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{{short description|American paleontologist}} | |||
{{More citations needed|date=February 2015}} | |||
{{Infobox scientist | {{Infobox scientist | ||
|name = John Ostrom | | name = John Ostrom | ||
|image = John ostrom.jpg | | image = John ostrom.jpg | ||
|image_size = | | image_size = | ||
|caption = John Ostrom and '']'' skeleton cast. Photo courtesy ]. | | caption = John Ostrom and '']'' skeleton cast. Photo courtesy ]. | ||
|birth_date = {{birth date|1928|2|18}} | | birth_date = {{birth date|1928|2|18}} | ||
|birth_place = ], ] | | birth_place = ], ] | ||
|death_date = {{Death date and age|2005|7|16|1928|2|18}} | | death_date = {{Death date and age|2005|7|16|1928|2|18}} | ||
|death_place = ], ] | | death_place = ], ] | ||
|residence = | | residence = | ||
|citizenship = | | citizenship = | ||
|nationality = ]n | | nationality = ]n | ||
|ethnicity = | | ethnicity = | ||
|fields = ] | | fields = ] | ||
|workplaces = | | workplaces = | ||
|alma_mater = ]<br>] |
| alma_mater = ] (])<br>] (]) | ||
|doctoral_advisor = | | doctoral_advisor = | ||
|academic_advisors = | | academic_advisors = | ||
|doctoral_students = ]<br>]<br> | | doctoral_students = ]<br>]<br> | ||
|notable_students = | | notable_students = | ||
|known_for = The "]" | | known_for = The "]" | ||
|author_abbrev_bot = | | author_abbrev_bot = | ||
|author_abbrev_zoo = | | author_abbrev_zoo = | ||
|influences = | | influences = | ||
|influenced = | | influenced = | ||
|awards = ] {{small|(1986)}}<br>] {{small|(1994)}} | | awards = ] {{small|(1986)}}<br>] {{small|(1994)}} | ||
|religion = | | religion = | ||
|signature = |
| signature = <!--(filename only)--> | ||
|footnotes = | | footnotes = | ||
}} | }} | ||
'''John Harold Ostrom''' (February 18, 1928 – July 16, 2005) was an American ] who revolutionized the modern understanding of ]s.<ref name="Stoddart">{{cite journal |last1=Stoddart |first1=Charlotte |title=The fossil that launched a dinosaur revolution |journal=Knowable Magazine |date=13 June 2023 |doi=10.1146/knowable-060923-1|doi-access=free |url=https://knowablemagazine.org/article/living-world/2023/fossil-archaeopteryx-origin-of-birds |access-date=20 June 2023 |language=en}}</ref> Ostrom's work inspired what his pupil ] has termed a "]".<ref name="Conniff"/><ref name="Bakker">{{cite journal |last1=Bakker |first1=Robert T. |title=Dinosaur Renaissance |journal=Scientific American |date=April 1, 1975 |volume=232 |issue=4 |page=58 |doi=10.1038/scientificamerican0475-58 |bibcode=1975SciAm.232d..58B |url=https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/dinosaur-renaissance/ |language=en}}</ref> | |||
'''John Harold Ostrom''' (February 18, 1928 – July 16, 2005) was an American ] who revolutionized modern understanding of ]s in the 1960s. | |||
Beginning with the discovery of '']'' in 1964, Ostrom challenged the widespread belief that dinosaurs were slow-moving ]s (or "saurians"). He argued that ''Deinonychus'', a small two-legged carnivore, would have been fast-moving and warm-blooded.<ref name="Siegel">{{cite news |last1=Siegel |first1=Robert |title=Influential Paleontologist John Ostrom, 77, Dies |url=https://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=4764995 |access-date=20 June 2023 |work=NPR / All Things Considered |date=July 21, 2005}}</ref><ref name="memoriam">{{cite journal |title=In Memoriam: John Ostrom |journal=Yale Bulletin and Calendar |date=August 26, 2005 |volume=34 |issue=1 |url=http://archives.news.yale.edu/v34.n1/story23.html}}</ref> | |||
As first proposed by ] in the 1860s,<ref>Feduccia, Alan 1999. ''The origin and evolution of birds''. Yale University Press, p55. {{ISBN|0-300-07861-7}}</ref><ref>Heilmann G. 1926. ''The origin of birds''. London: Witherby.</ref> Ostrom showed that dinosaurs were more like big non-flying ]s than they were like ]s (or "saurians"), and even proved that birds themselves are a type of ] ]n dinosaur. Since dinosaurs themselves are considered ]s, Ostrom's work made zoologists question if birds should be considered an order of ] instead of their own class, ]. | |||
Further, Ostrom's work made zoologists question whether birds should be considered an order of ] instead of their own class, ].<ref name="Wellnhofer"/> | |||
The first of Ostrom's broad-based reviews of the ] and ] of the primitive bird '']'' appeared in 1976. His reaction to the eventual discovery of ]s in ], after years of acrimonious debate, was bittersweet.<ref>. May 5, 2001. Olivia F. Gentile. ''Hartford Courant''.</ref> | |||
