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Dr. Kenneth Rose


  • The Beginning of the Age of Mammals
  • After 10 years in preparation, Dr. Ken Rose's book, The Beginning of the Age of Mammals, has been published this fall by Johns Hopkins University Press. The book is a graduate/upper level undergraduate text focusing on the Paleocene-Eocene radiations of mammals that followed the extinction of non-avian dinosaurs. See this link to the publisher's page for the volume. Readers of this book may also be interested in Dr. Rose's The Rise of Placental Mammals, co-edited with Dr. David Archibald and also published by Johns Hopkins University Press in 2005.

    UPDATE: Johns Hopkins University Press has provided a 20% discount for the book. Click on the link to download the coupon.
    Posted: 15 October 2006

  • Dr. Rose to Continue Indian Research
  • Congratulations to Dr. Kenneth Rose, who has received funding from the National Geographic Society to continue fieldwork in India. This research grant will support further work to locate and describe early Eocene mammals from western India.

    Dr. Rose also recently participated as a speaker at a conference held in honor of the 75th birthday of Elwyn Simons (Duke University). FAE's Dr. Mark Teaford was also in attendance.
    Posted: 12 December 2005

  • The Rise of Placental Mammals released
  • The volume The Rise of Placental Mammals: Origins And Relationships of the Major Extant Clades, edited by our Dr. Ken Rose and by Dr. J. David Archibald of San Diego State University, is now available from Johns Hopkins University Press. Go to the JHU Press page for more information about this comprehensive book, ordering details, and a list of its dozens of contributors.
    Posted: 7 March 2005

  • A belated congratulations to Dr. Rose on his Humboldt Award!
  • Dr. Kenneth Rose is currently completing his tenure as an Alexander von Humboldt Foundation Award winner, awarded to him in 2003. His research at the Institut für Paläontologie in Bonn, Germany, is supported by the foundation, which awards grants to scientists each year for internationally-recognized contributions to their fields. Many are invited to conduct research at Germany's academic institutions. This is a great honor, and we at the Center are proud to recognize Dr. Rose's achievement.
    Posted: 6 September 2004

    Dr. Christopher Ruff


  • Dr. Ruff takes over the editorship of AJPA
  • We at FAE are pleased to announce that Dr. Christopher Ruff is now the editor of the American Journal of Physical Anthropology. He is the successor of Dr. Clark Larsen of The Ohio State University and will hold the position for six years. Please see his recent announcement in the journal.

    Along with Dr. Ruff's new position, we would like to welcome Kandace Knapp, the new Assistant Editor of AJPA. We wish both of them luck and success with their new jobs!
    Posted: 30 June 2007
  • New version of Moment Macro available for ImageJ
  • A new version of the Moment Macro for calculating cross-sectional moments is now available. (Click here to visit macro page.) This version is designed to operate with ImageJ on both PC and Macintosh platforms. Please note that we are still testing and resolving minor bugs in the macro. The macro page will be updated accordingly as we solve these minor problems.
    Posted: 16 March 2006
  • Events at FAE (February to July 2005)
  • 19 February - Dr. Chris Ruff will co-chair a symposium on "New Ideas about Old Bones: Bone Biomechanics and Human Evolution" at the annual AAAS meeting in Washington, D.C.


    6-10 April - At the annual American Association of Physical Anthropology meeting in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, Drs. Ruff and Teaford, as well as current students Jason Organ and Benjamin Auerbach, will be presenting papers and posters. Dr. Teaford will also be co-chairing a career development panel discussion on the 6th. Drs. Kristina Aldridge, Valerie DeLeon, Gail Krovitz, and Carol Ward, alumni, will also be presenting papers.
    Updated: 15 June 2005

