Mary L. Droser Explained

Mary Droser
Birth Place:United States
Field:Paleontology
Work Institution:University of California, Riverside
Alma Mater:University of Southern California
Binghamton University
University of Rochester
Thesis Title:Trends in Extant and Depth of bioturbation in Great Basin Precambrian-Ordovician Strata, California, Nevada and Utah
Thesis Url:http://digitallibrary.usc.edu/digital/collection/p15799coll29/id/351140
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Thesis Year:1987
Doctoral Advisor:David Bottjer

Mary L. Droser is an American paleontologist. She is known for her work in South Australia, including the discovery of several fossils to which she had naming rights., she is part of a team preparing the nomination of the Flinders Ranges as a World Heritage Site.

Early life and education

Droser says that spending summers with her family on Shelter Island, New York first inspired her interest in the natural world. She says, "At age 5 I announced I wanted to be a marine biologist, then by age 10 I’d decided to become a geologist".

She pursued geology at the University of Rochester and Binghamton University, and went on to obtain a PhD in paleontology at the University of Southern California.

Career

Droser has been travelling to the Flinders Ranges since around 2001, first with her young family, to study the Ediacaran fossils on what was Nilpena Station (on land that was then part of a cattle station, now part of Nilpena Ediacara National Park).

Discoveries and naming

In 2008, Droser's discovery of the fossil Funisia dorothea in Australia was published in the journal Science. Funisia is a single-species genus of upright worm-like animals that lived 555 million years ago. Funisia was hailed as the first known species to sexually reproduce. She named the species to honor her mother, Dorothy Droser, saying "She's come with me on digs and done all the cooking and taken care of the kids. It seemed the right thing to do."

Droser named the fossil Obamus, after U.S. president Barack Obama. In 2018, while exploring the Flinders Ranges, over north of Adelaide in South Australia, Droser's team found the 550-million-year-old fossil. She explained that the creature resembled an ear, a distinctive feature of Obama, and so named it for the former president.On the same trip to the Flinders Ranges in 2018, the team also discovered the fossil Attenborites janeae, which Droser named for naturalist Sir David Attenborough.

Other activities

, Droser is part of a team acting on behalf of the Government of South Australia and the traditional owners of the Flinders Ranges, the Adnyamathanha people, to lodge the nomination for the Flinders Ranges as a World Heritage Site.[1] Research done by her, along with South Australian Museum palaeontologist Diego Garcia-Bellido, will be submitted as part of the UNESCO World Heritage nomination, which will be voted on in 2026.[2]

Awards and honors

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: South Australia’s Flinders Ranges nominated for Unesco world heritage status . . 21 August 2022 . 7 December 2022.
  2. Web site: Dillon . Meagan . ABC News. Set in stone . 21 April 2023 . 4 May 2023.
  3. Web site: 2022 NAS Awards Recipients Announced.