The idea that dinosaurs were similar to birds was first proposed by ] in the 1860s, but was dismissed by ] in his influential book '']'' (1926).<ref name="Ries">{{cite journal |last1=Ries |first1=C. J. |title=Creating the Proavis: bird origins in the art and science of Gerhard Heilmann 1913–1926 |journal=Archives of Natural History |date=April 2007 |volume=34 |issue=1 |pages=1–19 |doi=10.3366/anh.2007.34.1.1 |url=https://www.euppublishing.com/doi/10.3366/anh.2007.34.1.1 |language=en |issn=0260-9541}}</ref><ref name="Havstad"/><ref name="Heilmann">{{cite book |last1=Heilmann |first1=G. |title=The origin of birds |date=1926 |publisher=Witherby |location=London}}</ref> Prior to Ostrom's work, the development of birds was generally believed to have split off early on from that of dinosaurs.<ref name="Galton">{{cite journal |last1=Galton |first1=Peter M. |title=Ornithischian Dinosaurs and the Origin of Birds |journal=Evolution |date=June 1970 |volume=24 |issue=2 |pages=448–462 |doi=10.1111/j.1558-5646.1970.tb01775.x |pmid=28565073 |s2cid=5512265 |language=en|doi-access=free }}</ref> | |||
Ostrom showed more bird-like traits common in dinosaurs and proved that birds themselves are in fact a group of ]n ] dinosaurs.<ref name="Cracraft">{{cite journal |last1=Cracraft |first1=Joel |title=John Ostrom's Studies on Archaeopteryx, the Origin of Birds, and the Evolution of Avian Flight |journal=The Wilson Bulletin |date=1977 |volume=89 |issue=3 |pages=488–492 |jstor=4160962 |url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/4160962 |access-date=21 June 2023 |issn=0043-5643}}</ref><ref name="Wellnhofer">{{cite book |last1=Wellnhofer |first1=Peter |chapter=A short history of research on Archaeopteryx and its relationship with dinosaurs |pages=237–250 |editor-last1=Moody |editor-first1=Richard |title=Dinosaurs and Other Extinct Saurians: A Historical Perspective |date=2010 |publisher=Geological Society of London |isbn=978-1-86239-311-0 |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Ym2ei7Ey0PwC&pg=PA237 |language=en}}</ref><ref name="Havstad">{{cite journal |last1=Havstad |first1=Joyce C |last2=Smith |first2=N Adam |title=Fossils with Feathers and Philosophy of Science |journal=Systematic Biology |date=1 September 2019 |volume=68 |issue=5 |pages=840–851 |doi=10.1093/sysbio/syz010 |pmid=30753719 |pmc=6701454 |url=https://academic.oup.com/sysbio/article/68/5/840/5315532 |access-date=21 June 2023}}</ref><ref>{{cite book |last1=Bakker |first1=Robert T. |title=The dinosaur heresies: new theories unlocking the mystery of the dinosaurs and their extinction |date=1986 |publisher=Morrow |location=New York |isbn=0-688-04287-2 |edition=6.print. |url=https://doc.rero.ch/record/232376/files/PAL_E1363.pdf}}</ref> | |||
⚫ | == Early life and |
||
The first of Ostrom's broad-based reviews of the ] and ] of the primitive bird '']'' appeared in 1976.<ref name="Rauhut"/> Ostrom lived to see the eventual discovery of ]s in northeastern ], confirming his theories about dinosaurs being progenitors of birds, and the existence of dinosaurs with feathered plumage.<ref name="Conniff"/><ref>{{cite news |title=Dinosaurs in Your Garden |url=http://www.bbc.co.uk/science/horizon/1998/dinogarden.shtml |work=BBC - Science & Nature |date=18 October 2002}}</ref> | |||
⚫ | == Early life and education == | ||
Ostrom was born in ] |
Ostrom was born in ] on February 18, 1928<ref name="papers">{{cite web |title=Collection: John H. Ostrom Archives {{!}} Archives at Yale |url=https://archives.yale.edu/repositories/15/resources/11132 |website=Yale Archives |access-date=21 June 2023}}</ref> and grew up in ]. As a pre-medical undergraduate student at ], he originally aimed to prepare for medical school in order to become a physician like his father. However, an elective course in geology and ]'s book ''The Meaning of Evolution'' inspired him to change his career plans. He earned his bachelor's degree in biology and ] from Union College in 1951.<ref name="NYT">{{cite news | last = Wilford | first = John Noble | title = John H. Ostrom, Influential Paleontologist, Is Dead at 77 | newspaper = The New York Times | location = New York | date = 21 July 2005| url = https://www.nytimes.com/2005/07/21/nyregion/john-h-ostrom-influential-paleontologist-is-dead-at-77.html }}</ref><ref name="AZ">{{cite book| last = Gates| first = Alexander E.| title = A to Z of Earth Scientists | series = Notable Scientists | publisher = Facts on File, Inc.| date = 2003| location = New York| pages = 193–195 | isbn = 0-8160-4580-1 }}</ref> | ||
Ostrom enrolled at ] as a graduate student with ] as his advisor.<ref name="Dodson">{{cite journal |last1=Dodson |first1=Peter |title=Generations: Tracking American Paleontology and Anatomy Over 17 Decades |journal=The Anatomical Record |date=April 2020 |volume=303 |issue=4 |pages=649–655 |doi=10.1002/ar.24375 |pmid=32009298 |s2cid=211013829 |language=en |issn=1932-8486|doi-access=free }}</ref> In 1951 Simpson invited Ostrom to spend the summer as a field assistant in the San Juan Basin of New Mexico. Ostrom also worked as a research assistant with Colbert, who was the Curator of Vertebrate Paleontology at the ] (AMNH), Ostrom earned his doctorate in geology (vertebrate paleontology) in 1960 with a thesis on North American ] that was based on the skull collection housed at the AMNH.<ref name="papers"/><ref name="curie">{{cite book| last1 = Curie| first1 = Philip J.| last2 = Padian| first2 = Kevin| author-link =| title = Encyclopedia of Dinosaurs| publisher = Elsevier Science| date = 1997| location = United States| pages = xxix – xxx | isbn = 9780080494746 }}</ref> | |||