    Dr. Mark Teaford


  • Mark Teaford awarded Professor's Teaching Award
  • Mark Teaford has received the Professor's Award for Excellence in Teaching in the Preclinical Sciences for 2005-2006. This is the highest accolade granted by the School of Medicine to basic science professors. Dr. Teaford teaches human gross anatomy with the other members of FAE's faculty. Congratulations!
    Posted: 28 March 2006
  • FAE faculty in the science press news
  • Using a confocal microscope and new computer software, a team of scientists including Mark Teaford have developed a faster and more objective way to examine the surfaces of fossilized teeth, thus gaining new insights into the evolution of diet and tooth use. In a study published in Nature, early human ancestors were shown to have variable diets, but with significant overlap between species. The main differences probably related back to so-called fallback foods available during periods of resource scarcity.
    Posted: 5 September 2005
  • Upcoming events at FAE (February to July 2005)
  • 19 February - Dr. Mark Teaford will be co-chairing another symposium at the AAAS meeting on the "Origin and Evolution of Modern Human Diet."
    2-6 April - Dr. Teaford will be giving an invited talk on job prospects for anatomists in physical anthropology and forensics on the 3rd at the annual American Association of Anatomists meeting in San Diego.

    6-10 April - At the annual American Association of Physical Anthropology meeting in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, Drs. Ruff and Teaford, as well as current students Jason Organ and Benjamin Auerbach, will be presenting papers and posters. Dr. Teaford will also be co-chairing a career development panel discussion on the 6th. Drs. Kristina Aldridge, Valerie DeLeon, Gail Krovitz, and Carol Ward, alumni, will also be presenting papers.
    Posted: 11 February 2005
  • Belated congratulations to Dr. Teaford
  • We give a belated congratulations to Dr. Mark Teaford, who has been selected by the first year students (class of 2007) of the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine for his contribution as an outstanding pre-clinical teacher in human gross anatomy. As part of this honor, the students bestowed a Ravens helmet to our resident Baltimore football fan.
    Posted: 26 December 2004

    Dr. David Weishampel


  • FAE faculty in the science press news
  • In September, 2005, Dave Weishampel was honored to have a dinosaur named after him. Penelopognathus weishampeli is a new hadrosauroid ornithopod from the Bayan Gobi Formation (Lower Cretaceous) of Nei Mongol Zizhiqu, People's Republic of China. Named by Pascal Godefroit, Hong Li, and Chang-Yong Shang (see "Articles in Press"), this dinosaur provides important information on the origin of hadrosaurids (duck-billed dinosaurs).
    Posted: 5 September 2005
  • Dr. Weishampel in Spain...again.
  • Dr. David Weishampel returns to Spain for an international meeting in Barcelona in conjunction with a new Iguanodon exhibit at the new Museo de la Ciencia de la Fundación "la Caixa." In September of 2004, he attended another meeting in Salas de los Infantes, Spain.

    Dr. Weishampel would also like to announce the upcoming release of the second edition of Drs. Fastovsky and Weishampel's Evolution and Extinction of the Dinosaurs, published by Cambridge University Press and due out in April.
    Posted: 8 February 2005

  • The Dinosauria, 2nd Edition, at last!
  • Dr. Weishampel is pleased to announce the publication of the fully revised second edition of The Dinosauria. Published by the University of California Press, it includes original phylogenetic analyses of all dinosaurian clades (including birds), new chapters on paleoecology, taphonomy, biogeography, thermoregulation, and extinction, and features cover art by Mark Hallett. This makes the second book he has published over the past two years (the other is Dinosaur Papers 1676-1906, a presentation of the early dinosaur literature with historical commentary, published by the Smithsonian Institution Press.
    Posted: 10 October 2004

  • Dr. Weishampel in Spain
  • Dave Weishampel had the pleasure of attending the III Jornadas Internacionales sobre Paleontologia de Dinosaurios y su Entorno in Salas de los Infantes, Spain, this past September. A three-day meeting (including a field trip of the surrounding geology and dinosaur footprint localities), this symposium was international in terms of participants (Spain, England, and the United States) and showcased the rich ichnofaunas found throughout Spain, systematics papers on sauropods and ankylosaurs, the dinosaurs of the east coast of North America, possible marine dinosaurs, and dinosaurian origins, as well as the Museo de Dinosaurios in Salas, with an extensive collection of Early Cretaceous dinosaurs, crocodilians, turtles, and fishes.
    Posted: 6 October 2004

