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Edward Oscar Ulrich

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Name
  
Edward Ulrich

Role
  
Paleontologist

Awards
  
Penrose Medal


Died
  
February 22, 1944, Washington, D.C., United States

Books
  
Ozarkian and Canadian Cephalopods Part I: Nautilicones, Ozarkian and Canadian Cephalopods: Part II: Brevicones

Edward Oscar Ulrich (1 February 1857, in Covington, Kentucky – 22 February 1944, in Washington, D.C.) was an invertebrate paleontologist specializing in the study of Paleozoic fossils.

Biography

Ulrich was educated at Wallace College and the Ohio Medical College. Abandoning the practice of medicine, he became curator of the Cincinnati Society of Natural History in 1877, and later was paleontologist to geological surveys of Illinois, Minnesota, and Ohio, also associate editor for ten years of the American Geologist.

Ulrich was a prolific writer, publishing numerous pamphlets on the subject of American paleontology, treating particularly the fossil Bryozoa, Gastropoda, Ostracoda, and Pelecypoda. In 1930 he was awarded the Mary Clark Thompson Medal from the National Academy of Sciences, and he was awarded the Penrose Medal in 1932.

In 1926, with ray S. Bassler, he described the conodont genus Ancyrodella,

References

Edward Oscar Ulrich Wikipedia


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