- Alick Walker
Alick Walker (
October 26 ,1925 -December 4 ,1999 ) was a Britishpalaeontologist , after whom the "Alwalkeria "genus ofdinosaur is named.He was born in
Skirpenbeck , nearYork and attendedPocklington School from 1936 to 1943. He began a degree course in engineering at Cambridge, but dropped out in 1944. In 1948 he returned to university after national service, reading Geology at theUniversity of Bristol . On graduation, he join the research group of Professor Stanley Westoll at the University of Newcastle upon Tyne, working on the fossil reptiles of theLate Triassic found in Elgin. He was appointed Lecturer inGeology in 1954, while working on his PhD.The bony remains of the Elgin reptile fossils were poor, sometimes just indentations in rocks. Walker devised a new casting method to caputure the anatomical information in these fossils, using PVC; many of the resulting casts are now in the
National Museum of Scotland and theNatural History Museum . His early work was also notable for reclassifying and naming"Eustreptospondylus ".In the late 1960s Walker studied the origin of crocodilians and of birds, which became controversial in 1972 with his publication of a paper in Nature arguing for a close relationship between
sphenosuchia ncrocodylomorph s andbirds . He later accepted that this hypothesis might be incorrect in a 1985 paper on "Archaeopteryx ".Selected Publications
* Walker AD. 1964. Triassic reptiles from the Elgin area: Ornithosuchus and the origin of carnosaurs. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London B 248: 53–134.
* Walker AD. 1972. New light on the origin of birds and crocodiles. Nature 237: 257–263
* Walker AD. 1985. The braincase of Archaeopteryx. In: Hecht MK, Ostrom JH, Viohl G, Wellnhofer P, eds. The Beginnings of Birds, pp. 123–134. Freunde des Jura-Museums Eichstätt, Germany.References
[http://palaeo.gly.bris.ac.uk/Benton/reprints/2002Walker.pdf Alick D. Walker 1925–1999: an appreciation] , Benton and Walker, Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society, 2002, 136, 1–5
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.