    Dr. Valerie DeLeon


  • New version of Moment Macro available for ImageJ
  • A new version of the Moment Macro for calculating cross-sectional moments is now available. (Click here to visit macro page.) This version is designed to operate with ImageJ on both PC and Macintosh platforms. Please note that we are still testing and resolving minor bugs in the macro. The macro page will be updated accordingly as we solve these minor problems.
    Posted: 16 March 2006
  • Alessandra DeLeon
  • FAE sends a very belated congratulations to Valerie and Iser DeLeon on the birth of their second daughter, Alessandra, in November. Send congratulatory messages either to Valerie via our deprtmental address or directly via e-mail.
    Posted: 2 January 2006
  • Valerie DeLeon joins faculty at FAE
  • The Center has added a fifth full-time faculty position and hired Hopkins alumna Dr. Valerie DeLeon. Dr. DeLeon has just completed a post-doctoral fellowship under Dr. Roger Reeves, where she researched the genetics of heart septal defects involved with Down Syndrome, among other topics. She previously studied fluctuating asymmetry in crania for her dissertation research under Dr. Joan Richtsmeier.

    At FAE, Dr. DeLeon will join the four senior faculty members in instructing the medical human gross anatomy course. She also intends to pursue research into craniofacial development, morphological integration, and methods for obtaining geometric morphometrics. Additionally, as a joint-appointment as affiliated faculty with the Center for Craniofacial Development and Disorders at Johns Hopkins, she will investigate brain dysmorphology in individuals with autism. We welcome Dr. DeLeon to her new position in FAE.
    Posted: 1 August 2005

    Graduate Students and Post-Docs

  • Congratulations to Benjamin Auerbach and Jason Organ on their doctorates!
  • Belated congratulations to Drs. Benjamin Auerbach and Jason Organ for successfully defending their dissertations!
    Dr. Auerbach defended a record three volume dissertation entitled "Skeletal variation in the New World during the Holocene: effects of climate and subsistence across geography and time". He has taken up the position of Visiting Scholar at the Center for Archaeological Investigations at Southern Illinois University in Carbondale, IL.

    Dr. Organ defended his dissertation "The functional anatomy of prehensile and nonprehensile tails of the Platyrrhini (Primates) and Procyonidae (Carnivora)" and traveled very far to join the Department of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation at Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine as the Postdoctoral Research Fellow working with Dr. Rebecca German .
    Posted: 15 September 2007
  • Welcome new folks to FAE!
  • We would like to welcome our new Postdoctoral Fellow, Adam Sylvester. Adam received his Ph.D from University of Tennessee, Knoxville where he studied the origins of bipedalism.
    FAE welcomes our new students Heather Garvin and François Gould. Heather comes to us from Mercyhurst College where she earned her M.S. in Biological and Forensic Anthropology. François joins us from the UK where he earned his MSc. in Advanced Methods in Taxonomy and Biodiversity from Imperial College, London,
    Posted: 30 August 2007
  • Congratulations to Mike
  • Mike Habib has been awarded money from the Jurassic Foundation for travel and data collection. This will help fund his dissertation research on the structural mechanics and evolution of vertebrate flight.
    Posted: 15 June 2007

  • Congratulations to Kirsten and Michael!
  • This May, Kirsten Brown and Michael Yashinski successfully passed their qualifying oral examinations. We look forward to seeing their future work as we are sure their advisors will as well.
    Posted: 1 June 2007

  • Awards continue for FAE students
  • Madeleine recently received the William and Mary Drescher Award for Graduate Medical Research. This prize is given to promising incoming graduate students with an outstanding academic record and achievements in biomedical research.

    Frank has been awarded a Stephen J. Gould Grant from the Paleontological Society. This will fund his continuing dissertation research on the dental microwear and jaw mechanics of ceratopsians and pachycephalosaurs. Congratulations to both of you!
    Posted: 18 October 2006

  • Frank goes to China
  • Good luck to Frank Varriale as he departs this August for the Wucaiwan area of the Junggar Basin in Xinjiang Province, China. There he will spend a month in the field with Dr. Xu Xing of the Institute of Vertebrate Paleontology and Paleoanthropology, and Dr. James Clark of George Washington University. They will be digging in the Late Jurassic, Shishugou Formation which has recently produced the most basal ceratopsian, Yinlong downsi, and an early tyrannosauroid, Guanlong wucaii. Frank will proceed to research in museums in China, Mongolia and Poland after completing field work in China.

