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Philip Donoghue

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Nationality
  
British

Fields
  
Paleontology

Name
  
Philip Donoghue


Philip Donoghue palaeoelectronicaorgcontentimages424donoghuejpg

Born
  
Philip Conrad James Donoghue April 5, 1971 (age 53) Morriston, Wales (
1971-04-05
)

Alma mater
  
University of Leicester (BSc, PhD) University of Sheffield (MSc)

Thesis
  
Architecture, growth, and function of ozarkodinid conodonts (1996)

Doctoral students
  
Linda Wickstrom Rosie Dhanda Colin Barras David Jones Jason Downs Graeme Lloyd Robert Sansom Ceri-Wynn Thomas Gai Zhi-kun James Tarver Duncan Murdock Jennifer Greenwood

Notable awards
  
FRS (2015) Royal Society Wolfson Research Merit Award (2013) Charles Schuchert Award (2010) Bigsby Medal (2007) Hodson Fund (2005) Philip Leverhulme Prize (2004) Murchison Fund (2002) President's Award from the Palaeontological Association (1996)

Residence
  
England, United Kingdom

Doctoral advisor
  
Richard Aldridge

Institutions
  
University of Bristol

Education
  
University of Leicester

Philip donoghue vs fionn hickey


Philip Conrad James Donoghue FRS is a British palaeontologist and Professor of Palaeobiology at the University of Bristol.

Contents

Philip Donoghue Professor Philip Donoghue University of Bristol

Education

Philip Donoghue httpsroyalsocietyorgmediapeoplefellowsDO

Donoghue was educated at the University of Leicester where he was awarded a Bachelor of Science degree in Geology in 1992 and PhD in Paleontology in 1997 for research supervised by Richard Aldridge and Mark Purnell. He also holds a Master of Science degree in palynology from the University of Sheffield.

Research

Donoghue's research focuses on major transitions in evolutionary history, including the origin and early evolution of vertebrates, animals, and plants. He has been influential in developing a 'molecular palaeobiology' in which evidence from living and fossil species, anatomy and molecular biology, phylogenetics and developmental biology, can be integrated to achieve a more holistic understanding of evolutionary history. He introduced synchrotron tomography to palaeontology, and has played a leading role in establishing the role of palaeontology in establishing evolutionary timescales.

Awards and honours

Donoghue was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society (FRS) in 2015. His certificate of election reads:

Philip Donoghue is a major force in the emerging field of molecular palaeontology. His work bridges the gap between palaeobiology, developmental biology and molecular evolution in highly innovative ways. He was pioneering in first demonstrating the utility of synchrotron imaging in palaeontology and has been a world leader in driving forward our understanding of the remarkable fossil embryos from the late pre-Cambrian and Cambrian and their biological significance. His work takes developmental and genomic data constrained by the fossil record to bring new insights into large-scale evolutionary patterns and the relationship between phenotypic and gene regulatory evolution.

Donoghue has been on the Councils of the Palaeontological Society, Systematics Association, the Micropalaeontological Society and the European Society for Evolutionary Developmental Biology. His research has been recognised by the award of the Philip Leverhulme Prize of the Leverhulme Trust in 2004, the Bigsby Medal of the Geological Society in 2007, and the President's Medal of the Palaeontological Association in 2014.

References

Philip Donoghue Wikipedia