⚫ | |||
⚫ | In 1952 Ostrom married Nancy Grace Hartman (d. 2003). They had two daughters, Karen and Alicia.<ref name="papers"/><ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.courant.com/news/connecticut/hc-xpm-2005-07-19-0507180588-story.html|title=OSTROM, DR. JOHN H.|last=Courant|first=Hartford|website=courant.com|language=en-US|access-date=2019-08-02}}</ref> | ||
Ostrom taught for one year at ] in 1955 before joining the faculty at ] the following year. In 1961 he accepted a professorship at ], where he remained throughout his career. As a new professor at Yale, Ostrom was named the assistant curator for ] at the ], and became Curator Emeritus in 1971.<ref name="AZ"/> Throughout his career, Ostrom led and organized fossil-hunting expeditions to Wyoming and Montana, edited the ''American Journal of Science'', published over a dozen books for both popular and lay audiences, and was the recipient of numerous awards and honors. He retired from Yale in 1992, but continued his writing and research there until his health failed.<ref name="NYT" /><ref name="WP">{{Cite news|url=http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/07/21/AR2005072102218.html|title=Dinosaur Expert John Ostrom Dies|last=Schudel|first=Matt|date=July 22, 2005|work=The Washington Post|access-date=2019-08-02}}</ref> Ostrom died from complications of ] in July 2005 at the age of 77 in ].<ref name="WP" /> | |||
== Career == | |||
Ostrom taught for one year at ] in 1955 before joining the faculty at ] the following year. In 1961 he accepted a professorship at ], where he remained throughout his career. As a new professor at Yale, Ostrom was named the assistant curator for ] at the ]. He became full professor and curator in 1971.<ref>{{cite book |title=John Ostrom {{!}} American paleontologist {{!}} Britannica |url=https://www.britannica.com/biography/John-Ostrom |language=en}}</ref> | |||
Throughout his career, Ostrom led and organized fossil-hunting expeditions to Wyoming and Montana. He worked in the ] Site in Montana and Wyoming from 1962 to 1966.<ref name="Maxwell"/> By 1964 he had made 10 expeditions to the ], in Wyoming, east of ].<ref name="NYT1964">{{cite news |title=A New Species of Small Dinosaur Reported Found by Yale Curator |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1964/12/04/archives/a-new-species-of-small-dinosaur-reported-found-by-yale-curator.html |access-date=20 June 2023 |work=The New York Times |date=4 December 1964}}</ref> Late in 1964, he discovered '']'' fossils near the town of ].<ref name="Maxwell"/><ref name="Orlowski"/> He also discovered and named '']'' fossils from the Cloverly Formation.<ref name="Forster">{{cite journal |last1=Forster |first1=Catherine A. |title=The Postcranial Skeleton of the Ornithopod Dinosaur Tenontosaurus tilletti |journal=Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology |date=1990 |volume=10 |issue=3 |pages=273–294 |doi=10.1080/02724634.1990.10011815 |jstor=4523326 |bibcode=1990JVPal..10..273F |url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/4523326 |issn=0272-4634}}</ref> | |||
⚫ | In 1966 John H. Ostrom helped to establish ] in ] ("because the governor was besieged by letters from schoolchildren swayed into dino-mania by Ostrom".<ref name="Carlson">{{cite news |title=Bringing shale to life |url=https://www.courant.com/2005/07/23/bringing-shale-to-life/ |access-date=20 June 2023 |work=Hartford Courant |date=23 July 2005 |last=Carlson|first=Barbara }}</ref>). | ||
Ostrom edited the '']'', published over a dozen books for both scientific and lay audiences. He was the recipient of numerous awards and honors.<ref name="NYT" /><ref name="WP"/> | |||
In the 1960s, Ostrom wrote a paleontology themed guide for the ]'s ] (NNLs) Program. He recommended 20 sites for designation and protection as NNLs, of which 13 became designated landmarks.<ref name="Orlowski"/> | |||
Others sites such as the Charles O. Wolcott Quarry near ] have since been destroyed.<ref name="Orlowski"/> | |||
As early as October 20, 1884, stones from the Wolcott Quarry, reportedly containing fossils, were used to build a local bridge. In 1969, Ostrom surveyed over 60 bridges to find the missing blocks. They were part of a bridge over Hop Creek at Bridge Street which was scheduled for replacement. The highway department allowed Ostrom and his team to examine 400 sandstone blocks to find dinosaur fossils.<ref name="Orlowski"/><ref name="Williams">{{cite web |last1=Williams |first1=David B. |title=Mystery Solved: Bones found in Bridge – GeologyWriter.com |url=https://geologywriter.com/streetsmartnaturalist/stories-in-stone-blog/mystery-solved-bones-found-in-bridge/ |website=Geology Writer|date=August 19, 2010 |access-date=20 June 2023 }}</ref> Despite lobbying to preserve it, a shopping mall was built on the site of the Charles O. Wolcott Quarry in 2000.<ref name="Orlowski"/> | |||
