‘Genesis of Paleo at Princeton: 150 Years of Princeton Paleontology’
‘150 Years of Princeton Paleontology’ brings real fossils from the University’s Geosciences collection, alongside the scientific publications describing them, to tell the story of the scientific lineage that founded modern vertebrate paleontology.
Paleontology is the study of the 99.999% of life on Earth which is now extinct. When William Berryman Scott ’1877 inadvertently founded Princeton’s century-long dynasty in fossil studies, he thrust his friends and himself quite literally into the middle of a scientific field battling to define itself. With the famed “Bone Wars” raging between Yale’s Othniel Charles Marsh and Philadelphia’s Edward Drinker Cope, North American paleontology was less of a rigorous discipline, and more of a rabid, animosity-driven rush to name more species and claim more territory. But if the science would ever evolve to ideas and theory, it would need successors who would eventually take the reigns from Cope and Marsh. Princeton would provide those successors.
Those Princeton students would make good on their plans to explore the West for fossils, and the science that countless millions of people have marveled at over the last century and a half in museums and classrooms around the world, including some of the most iconic species resurrected from Earth’s prehistory, would come to be delivered by a lineage of scientists working from a small powerhouse school in central New Jersey. This is the story of that dynasty’s founding and first decades in the life of Princeton Paleontology.
Photo of Henry Osborn, Francis Speir and William Scott from the National Park Service.
The Commons Library sits between Briger Hall and the new Bioengineering Building. Enter on the first floor on Ivy Lane across from the football stadium or through Briger Hall’s first floor. You can also enter on the second floor from Roper Lane. The Curiosity Studio is an open presentation space inside the Commons Library’s second floor. To request disability-related accommodations for this event, please contact pulcomm@princeton.edu at least three working days in advance.
Event Details
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DateAugust 11, 2026, 4:00 PM EDT
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Website