 Niles Eldredge
When Niles Eldredge was in school, his favorite subject was Latin. He claims
that he was not a science person. Today he is a well-known evolutionary
biologist and the author of dozens of books for adults and children, students
and scientists, and the general reading public. The subjects he writes about
range from trilobites to patterns of extinction, from evolution to
biodiversity.
He has worked at the American Museum of Natural History for nearly 30 years,
doing research and teaching. He is a Curator in the Department of Invertebrates
and heads the team of curators who made the new Hall of Biodiversity at the
Museum. He has devoted his entire career to affecting a better fit between
evolutionary theory and the fossil record. In recent years, he has focused on
the mass extinctions of the geological past and their implications for
understanding the modern biodiversity crisis and future human ecological and
evolutionary prospects. He attended Columbia, where he studied languages, then
met the woman who is now his wife, who was hanging out with a bunch of
anthropology majors, so he left Latin and switched over to anthropology. Niles
was still an undergraduate when he came to AMNH to work on a project sponsored
by the National Science Foundation. The Museum was a place he had loved since he
was a child growing up in Westchester County. As a Columbia doctoral student, he
continued his research at AMNH. Then, in 1969, when he was looking for a job in
his field, he was asked to stay on at the Museum. To Niles, being a
paleontologist is not all that different from being a historian or studying
Latin. He believes that if you are passionately interested in something, its
not hard.
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