    Update: Frank has sent us a photo from the field, showing Frank and the femur of a new stegosaurus in the Shishugou Formation.
    Posted: 31 July 2006
    Updated: 10 September 2006

  • New people join FAE
  • We welcome our two new graduate students, Madeleine Chollet and Evan Garofalo. Madeleine recently completed her studies at Rice University, where she obtained a B.A. in Anthropology. Evan joins us from the Department of Anthropology at the National Museum of Natural History (Smithsonian) in Washington, D.C., after completing a B.A. in Anthropology at Tulane and a M.S. in Human Osteology and Palaeopathology at the University of Bradford.

    We also extend a welcome to Donna Jones, a researcher working with Dr. Rebecca German. She will be joining FAE faculty and graduate students in the anatomy lab this fall as an instructor.
    Posted: 10 September 2006

  • Congratulations to Frank
  • Congratulations to Frank Varriale who has received a Grant-in-Aid of Research from Sigma Xi, as well as a graduate student research grant from the Geological Society of America. Both grants will support his work on the dental microwear and jaw mechanics of ceratopsians and pachycephalosaurs.

    Frank was recently an invited speaker at the Royal Tyrrell Museum of Paleontology. His talk, entitled "Testing for Dinosaur-Angiosperm Coevolutionary Relationships with an Analysis of Marginocephalian Dental Microwear and Jaw Morphology," was an evaluation of the current literature and a description of his ongoing work.
    Posted: 5 May 2006

  • Jason Organ wins the AAPA Mildred Trotter Award
  • Congratulations to Jason Organ (pictured at right with advisor Mark Teaford), who was awarded the Mildred Trotter Student Prize at this month's American Association of Physical Anthropologists Annual Meeting in Anchorage, Alaska. His paper was entitled "To grasp or not to grasp? Structure and function of platyrrhine caudal vertebrae," in which Jason examined differences in biomechanical properties of prehensile, semiprehensile and non-prehensile New World monkey tails. He will continue the study of tail mechanics in his dissertation research.
    Posted: 16 March 2006

  • Congratulations to Frank Varialle
  • Congratulations to Frank Varriale, who has received funding from the Jurassic Foundation to support his dissertation research, entitled "Testing for Dinosaur-Angiosperm Coevolutionary Relationships with an Analysis of Marginocephalian Dental Microwear and Jaw Morphology." Frank's funding will support travel to museums in China and Poland where he will be conducting data collection.
    Posted: 2 February 2006

  • Congratulations to Jason and Benjamin
  • Hats off to FAE's Jason Organ and Benjamin Auerbach, who both have received doctoral dissertation improvement grants from the National Science Foundation to support their dissertation research. Jason will be employing his grant in research to examine the functional anatomy and biomechanics of prehensile tails in comparison with non-prehensile tails. Benjamin's funding will support research into the morphological variation of prehistoric New World humans in relation to environmental factors.
    Posted: 19 December 2005

  • Compliments to Matthew O'Neill
  • A belated congratulations is given to Matthew O'Neill, who has received a doctoral dissertation improvement grant from the National Science Foundation and a dissertation fieldwork grant from the Wenner- Gren Foundation for Anthropological Research. These are currently funding his dissertation research, entitled "Energetics of primate quadrupedalism: Limb design, mechanics and the metabolic cost of force production." Matthew will be conducting his data collection at Duke University and their Primate Center.
    Posted: 6 December 2005

  • New faces at FAE
  • We at the Center welcome our two new first year Ph.D. graduate students, Michael Yashinski and Kirsten Brown. Michael recently completed his studies at Franklin and Marshall College, where he completed a B.A. in Geosciences and a B.A. in Biology. Kirsten joins the department from Louisiana State University, where she finished a B.A. in Anthropology. Welcome to Anatomy at Hopkins!
    Posted: 25 August 2005

  • Congratulations to Amy Chew for her doctorate!
  • Congratulations to Amy Chew, who successfully defended her dissertation entitled "Biostratigraphy, Paleoecology and Synchronized Evolution in the Early Eocene Mammalian Fauna of the Central Bighorn Basin, Wyoming" on May 20. We are grateful to Drs. Gregg Gunnell (University of Michigan), Steven Stanley (Johns Hopkins), and Scott Wing (Smithsonian), who served as external readers.