Ostrom officially retired from Yale in 1992, but continued to write and research as a professor emeritus until his health failed.<ref name="NYT" /><ref name="WP">{{Cite news|url=http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/07/21/AR2005072102218.html|title=Dinosaur Expert John Ostrom Dies|last=Schudel|first=Matt|date=July 22, 2005|newspaper=The Washington Post|access-date=2019-08-02}}</ref> Ostrom died from complications of ] in July 2005 at the age of 77 in ].<ref name="WP" /><ref name="Maugh">{{cite news |last1=Maugh, II |first1=Thomas H. |title=John Ostrom, 77; Paleontologist Pursued Dinosaurs' Link to Birds |url=https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-2005-jul-21-me-ostrom21-story.html |work=Los Angeles Times |date=21 July 2005}}</ref> | |||
== Key discoveries == | == Key discoveries == | ||
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=== Hadrosaurs === | === Hadrosaurs === | ||
] | |||
⚫ | Ostrom's work first achieved international attention with his studies of the unique hadrosaur nasal apparatus, which had not been convincingly explained by the early 1960s. By examining the ] apparatuses of modern ]s and drawing comparisons via ], Ostrom concluded that hadrosaurs likely developed an acute sense of smell by a lengthening of the nasal passages into long chambers that wound around the skull and were protected by bony crests. He speculated in a subsequent paper that hadrosaurs had need for such an acute sense of smell as a defense against larger carnivorous dinosaurs, of which the hadrosaur body plan had little in the way of armor and speed.<ref name="Evans">{{cite journal |last1=Evans |first1=David C. |title=Nasal Cavity Homologies and Cranial Crest Function in Lambeosaurine Dinosaurs |journal=Paleobiology |date=2006 |volume=32 |issue=1 |pages=109–125 |doi=10.1666/0094-8373(2006)0322.0.CO;2 |url=https://people.ohio.edu/witmerl/Downloads/2009_Evans_et_al._lambeosaurine_brains_&_crests.pdf |issn=0094-8373}}</ref><ref name="Hot">{{cite book| last = Desmond| first = Adrian J.| title = The Hot-Blooded Dinosaurs: A Revolution in Palaeontology | publisher = Blond & Briggs Ltd| date = 1975| location = Great Britain | isbn = 978-0803737556 }}</ref> | ||
⚫ | This hypothesis led Ostrom to further conclude that ecology of hadrosaurs was more likely to be that of dry ground such as conifer forests, rather than swampy, aquatic environments, thought to be the case at the time. This idea was further justified by a 1922 paper that Ostrom rediscovered in 1964, which described the stomach contents of a mummified specimen of the hadrosaur '']'', which included conifer needles, twigs, fruit and seeds, plant matter that would be consumed in a terrestrial environment.<ref name="Oldham">{{cite journal |last1=Oldham |first1=Jordan |title=A Four-Legged Megalosaurus and Swimming Brontosaurs |journal=Channels |date=2018 |volume=2 |issue=2 |pages=67–76 |doi=10.15385/jch.2018.2.2.5 |url=https://digitalcommons.cedarville.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1038&context=channels|doi-access=free }}</ref><ref name=Hot /> | ||
⚫ | Ostrom's work first achieved international attention with his studies of the unique |
||
In the 1970s, Ostrom examined ] at the ] in ]. He mapped the site, identifying preserved dinosaur tracks in the sandstone beds of various sizes and species. Ostrom's reading of fossilized '']'' trackways led him to the conclusion that these duckbilled dinosaurs were gregarious and traveled in herds.<ref name="Getty">{{cite journal |last1=Getty |first1=Patrick R. |last2=Aucoin |first2=Christopher |last3=Fox |first3=Nathaniel |last4=Judge |first4=Aaron |last5=Hardy |first5=Laurel |last6=Bush |first6=Andrew M. |title=Perennial Lakes as an Environmental Control on Theropod Movement in the Jurassic of the Hartford Basin |journal=Geosciences |date=March 2017 |volume=7 |issue=1 |pages=13 |doi=10.3390/geosciences7010013 |bibcode=2017Geosc...7...13G |language=en |issn=2076-3263 |doi-access=free }}</ref><ref>{{cite web |title=Dinosaur Footprints Reservation, Holyoke, MA |url=https://allosaurusroar.com/dinosaur-footprints-reservation-holyoke-ma/ |website=Allosaurus Roar |access-date=21 June 2023 |language=en |date=7 July 2017}}</ref> | |||
⚫ | This hypothesis led Ostrom to further conclude that ecology of hadrosaurs was more likely to be that of dry ground than swampy, aquatic environments, thought to be the case at the time. This idea |
||
⚫ | ===''Deinonychus'' === | ||
Ostrom's reading of fossilized '']'' ] also led him to the conclusion that these duckbilled dinosaurs traveled in herds. | |||
{{external media | width = 210px | float = right | headerimage= ] | video1 = , PBS.}} | |||
