- Samuel Wendell Williston
Infobox Scientist
name = Samuel Wendell Williston
image_width = 250px
caption = Samuel Wendell Williston
birth_date = birth date|1852|7|10
birth_place =Boston, Massachusetts
death_date = death date and age|1918|8|30|1851|7|10
death_place =
residence =United States
citizenship =United States
nationality = USA
ethnicity =
field =Paleontology
work_institution =Yale University
University of Kansas
University of Chicago
alma_mater = Kansas State Agricultural College
Yale University
known_for = "Allosaurus ", "Diplodocus ", illustrations, terrestrial origin of bird flight
prizes =Samuel Wendell Williston (
July 10 ,1852 –August 30 ,1918 ) was an Americaneducator andpaleontologist who was the first to propose thatbird s developed flight cursorially (by running), rather than arboreally (by leaping from tree to tree). He was also anentomologist , specialising inDiptera .Biography
Early life
Williston was born in Boston, Massachusetts to Samuel Williston and Jane A. Williston
née Turner. As a young child, Williston's family travelled toKansas Territory in 1857 under the auspices of theNew England Emigrant Aid Company to help fight the extension of slavery. He was raised inManhattan, Kansas , attended public high school there, and graduated from Kansas State Agricultural College (nowKansas State University ) in 1872, afterwards receiving a Magister Artium from that institution.Blackmar 1912.]In 1874, he went on his first field fossil hunting expedition for
Othniel Charles Marsh atYale University under the mentorship ofBenjamin Franklin Mudge , and led his first expedition in 1877.Allosaurus" and "Diplodocus "dinosaur s. He was noted for painstakingly illustrating the finds. In 1880, he matriculated toYale University , for several years was a post-graduate student and faculty member. Around this time, he proposed the first explicit model for the terrestrial origin of bird flight ("i.e.", that dinosaurs developed flight by running along the ground rather than jumping from trees).Williston returned to
Kansas in 1890, to take a position on the faculty at theUniversity of Kansas as a professor ofgeology andanatomy . In 1899, he was named the first Dean of the new School of Medicine at KU. He was also a member of the state boards of health and medical examiners. In 1902, Williston left Kansas again, and took the chair of paleontology at theUniversity of Chicago .Williston was a fellow of the
Geological Society of America and foreign correspondent for the London Geological and Zoölogical societies. He was president of the Kansas Academy of Science, and in 1903 became president of theSociety of Vertebrate Paleontology . He was the author of several books, and theSmithsonian Institution now administers an endowment fund in his name.Theories
Williston noticed that, over evolutionary time, the modular and serially repeated parts distinguishing animal groups exhibited trends in numbers and types. For instance, ancient vertebrates were characterized by mouths that contained few similar teeth, whereas recent vertebrates are characterized by mouths that contain many different teeth, adapted for biting, tearing, and compacting food; differences ultimately characterized different diets, with carnivores bearing incisors and canines and grazers bearing mostly molars. So pronounced were these trends that Williston (1917) declared that “it is a law in evolution that the parts in an organism tend toward reduction in number, with the fewer parts greatly specialized in function”. [cite book|last=Carroll|first=S.|title= Endless Forms Most Beautiful: The New Science of Evo Devo and the Making of the Animal Kingdom|publisher=W. W. Norton & Co.|location=New York|date=2005]
Notes
References
* [http://skyways.lib.ks.us/genweb/archives/1912/w/williston_samuel_wendell.html Transcribed here] .
*cite book|author=Shor, Elizabeth|year=1971|title=Fossils and Flies: The Life of a Compleat Scientists Samuel Wendell Williston|publisher=University of Oklahoma Press|location=Norman, Oklahoma|isbn=0-8061-0949-1External links
* [http://www.oceansofkansas.com/Williston98ad.html Excerpts] from "A Brief History of Fossil Collecting in the Niobrara Chalk prior to 1900", (1898).
Persondata
NAME= Williston, Samuel Wendell
ALTERNATIVE NAMES=
SHORT DESCRIPTION=American paleontologist
DATE OF BIRTH= birth date|1852|7|10
PLACE OF BIRTH=Boston, Massachusetts
DATE OF DEATH= death date|1918|8|30
PLACE OF DEATH=
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