    Amy has accepted a position as postdoctoral fellow in anatomical sciences at Stony Brook University, beginning in August, where she will work with Prof. Dave Krause.
    Posted: 15 June 2005

  • FAE publication in Nature
  • In the March 24 issue of Nature, FAE doctoral candidates Shawn Zack and Tonya Penkrot (together with University of Florida Assistant Professor Jon Bloch and FAE Professor Ken Rose) describe skeletal remains of early Eocene 'hyopsodontid' condylarths from Wyoming which suggest relationship to African elephant shrews (Macroscelidea). The limb bones of Haplomylus and Apheliscus show specializations for running and jumping that are specifically shared with elephant shrews, one of the most primitive groups assigned to the African clade Afrotheria by molecular systematists. The new fossils suggest a Holarctic (perhaps even North American) origin of Afrotheria.
    Posted: 28 March 2005

  • Congratulations to Ann Zumwalt for Ph.D. defense!
  • Congratulations to Ann Zumwalt for the successful defense of her dissertation: "The effect of endurance exercise on the morphology of muscle attachment sites: An experimental study in sheep (Ovis aries)" on November 22. We thank the Harvard Field Station and Dr. Dan Lieberman for making available the facilities for carrying out the experimental part of the study, and Drs. John Matyas and Cindy Wilczak for also serving on her external advisory committee. Ann is currently a post-doctoral fellow in the Department of Biological Anthropology and Anatomy at Duke University, where she is continuing her work on exercise and functional adaptation of the skeleton.
    Posted: 28 November 2004

  • Congratulations to Jay Mussell, Ph.D.
  • Congratulations to Jay Mussell, who successfully defended his dissertation entitled "A reexamination of Lipotyphla and Afrotheria using both molecular and morphological analyses" on November 16. We thank Drs. Marc Allard (George Washington University) and Mike Novacek (American Museum of Natural History) for serving as external reviewers and attending the defense. Jay recently began a postdoctoral fellowship in the laboratory of Dr. Lori Kotch here at Johns Hopkins.
    Posted: 28 November 2004

  • Congratulations to Shawn and Tonya!
  • Congratulations to Shawn Zack and Tonya Penkrot, each of whom just received a grant from the Welles Fund at Berkeley. They will use these awards to support dissertation research study at the University of California Museum of Paleontology. We wish them the best of luck in their future research endeavors.
    Posted: 4 November 2004

  • F.A.E. welcomes new post-doc Kristin and new grad students Gina and Mike
  • The Center welcomes two new graduate students to our Ph.D. program. Mike Habib comes to our department having completed his Master's in Biology from the University of Virginia. Georgina McKusick joins us from Chicago, where she finished her B.A. in Anthropology last year. We wish them luck as they begin their first year studies.

    We also welcome Kristin Wright, who is joining us from Northwestern University's School of Medicine. There, she has been completing her dissertation on the postcranial morphology of weeper capuchins in relation to ecology and locomotion. She will be starting her tenure as a post-doctoral fellow at F.A.E.
    Posted: 6 September 2004

  • Congratulations to Dr. François Therrien!
  • All of us at F.A.E. extend our congratulations to François Therrien on his recent successful completion of his dissertation defense. His thesis is titled "Paleoenvironmental reconstruction of the Late Cretaceous (Maastrichtian) dinosaur-bearing formations of Romania." François leaves to begin a post-doctoral fellowship for University of Calgary and Royal Tyrrell Museum of Palaeontology in Alberta, Canada. Good luck, François!
    Posted: 22 July 2004

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