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David
grew up in Allentown, PA with
a great family who he doesn't
get to see nearly enough.
He received degrees in geology
from Cornell (B.S.) and the
University of Georgia (M.S.)
before heading west to Montana
to do field work on dinosaurs.
In 1995 he finished his doctorate
in paleontology at Montana
State University.
Since
moving to Montana, David has
had the opportunity to work
with two museums, the Museum
of the Rockies, and the Old
Trail Museum, as well as doing
a variety of field work. His
favorite studies have been
those that start in the field
and provide the opportunity
to learn something about,
or at least ponder the biology
of dinosaurs. He spent several
summers at a site called Jack's
Birthday Site that held the
remains of at least nine different
dinosaur species and many
other animals.
Recently,
he had the opportunity to
work on some dinosaur nests
and eggs. The dinosaur he
has studied the most is the
small theropod, Troodon,
a wily, large-eyed predator
from the Cretaceous. David
has joined Paul on three earlier
expeditions, all of which
were great: Morocco ('95),
Argentina ('96), and Niger
('97). He thinks Inner Mongolia
should be way cool. (*NOTE:
Dave is modest and so he hasn't
told you that he is also the
discoverer of Suchomimus,
the crocodile mimic.)
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