Ostrom worked in the Cloverly Formation Site in Montana and Wyoming from 1962 to 1966. Late in 1964, he detected unfamiliar fossils in the Bridger Fossil Area, near the town of Bridger, Montana. In subsequent seasons, his team unearthed four specimens of a small bipedal carnivorous ], and parts of a larger plant-eating dinosaur. The discovery of the '']'' fossils is considered one of the most important fossil finds in history.<ref name="Maxwell">{{cite journal |last1=Maxwell |first1=Desmond |title=Days of the Deinos : Did predatory dinosaurs leave clues to their pack-hunting habits at kill sites? |journal=Natural History Magazine |date=2000 |volume=108 |issue=10 |pages=60–65 |url=https://www.naturalhistorymag.com/htmlsite/master.html?https://www.naturalhistorymag.com/htmlsite/1299/1299_feature.html}}</ref><ref name="Orlowski">{{cite journal |last1=Orlowski |first1=Jeff |title=Preserving Fossils: How the National Natural Landmarks Program Advances Resource Management (U.S. National Park Service) |journal=Park Paleontology News |publisher=National Park Service |date=2020 |volume=12 |issue=1 |url=https://www.nps.gov/articles/preserving-fossils-how-the-national-natural-landmarks-program-advances-resource-management.htm |language=en}}</ref> | |||
''Deinonychus'' was an active predator that clearly killed its prey by leaping and slashing or stabbing with its "terrible claw", the meaning of the animal's genus name. Ostrom also suggested that it had hunted in packs.<ref name="Paul">{{cite book |last1=Paul |first1=Gregory S. |title=Predatory dinosaurs of the world: a complete illustrated guide |date=1988 |publisher=Simon and Schuster |location=New York, N.Y. u.a |isbn=978-0671619466 |url=https://www.geokniga.org/bookfiles/geokniga-predatorydinosaursoftheworldacompleteillustratedguide.pdf}}</ref>{{rp|35}}<ref name="Maxwell"/> John Ostrom's work on the functional morphology of dinosaurs found that the claws and tendon scars in the tail would indicate a running position. Evidence of a truly active lifestyle included long strings of ] running along the tail, providing a stiff counterbalance for jumping and running. This changed the posture of bipedal dinosaurs to one of agile, fast-running, fearsome predators.<ref name="Pittman">{{cite journal |last1=Pittman |first1=M |last2=Gatesy |first2=SM |last3=Upchurch |first3=P |last4=Goswami |first4=A |last5=Hutchinson |first5=JR |title=Shake a tail feather: the evolution of the theropod tail into a stiff aerodynamic surface. |journal=PLOS ONE |date=2013 |volume=8 |issue=5 |pages=e63115 |doi=10.1371/journal.pone.0063115 |pmid=23690987 |pmc=3655181 |bibcode=2013PLoSO...863115P |doi-access=free }}</ref> | |||
=== Warm-blooded dinosaurs === | |||
He concluded that at least some dinosaurs had a high ] and were in some cases ]. This position was further popularized by Ostrom's student ].<ref name="Conniff"/><ref name="Norman"/> | |||
This helped to change the impression of dinosaurs as sluggish, slow, ] lizards, which had prevailed since the turn of the century.<ref name="Conniff"/><ref name="Norman">{{cite book |last1=Norman |first1=David |title=Dinosaurs: a very short introduction |date=2017 |publisher=Oxford University Press |location=Oxford |isbn=9780198795926 |edition=Second |url=https://academic.oup.com/book/976/chapter-abstract/137835214?redirectedFrom=fulltext}}</ref> | |||
⚫ | |||
The implications of ''Deinonychus'' changed depictions of dinosaurs both by professional illustrators and as perceived by the public eye. Museums worldwide changed their dinosaur bone displays. The altered view of dinosaurs inspired a new generation of dinosaur movies such as ''Jurassic Park'', which based its murderous "Velociraptors" on ''Deinonychus''.<ref name="Badwan">{{cite news |last1=Badwan |first1=Bara |title=Deinonychus Changed Our Understanding of Dinosaurs |url=https://scitechdaily.com/deinonychus-changed-our-understanding-of-dinosaurs/?expand_article=1 |work=SciTechDaily |date=3 June 2019 |language=en-us}}</ref> | |||
Ostrom's work on ''Deinonychus'' is credited with triggering the "]",<ref name="Conniff"/> a term coined in a 1975 issue of '']'' by Bakker to describe increased interest in paleontology.<ref name="Bakker"/> The "dinosaur renaissance" continues, with scientists describing new species of dinosaurs every year and expanding the understanding of dinosaur biology.<ref name="Currie">{{cite journal |last1=Currie |first1=Philip J. |title=Celebrating dinosaurs: their behaviour, evolution, growth, and physiology |journal=Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences |date=March 2023 |volume=60 |issue=3 |pages=263–293 |doi=10.1139/cjes-2022-0131 |s2cid=257133273 |issn=0008-4077|doi-access=free }}</ref> | |||
⚫ | ===''Deinonychus'' === | ||
=== Energy and climate === | |||
His 1964 discovery of additional '']'' fossils is considered one of the most important fossil finds in history.<ref></ref> ''Deinonychus'' was an active predator that clearly killed its prey by leaping and slashing or stabbing with its "terrible claw", the meaning of the animal's genus name. Evidence of a truly active lifestyle included long strings of ] running along the tail, making it a stiff counterbalance for jumping and running. The conclusion that at least some dinosaurs had a high ], and were thus in some cases ], was popularized by his student ]. This helped to change the impression of dinosaurs as the sluggish, slow, ] lizards which had prevailed since the turn of the century. | |||
