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38 Pp. Green Card Covers Citing Publication Date March 31, 1944. First Edition, First Printing. Signed By Stock And Howard At Top Of Front Cover. Chester Stock (1892 ?1950) Was An American Paleontologist Who Specialized In The Pleistocene Mammalian Fauna Of The Rancho La Brea Tar Pits. He Served As A Professor Of Geology At The California Institute Of Technology, Pasadena. He Attended The University Of California, Berkeley With The Intent To Study Medicine But, Influenced By John C. Merriam, Instead Took An Interest In Paleontology. He Authored A Paper Of The Remains Of The Rancho La Brea For His Graduation In 1914, After Which He Continued His Studies Under Merriam. He Collected Paleontological Samples In The Hawker Cave For His 1918 Phd Dissertation. He Soon Joined The University As An Instructor And, When Merriam Moved To Washington In 1921, Began Teaching Vertebrate Paleontology. The Newly Founded California Institute Of Technology Was Being Expanded By R.A. Millikan, Who Recruited J.P. Buwalda And Chester Stock For The Geology Department. Stock Worked There Until His Death. The Plesiosaur Morenosaurus Stocki, A Flamingo Phoenicopterus Stocki, And A Fossil Bat Desmodus Stocki Are Among The Species That Have Been Named After Him. Stock Was Elected To The American Academy Of Arts And Sciences In 1941, The American Philosophical Society In 1946, And The United States National Academy Of Sciences In 1948. Hildegarde Howard (1901 ?1998) Was An American Pioneer In Paleornithology. She Was Mentored By The Famous Ornithologist, Joseph Grinnell, At The Museum Of Vertebrate Zoology (Mvz) And In Avian Paleontology. She Was Well Known For Her Discoveries In The La Brea Tar Pits, Among Them The Rancho La Brea Eagles. She Discovered And Described Pleistocene Flightless Waterfowl At The Prehistoric Ballona Wetlands Of Coastal Los Angeles County At Playa Del Rey. In 1953, Howard Became The Third Woman To Be Awarded The Brewster Medal. She Was The First Woman President Of The Southern California Academy Of Sciences. She Wrote 150 Papers Throughout Her Career. Her First Biology Teacher, Pirie Davidson, Inspired Her To Change Her Concentration From Journalism To Biology; Davidson Helped Her Get A Job Working For The Paleontologist Chester Stock. She Completed Her Bachelor's Degree At U.C. Berkeley In 1924, Where She Took Courses In Paleontology. That Same Year, Howard Joined The Scientific Staff Of The Los Angeles County Museum Of Natural History Part-Time; Her Work There On The Extinct Turkey Parapavo Californicus Was Credited Towards Her Master's Degree, Which Was Received In 1926 At Berkeley. She Would Earn Her Ph.D. At The Same University In 1928 With A Dissertation On The Fossil Birds Of The Emeryville Shellmound. In 1929 Howard Returned To The Los Angeles County Museum Of Natural History And She Held A Permanent Position There As A Curator. However, She Was Not Officially Given The Title Of A Curator Until 1938. Her Initial Title Was Junior Clerk And Howard's Job Was Researching Fossils From The Rancho La Brea As Well As Curating Them. Named Chief Curator Of Science In 1951, She Retired In 1961, But Continued To Conduct Research And To Publish On Avian Evolution. While At The Museum And In Retirement, Howard Described Three Families, 13 Genera, 57 Species, And 2 Subspecies. In 1977 The Los Angeles Museum Of History Decided To Honor Hildegarde Howard In The Cenozoic Life Hall. Howard Married Henry Anson Wylde In 1930. Wylde, Who Would Become Chief Of Exhibits At The Los Angeles County Museum Of Natural History, Died In 1984. Seller Inventory # 057444
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