User:Abyssal/Bradford Riney
Bradford Riney Author Richard P. Hilton has called Riney "the most successful dinosaur hunter in the state of California."[1] Riney made his first dinosaur discovery when he was just 13 years old. In 1967, he was he discovered a vertebra from the neck of a duck-billed dinosaur that had been preserved in a La Jolla sea cave. In 1976 he discovered two neck vertebrae from a mosasaur at Point Loma. Riney was offered a position as curatorial assistant and field paleontologist for the San Diego Natural History Museum by Tom Demere. In 1983 Riney discovered a hadrosaur femur near Carlsbad. In 1986 he made another hadrosaur discovery near Carlsbad when he uncovered a series of thirteen vertebrae. In 1987 Riney discovered the first armored dinosaur in California when he noticed a foot bone at a Carlsbad construction site. Further excavation uncovered one of the most complete dinosaur skeletons ever found in California. The specimen was later mounted for display at the San Diego Natural History Museum. In addition to excavating fossils he also prepares them for the San Diego Natural History Museum. Riney also does illustration work relevant to paleontology.
http://www.sdnhm.org/consulting-services/paleo-services/about-us/staff/
See also
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Footnotes
[edit]- ^ "Cretaceous Herbivores," Hilton (2003); page 39.
References
[edit]- Hilton, Richard P. 2003. Dinosaurs and Other Mesozoic Reptiles of California. Berkeley: University of California Press. 318 pp. ISBN 9780520233157.