Due in large part to his earlier research on hadrosaurs—and his conclusion that they were likely upright, terrestrial animals rather than sluggish, swamp-bound lizards—Ostrom was one of the first paleontologists to grasp the implications of the amount of energy it would take such large animals (and their still larger predators, such as '']'') to stand and move erect.<ref name="Bara">{{cite news |last1=Badwan |first1=Bara |title=A Yale scientist's research changed our understanding of dinosaurs |url=https://news.yale.edu/2019/06/03/yale-scientists-research-changed-our-understanding-dinosaurs |access-date=21 June 2023 |work=YaleNews |date=3 June 2019 |language=en}}</ref> | |||
⚫ | At the first North American Paleontological Convention, held at the ] in 1969, Ostrom spoke out against the accepted wisdom that ] climates were universally tropical and that such warm climates would be necessary to sustain large animals with lizard-like ]s. Ostrom supported this view by noting the correlation of erect posture and locomotion with high metabolism and body temperature in modern mammals and birds, stating that this relationship cannot be accidental.<ref>{{cite journal | journal = Proceedings of the North American Paleontological Convention | date = 1969 | title = Terrestrial vertebrates as indicators of Mesozoic climates | pages = 347–376}}</ref><ref name=Hot /> | ||
The observation that dinosaurs, thought to be uniformly cold-blooded at the time, could not be used as indicators of ] was further validated in 1973 with the discovery of hadrosaur fossils above the ] Canadian ] by the Canadian paleontologist ].<ref>{{cite journal | last = Russell |first = Dale A. | date = 1973 | title = The environments of Canadian dinosaurs | journal = Canad. Geog. J. | volume = 87 | issue = 1 | pages = 4–11}}</ref> Ostrom's reappraisal of dinosaurs as ] was considered radical at the time, but its ability to resolve outstanding contradictions in ] immediately drew many followers, and would be supported by many future discoveries.<ref name = Hot /> | |||
The implications of ''Deinonychus'' changed depictions of dinosaurs both by professional illustrators and as perceived by the public eye. The find is also credited with triggering the "]", a term coined in a 1975 issue of '']'' by Bakker to describe the renewed debates causing an influx of interest in paleontology. The "renaissance" has lasted from the 1970s to the present and has doubled recorded dinosaur diversity. | |||
=== ''Archaeopteryx'' and the origin of flight === | === ''Archaeopteryx'' and the origin of flight === | ||
Ostrom's interest in the dinosaur-bird connection started with his study of what |
Ostrom's interest in the dinosaur-bird connection started with his study of what became known as the ] ''Archaeopteryx''. Discovered in 1855, it was actually the first specimen recovered but, incorrectly labeled as ''] crassipes'', it languished in the ] in the ]. Ostrom's 1970 paper (and 1972 description) identified it as one of only four specimens known to exist at that time.<ref name="Conniff">{{cite news |last1=Conniff |first1=Richard |title=The man who saved the dinosaurs |url=https://yalealumnimagazine.org/articles/3921-the-man-who-saved-the-dinosaurs |access-date=20 June 2023 |work=Yale Alumni Magazine |issue=Jul/Aug |date=2014 |language=en}}</ref><ref name="Foth">{{cite journal |last1=Foth |first1=Christian |last2=Rauhut |first2=Oliver W. M. |title=Re-evaluation of the Haarlem Archaeopteryx and the radiation of maniraptoran theropod dinosaurs |journal=BMC Evolutionary Biology |date=2 December 2017 |volume=17 |issue=1 |pages=236 |doi=10.1186/s12862-017-1076-y |pmid=29197327 |pmc=5712154 |issn=1471-2148 |doi-access=free }}</ref> | ||
In his 1973 paper in ''Nature'', "The Ancestry of Birds", Ostrom argued for a coelurosaurian (Theropoda) ancestry of birds, based on the skeletal anatomy of ''Archaeopteryx''. He suggested that dinosaurs, far from becoming extinct, had evolved into a wide variety of descendants in the form of birds.<ref name="Stoddart"/><ref name="AB1973">{{cite journal |last1=Ostrom |first1=John |title=The Ancestry of Birds |journal=Nature |date=March 9, 1973 |volume=242 |issue=5393 |page=136 |doi=10.1038/242136a0 |s2cid=29873831 |url=https://www.nature.com/articles/242136a0.pdf}}</ref> | |||
Ostrom's work led to a revolution in the classification of fossils and the understanding of dinosaur-bird lineages.<ref name="Stoddart"/><ref name="Conniff"/> | |||
] | |||
== Cultural influence == | |||
As a result of subsequent research and comparison with more recently found specimens from the Tiaojushan Formation of China, it was suggested in 2017 that the ] ''Archaeopteryx'' actually represents a separate taxon. The genus has been given the generic name '']'', after John Ostrom. The Haarlem fossil is now considered to be of the species ''Ostromia crassipes''. It is the first representative of the basal avialian clade ''Anchiornithidae'' to be found outside eastern Asia.<ref name="Foth"/><ref name="Rauhut">{{cite journal |last1=Rauhut |first1=OWM |last2=Foth |first2=C |last3=Tischlinger |first3=H |title=The oldest Archaeopteryx (Theropoda: Avialiae): a new specimen from the Kimmeridgian/Tithonian boundary of Schamhaupten, Bavaria. |journal=PeerJ |date=2018 |volume=6 |pages=e4191 |doi=10.7717/peerj.4191 |pmid=29383285 |pmc=5788062 |doi-access=free }}</ref> | |||
