Spencer G. Lucas

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Spencer G. Lucas is an American paleontologist and stratigrapher, and curator of paleontology at the New Mexico Museum of Natural History and Science. His main areas of study are late Paleozoic, Mesozoic and early Cenozoic vertebrate fossils, stratigraphy, and continental deposits, particularly in the American Southwest. His research has taken him on field trips to in northern Mexico, Costa Rica, Nicaragua, Jamaica, Kazakhstan, and Georgia, and he conducted extensive field and museum research in China in the 1980s and 1990s. He has written more than 500 scientific articles and three books, and has co-edited 14 books.

In 2007, some publications by Lucas and associates at the New Mexico Museum of Natural History and Science came under scrutiny after allegations that information was improperly taken from the unpublished and in-press work of graduate students not on his team. Formal complaints were made to the New Mexico Department of Cultural Affairs regarding publications on a new genus of aetosaur (a type of armored prehistoric reptile from the Triassic), and a reinterpretation of another aetosaur's armor.[1] The complaints have also gone for review before the Ethics Committee of the Society of Vertebrate Paleontology.

Lucas is also a master-level chess player (New Mexico state champion in 1973 and 1974). Many consider him to be the strongest player ever to come from New Mexico, at least until the rise of the International Grandmaster Jesse Kraai. He gave up chess, for the most part, in the mid-1970s to focus on his academic career.

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ Nature News, "Fossil reptiles mired in controversy" Published online 30 January 2008

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