About the Author
Paul Sealey has been collecting ammonites in New Mexico for over 45 years. He discovered his first fossil when he was fifteen years old. Paul has been conducting research and publishing on Cretaceous ammonites in New Mexico for many years. He has also been co-author numerous times in papers on dinosaurs and other vertebrate fossils. Paul is a research associate of the New Mexico Museum of Natural History and Science. He discovered the tyrannosaur Bistahieversor sealeyi, which was named in his honor, and the pachycephalosaur Spaerotholus goodwini. Paul’s educational background consists of a Bachelor’s degree at the University of New Mexico with a major in Anthropology and a minor in Geology. He is also an accomplished photographer having won several awards including best of show and First Place Color-off-the-job at the 29th Annual Conference of the Industrial Photographers of the Southwest in 1988 and honorable mention at the 1995 Natural History Photography Salon, New Mexico Museum of Natural History and Science. Additionally, many of his photographs have been published in paleontological and geological publications and books.
Paul Sealey has been collecting ammonites in New Mexico for over 45 years. He discovered his first fossil when he was fifteen years old. Paul has been conducting research and publishing on Cretaceous ammonites in New Mexico for many years. He has also been co-author numerous times in papers on dinosaurs and other vertebrate fossils. Paul is a research associate of the New Mexico Museum of Natural History and Science. He discovered the tyrannosaur Bistahieversor sealeyi, which was named in his honor, and the pachycephalosaur Spaerotholus goodwini. Paul’s educational background consists of a Bachelor’s degree at the University of New Mexico with a major in Anthropology and a minor in Geology. He is also an accomplished photographer having won several awards including best of show and First Place Color-off-the-job at the 29th Annual Conference of the Industrial Photographers of the Southwest in 1988 and honorable mention at the 1995 Natural History Photography Salon, New Mexico Museum of Natural History and Science. Additionally, many of his photographs have been published in paleontological and geological publications and books.
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