of dinosaurs found that the claws and tendon scars in the tail would indicate a running position. And so the whole posture of bipedal dinosaurs changed to one of agile, fast-running, fearsome predators. This inspired a new generation of dinosaur movies and also museums worldwide changed their dinosaur bone displays. | |||
In considering the possible evolution of flight, Ostrom theorized that birds might have evolved the ability for powered flight as a result of cursorial, or ground-upward movement such as leaping up to capture prey. This position was opposed to the arboreal hypothesis in which activities such as gliding down from trees were suggested to have been a precursor to flight.<ref name="Ruben">{{cite journal |last1=Ruben |first1=John |title=Paleobiology and the origins of avian flight |journal=Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences |date=16 February 2010 |volume=107 |issue=7 |pages=2733–2734 |doi=10.1073/pnas.0915099107 |pmid=20145106 |pmc=2840315 |bibcode=2010PNAS..107.2733R |language=en |issn=0027-8424 |doi-access=free }}</ref><ref name="Tarsitano">{{cite journal |last1=Tarsitano |first1=Samuel F. |last2=Russell |first2=Anthony P. |last3=Horne |first3=Francis |last4=Plummer |first4=Christopher |last5=Millerchip |first5=Karen |title=On the Evolution of Feathers from an Aerodynamic and Constructional View Point |journal=American Zoologist |date=2000 |volume=40 |issue=4 |pages=676–686 |jstor=3884286 |url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/3884286 |issn=0003-1569}}</ref><ref name="Norberg">{{cite journal |last1=Norberg |first1=Ulla M. |title=Evolution of Vertebrate Flight: An Aerodynamic Model for the Transition from Gliding to Active Flight |journal=The American Naturalist |date=1985 |volume=126 |issue=3 |pages=303–327 |doi=10.1086/284419 |jstor=2461357 |s2cid=85306259 |url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/2461357 |issn=0003-0147}}</ref><ref name="Manning">{{cite web |last1=Manning |first1=Adam |title=How Flight Evolved in Birds: The Flying and Feathered Dinosaurs |url=https://www.darwinsdoor.co.uk/prehistoricplanet/how-flight-evolved-in-birds-the-flying-and-feathered-dinosaurs.html |website=Darwin's Door|date= 20 March 2020 }}</ref> | |||
⚫ | In 1966 John H. Ostrom |
||
== Dinosaur dig sites == | |||
John Ostrom set up a full-time in the 1960s, as well he spent a lot of time digging at Rocky Hill. | |||
== Scientific classification == | == Scientific classification == | ||
* In 1970, John Ostrom gave '']'' its formal name<ref name="Makovicky">{{cite book |last1=Makovicky |first1=Peter J. |last2=Sues |first2=Hans-Dieter |title=Anatomy and phylogenetic relationships of the theropod dinosaur Microvenator celer from the Lower Cretaceous of Montana. American Museum novitates ; no. 3240 |publisher=American Museum of Natural History |hdl=2246/3239 |url=http://hdl.handle.net/2246/3239}}</ref> (meaning "fast small hunter").<ref name="Jason">{{cite web |last1=Abdale |first1=Jason R. |title=Microvenator |url=https://dinosaursandbarbarians.com/2021/07/20/microvenator/ |website=DINOSAURS AND BARBARIANS |date= July 20, 2021 |language=en }}</ref> | |||
* In 1970, John Ostrom gave '']'' its formal name (meaning "fast small hunter"). | |||
* Also in 1970, he named '']'' (meaning "tendon lizard"). | * Also in 1970, he named '']'' (meaning "tendon lizard").<ref name="Forster"/> | ||
* In 1993, ], Robert Gaston, and Donald Burge named a fossil '']'' for John Ostrom and Chris Mays. The largest discovered example of this species is 23 feet long and had an estimated live weight over 1000 pounds. | * In 1993, ], Robert Gaston, and Donald Burge named a fossil '']'' for John Ostrom and Chris Mays.<ref name="Abdale">{{cite web |last1=Abdale |first1=Jason R. |title=Utahraptor: A History |url=https://dinosaursandbarbarians.com/2022/07/01/utahraptor-a-history/ |website=DINOSAURS AND BARBARIANS |language=en |date=1 July 2022}}</ref> The largest discovered example of this species is 23 feet long and had an estimated live weight over 1000 pounds.<ref name="Black">{{cite news |last1=Black |first1=Riley |title=The Continuously Evolving Picture of the World's Largest Raptor |url=https://www.smithsonianmag.com/science-nature/utahraptor-largest-raptor-180974954/ |work=Smithsonian Magazine |date=June 2, 2020 |language=en}}</ref> | ||
* In 1998, ] named a fossil '']'' (meaning " |
* In 1998, ] named a fossil '']'' (meaning "Ostrom's menace from the clouds") in honour of John Ostrom. The fossil is that of a primitive winged creature with a two-foot wingspan, feathers and a sickle-shaped claw on its second toe designed for slashing prey, similar to ''Deinonychus'' and ''Archaeopteryx''.<ref>{{cite news |title=UNIQUE 'DINO-BIRD' FOSSIL FOUND IN AFRICA |url=https://www.chicagotribune.com/news/ct-xpm-1998-03-18-9803180190-story.html |work=Chicago Tribune |date=18 March 1998}}</ref> | ||
