowship (Government of Canada), he joined the ROM as Associate Curator of Invertebrate Paleontology in early 2006, thus finally fulfilling his long-standing childhood dream.

At present, his main responsibilities are to curate and interpret fossils from the very large ROM Burgess Shale collection as well as to continue fieldwork activities. This represents a real Pandora’s Box for science, with many new organisms still to be described. He also studies fossils from other deposits, particularly in China, where there are sites of similar age and quality of preservation. These Burgess Shale-type deposits yield spectacularly preserved soft-bodied organisms. Because of their great age (about half a billion years old), they are of crucial importance for the study of the origins of animal groups during the Cambrian evolutionary radiation. At the end of 2010, Jean-Bernard launched the "Virtual Museum of Canada website on the Burgess Shale", a joint effort between the ROM and Parks Canada. This bilingual website received over 65.000 visitors in 2012.

Follow Jean-Bernard Caron on ROM BLOG:

 

AWARDS & RECOGNITIONS:

Jean-Bernard was the recipient of the 2010 Pikaia award from the Canadian Geological Association in recognition of his contribution to the profile of Canadian paleontology through his research. The nomination citation (PDF) praised him as "an exceptionally innovative and productive young paleontologist who shows promise for continuing excellence in Canadian paleontological research."

Jean-Bernard received two awards for "Virtual Museum of Canada website on the Burgess Shale": the Paleontological Association Golden Trilobite Award (2011) and the Ontario Museum Association Award for Excellence in Publications (2012).

 

RESEARCH GRANTS:

Jean-Bernard's research at the ROM is partially funded by an NSERC Discovery grant (2012-2017) under the program, "Palaeobiology and community analysis of the Burgess Shale biota," see Research Page for more information.

 

ACADEMIC LINKS:

See also Focus on Research page.

 

STUDENTS:

Lorna O'Brien (Phd) - (2008-current)

Cédric Aria (PhD) - (2012-current)

Martin Smith (Phd) completed (2008-2012)

Allison Daley (PhD) completed (2006-2010)

 

SELECTED PUBLICATIONS:

Google scholar profile, with list of citations, click here.

Complete publication list by Dr. Jean-Bernard Caron (PDF)

 

Other relevant stories about the Burgess Shale:

Centennial of the Burgess Shale discovery:

Parks Canada;

Shale of the century: mining the rich seam of the Burgess Shale;

The Burgess Shale: Evolution's Big Bang

Re-examining the Burgess Shale

 

 

Other Links

 

Mistaken Point Casting project:

 

Posted: September 14, 2012 - 21:10 , by Patti McCabe
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