Kristina Curry Rogers Explained

Kristina Curry Rogers
Birth Place:Sikeston, Missouri, U.S.
Education:Degree in Biology from Montana State University, MSc and PhD in Anatomical Sciences from State University of New York at Stony Brook
Spouse:Ray Rogers
Children:2 daughters

Kristina "Kristi" Curry Rogers (born June 20, 1974) is an American vertebrate paleontologist and a professor in Biology and Geology at Macalester College.[1] Her research focuses on questions of dinosaur paleobiology, bone histology, growth, and evolution, especially in a subgroup of sauropods called Titanosauria. She has named two dinosaur species from Madagascar, Rapetosaurus,[2] the most complete Cretaceous sauropod and titanosaur found to date, and Vahiny, so far known only from a partial skull. She and Jeffrey A. Wilson co-authored The Sauropods, Evolution and Paleobiology, published in December 2005.[3] Her research includes field work in Argentina, Madagascar, Montana, South Africa, and Zimbabwe.

Early life and education

Rogers was born in Sikeston, Missouri, where her passion for paleontology was fostered at an early age. By the time she began research during her undergraduate education under the guidance of Jack Horner, her future career in research was fossilized. Her experience ignited a long-term fascination with the long-necked, giant dinosaurs known as sauropods.[4] She graduated with a degree in Biology from Montana State University in 1996.

Rogers completed both her MSc and PhD in Anatomical Sciences from State University of New York at Stony Brook.[5] by 2001. Her graduate advisors, Catherine Forster and David W. Krause, were founding members of the Mahajanga Basin Project, a long-term, National Science Foundation and National Geographic Society-supported research program focused on the Upper Cretaceous Maevarano Formation.

Her graduate research focused on the evolutionary history of Titanosauria. Since then, she has continued to publish work elucidating titanosaur anatomy and paleobiology.

Career

In 2001, Rogers was hired as the Curator of Paleontology at the Science Museum of Minnesota, where she worked until 2008. At that time, she moved to Macalester College, where she was jointly appointed in the Biology and Geology Departments. In 2019, she was appointed as Chair of Biology at Macalester College.[6]

She is also an active member of the Society of Vertebrate Paleontology, the Geological Society of America, and the Society for Integrative Comparative Biology.

Awards and honours

Rogers has been the recipient of a number of National Science Foundation grants, including the prestigious NSF CAREER award. Rogers was awarded the Macalester College Jack and Marty Rossman Excellence in Teaching Award in 2015.

Rogers has also served as an on screen expert for numerous documentaries with the BBC, PBS, the National Geographic Channel, and the Discovery Channel, and is featured in the large format film Titanosaur 3D: The Story of Maximo. She was also a guest speaker on the MPR News in 2012 where she discussed dinosaur bones and has starred in a video describing the way in which dinosaurs grow.

Family

She is married to Macalester College geologist, Ray Rogers, and has two daughters.

Partial bibliography

Books

Reviews:

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Kristi Curry Rogers - Macalester College . Macalester.edu . 2015-07-06.
  2. Curry Rogers . Kristina . Forster . Catherine A. . The last of the dinosaur titans: a new sauropod from Madagascar . Nature . 2 August 2001 . 412 . 6846 . 530–534 . 10.1038/35087566 . 11484051 . 2001Natur.412..530C . 4347583 .
  3. Book: Rogers . Kristina Curry . Wilson . Jeffrey . The Sauropods: Evolution and Paleobiology . 2005 . University of California Press . 978-0-520-24623-2 .
  4. News: Bright Ideas with Kristi Curry Rogers . MPR News . 27 March 2012 .
  5. Web site: Kristi Curry-Rogers. 2008-08-02. The Shape of Life. Public Broadcasting Service.
  6. Web site: Biology - Macalester College. 2020-09-09. en-US.