| The DIN |
| The
BONE ZoneTM |
Paleontologist
(Curator of PalaeoBiology)
Chris McGowan |
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Dino Stats (tm) Name: Chris McGowan Date Born/ Age:Post-glacial Length:175 cm Weight:74 kg Favorite Food: Japanese Family: Married, with two married daughters Genus: Paleo Biologist Species: . Place of Origin: Beckenham, Kent, England Habitat: .Ontario, Canada Favorite Movie: Sliding doors Favorite TV Show: .Seldom watch anything but movies Favorite Dinosaur: Norman (sorry Samantha) Favorite Sport: .Was never into sports Exercise: . Hobbies: Writing, brewing, wine-making, cooking. Distinguishing Features: .white hair and elfin beard. Chris McGowan was the
Vera Velociraptor's Very Vast, Verbose, Voracious Vocabulary
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Chris McGowan (and Friend) (Chris is on the left. Friend is on the right.) Chris McGowan was born in England, went to all the wrong schools, but had good teachers who taught science properly. He fell in love with the subject. As a young lad he amused himself by conducting experiments, and by building things. His interests included rockets (which more often exploded than flew), model aircraft, steam engines, chemistry, osteology and natural history. After obtaining a B.Sc. in Zoology at one of the least known seats of learning in London, he became a full-time high-school teacher. He loved teaching, but did not want to stay at school forever. He therefore enrolled as a part-time graduate student at London University, to study paleontology. The choice between research projects--Pleistocene pigs or ichthyosaurs--was an easy one. He received his Ph.D. three years later, in 1969. He moved to Canada the same year, with his wife and two young daughters, to take a job in the paleontology department at the Royal Ontario Museum. He has been there ever since. In addition to his museum duties he is a Professor of Zoology at the University of Toronto. Although interested in dinosaurs, his research focus is on ichthyosaurs, a group of fish-like reptiles that lived in the sea while dinosaurs roamed the land. A firm believer in the idea that we cannot know much about the dead before knowing a lot about the living, he spends much of his time researching modern animals. Several of his scientific publications, and two of his ten books, are about modern animals. Convinced that the only way to learn it is by doing it, the courses
he teaches at the U of T are very much hands-on. His two books on
building dinosaurs from chicken bones were written to share the fun of
learning by first-hand experience. He lives outside of Toronto with
his lovely wife, and close to his two gorgeous daughters.
Chris McGowan
October , 1999
Related Resources:
Books by Chris McGowan
McGowan, C. 1983a The successful dragons: A natural history of extinct reptiles. Samuel Stevens, Toronto and Sarasota, 263 pp. Currently Out of Print. McGowan, C. 1983b. McGowan, C. 1992a. Dinosaurs, Spitfires, and Sea Dragons, Harvard University Press, Cambridge, 384 pp. McGowan, C. 1992b. Discover dinosaurs: Become a Dinosaur Detective . Kids Can Press, Toronto, 96 pp, Currently Unavailable from publisher. Can sometimes be special ordered. McGowan, C. 1994. Diatoms
to dinosaurs. Julian Mulock (Illustrator), Island Press,
Washington, 271 pp. McGowan, C. 1997a. McGowan, C. 1997b. McGowan, C. January, 1998 A Practical Guide to Vertebrate Mechanics 320 pages McGowan, C. 1999
A revision of the Latipinnate ichthyosaurs of the Lower Jurassic of England (Reptilia, Ichthyosauria) Currently Out of Print |