Paul
Sereno
Paul Sereno was born in Aurora, Illinois
on October 11, 1957. He was the second
oldest of six children: he has an
older brother, Marty, and four younger
sisters- Joan, Anne, Margaret and
Sara - in that order.
As a kid, Paul was mischievous and
often caused trouble in school. Paul's
mother, Rena was an art teacher and
all of the children were encouraged
to experiment in art and ask lots
of questions about things.
In high school Paul played french
horn in the marching band and began
to paint seriously. By the time he
went off to Northern Illinois for
college Paul had decided to major
in biology and art. It wasn't until
he was almost ready to graduate from
college that he decided to study paleontology.
During a trip to the American Museum
of Natural History in New York with
his brother Marty, Paul got to see
the 'behind the scenes" activity
that surrounded the science of fossils:
bones, technical drawing, biology
and travel. He was hooked! He turned
his artistic talent to recording the
fossil record and got a doctorate
in geology at Columbia University.
He currently teaches at the University
of Chicago.
Paul has led three previous expeditions
to Niger (in 1993, 1997, and 2000)
not to mention numerous expeditions
to other places such as Morocco and
Inner Mongolia. Considering their
success with discoveries of new dinosaur
species such as Jobaria, Afrovenator,
Nigersaurus, Carcharodontosaurus,
and Suchomimus, and the 40-foot-long
crocodile Sarcosuchus, it
is impossible to say what types of
new discoveries await the 2003 expedition.
• Interview
with Dr. Paul Sereno
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