The Burke Museum of Natural History and Culture Visit Us Exhibits Events Education Research and Collections Join Museum Information Washington State Field Guide University of Washington


Research and Collections
ArachnologyHerbarium
ArchaeologyHerpetology
EthnologyMammalogy
Genetic ResourcesOrnithology
GeologyPaleontology
Paleontology




NOTE: All phone numbers Area Code 206; all e-mail addresses @u.washington.edu unless otherwise specified.



Staff

Elizabeth A. Nesbitt, Ph.D.
Chair of the Division, Curator of Invertebrate Paleontology and Micropaleontology
lnesbitt@
543-5949

Christian Sidor, Ph.D.
Curator of Vertebrate Paleontology
casidor@
221-4181

Caroline A.E. Strömberg, Ph.D.
caestrom@
543-0495
Curator of Paleobotany

Alan Kohn, Ph.D.
Adjunct Curator of Recent Mollusk Collection
kohn@
616-4383

Rebecca Price, Ph.D.
Affiliate Curator of Invertebrate Paleontology and Malacology; Assistant Professor, Interdisciplinary Arts & Science, U.W. Bothell

Ronald C. Eng, M.S.
Collections Manager
rceng@
543-6776

Bruce Crowley, M.S.
Fossils Preparator
bcrowley@
543-1856

James Goedert
Affiliate Curator of Fossil Marine Vertebrates
jgoedert@

Courtney Richards
Curatorial Assistant
cdr8@
543-1856

Jude Swales
Scientific Illustrator
jswales@
543-7036

Students

Read about the undergraduate and graduate programs in Paleontology at UW's Department of Earth and Space Sciences and Department of Biology.

Ruth Martin
Graduate Student, Micropaleontology

Adelina Prentice
Graduate Student

Julian Dillon
Undergraduate student, Mary Gates Scholarship Awardee

Paul Richardson
Undergraduate student, Mary Gates Scholarship Awardee

Whitney Bacca
Bret Buskirk
Tara Smiley
Margaret Spears
Rachel Simon
Marciej Sliwinski
Sarah Wang






Museum Associates

Thomas DeVries, Ph.D.
Invertebrate Paleontology — Cenozoic marine molluscan taxonomy, biogeography and biostratigraphy of Peru, Chile and Ecuador.

Kathryn Hoppe, Ph.D.
Vertebrate Paleontology, stable isotopes

Bax R. Barton, M.S.
Quaternary Paleoecology
baxqrc@

Ed East, M.S.
Invertebrate paleontology, especially arthropods, including shrimps and trilobites. Non-arthropod fossils of the middle Cambrian Metalline Formation from Pend Oreille Count, Washington.

John P. Alexander, M.S.
Fossil Primates and Paleoecology

Tad Dillhoff
Tertiary Paleobotany of the Pacific Northwest with emphasis on the Okanogan Highlands floras and the fossil wood deposits associated with the Columbia River basalts.

Rick Dillhoff
Cenozoic Paleobotany of the Northwest

Beverly Witte
Museum Curatorial Associate

Ross and Marion Berglund
Invertebrate Paleontology—Tertiary fossil Crustacea from the Pacific Northwest

Tom Kaye
Research Associate
tomkaye@

Paleobotany Lab
paleobot@
543-0495

Volunteers

To learn how you can volunteer at the Burke Geology Division, e-mail Ron Eng.

Bret Buskirk
Invertebrate Paleontology

Maureen Carlisle
Invertebrate paleontology, especially unusual late Paleozoic fossils from accreted terrains

Richard Groomer
Diatoms of Puget Sound

Don Hopkins
Paleobotany

Jim Schneider
Minerals, but usually on loan to Exhibits

Larry Friedman
Vertebrate Paleontology

Steve Hunter
Vertebrate Paleontology








©2008 Burke Museum of Natural History and Culture.
All Rights Reserved. Box 353010, University of Washington,
Seattle, WA 98195-3010, Phone: 206-543-5590.
On the UW campus at 17th Avenue NE and NE 45th Street.