* In 2017, '']'' (a new genus named for the Haarlem specimen, formerly of '']'') was named in his honor. | * In 2017, '']'' (a new genus named for the Haarlem specimen, formerly of '']'') was named in his honor.<ref name="Foth"/><ref name="Rauhut"/> | ||
==Selected publications== | |||
* {{cite journal |last1=Ostrom |first1=J. H. |title=Cranial morphology of the hadrosaurian dinosaurs of North America |journal=Bulletin of the AMNH |date=1961 |volume=122 |issue=2 |url=https://core.ac.uk/download/pdf/18223751.pdf}} | |||
* {{cite journal| last = Ostrom |first = John H. |journal = Postilla |title = The cranial crests of hadrosaurian dinosaurs | volume = 62 | pages = 1–29 | date = 1962}} | |||
* {{cite journal| last = Ostrom |first = John H. |journal = American Journal of Science |title = A reconsideration of the paleoecology of hadrosaurian dinosaurs | volume = 262 | pages = 975–997 |date = 1964|issue = 8 |doi = 10.2475/ajs.262.8.975 |bibcode = 1964AmJS..262..975O |doi-access = free }} | |||
* {{cite journal |last1=Ostrom |first1=John H. |title=Osteology of Deinonychus antirrhopus, an unusual theropod from the Lower Cretaceous of Montana |journal=Bulletin of the Peabody Museum of Natural History |date=1969 |volume=30 |url=http://www.esp.org/foundations/genetics/classical/holdings/o/ostrom-1969.pdf}} | |||
* {{cite journal |last1=Ostrom |first1=John H. |title=Were some dinosaurs gregarious? |journal=Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology |date=1 June 1972 |volume=11 |issue=4 |pages=287–301 |doi=10.1016/0031-0182(72)90049-1 |bibcode=1972PPP....11..287O |url=https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/0031018272900491 |language=en |issn=0031-0182}} | |||
* {{cite journal |last1=Ostrom |first1=JH |title=Description of the Archaeopteryx specimen in the Teyler museum, Haarlem |journal=Proc K Ned Akad van Wet B |date=1972 |volume=75 |pages=289–305}} | |||
* {{cite journal |last1=Ostrom |first1=John |title=The Ancestry of Birds |journal=Nature |date=March 9, 1973 |volume=242 |issue=5393 |page=136 |doi=10.1038/242136a0 |s2cid=29873831 |url=https://www.nature.com/articles/242136a0.pdf}} | |||
<!-- can't confirm this | |||
* {{cite journal |last1=Ostrom |first1=John H. |title=Archaeopteryx |journal=Discovery |date=1975 |volume=11 |issue=1 |pages=15-23}} | |||
--> | |||
* {{cite journal |last1=Ostrom |first1=John H. |title=The Origin of Birds |journal=Annual Review of Earth and Planetary Sciences |date=May 1975 |volume=3 |issue=1 |pages=55–77 |doi=10.1146/annurev.ea.03.050175.000415 |bibcode=1975AREPS...3...55O |url=https://doi.org/10.1146/annurev.ea.03.050175.000415 |language=en |issn=0084-6597}} | |||
* {{cite journal |last1=Ostrom |first1=John H. |title=Archaeopteryx and the origin of birds |journal=Biological Journal of the Linnean Society |date=June 1976 |volume=8 |issue=2 |pages=91–182 |doi=10.1111/j.1095-8312.1976.tb00244.x|url=http://doc.rero.ch/record/16120/files/PAL_E2122.pdf }} | |||
* {{cite journal |last1=Ostrom |first1=J. H. |last2=Wellnhofer |first2=P. |title=The Munich specimen of Triceratops with a revision of the genus |journal=Zitteliana |date=1986 |volume=14 |pages=111–158 |url=https://www.zobodat.at/pdf/Zitteliana_14_0111-0158.pdf}} | |||
* {{cite journal |last1=Burnham |first1=D. A. |last2=Bakker |first2=R. T. |last3=Currie |first3=P. J. |last4=Ostrom |first4=J. H. |last5=Kraig |first5=L. D. |last6=Zhou |first6=Z. |title=Remarkable new birdlike dinosaur (Theropoda: Maniraptora) from the Upper Cretaceous of Montana |journal=University of Kansas Paleontological Contributions |date=2000 |volume=13 |pages=1–14 |url=https://era.library.ualberta.ca/items/d81a27c3-fec7-4e0e-9fd2-dc0d59ffe02c |language=en}} | |||
== References == | == References == | ||
===Notes=== | |||
{{Reflist}} | {{Reflist}} | ||
===Sources=== | ===Sources=== | ||
* {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20060527061919/http://athena.english.vt.edu/~hagedorn/TechnicalWriting/Archaeoptryx.html |date=May 27, 2006 |title="''Archaeopteryx''" }}. May 1975. John H. Ostrom. ''Discovery'', volume 11, number 1, pages 15 to 23. | * {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20060527061919/http://athena.english.vt.edu/~hagedorn/TechnicalWriting/Archaeoptryx.html |date=May 27, 2006 |title="''Archaeopteryx''" }}. May 1975. John H. Ostrom. ''Discovery'', volume 11, number 1, pages 15 to 23. | ||
* Obituary Los Angeles Times July 21, 2005 | |||
== External links == | |||
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American paleontologistJohn Ostrom | |
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John Ostrom and Deinonychus skeleton cast. Photo courtesy Yale University. | |
Born | (1928-02-18)February 18, 1928 New York City, New York |
Died | July 16, 2005(2005-07-16) (aged 77) Litchfield, Connecticut |
Nationality | American |
Alma mater | Union College (BS) Columbia University (PhD) |
Known for | The "Dinosaur renaissance" |
Awards | Hayden Memorial Geological Award (1986) Romer-Simpson Medal (1994) |
Scientific career | |
Fields | Paleontology |
Doctoral students | Robert T. Bakker Thomas Holtz |
John Harold Ostrom (February 18, 1928 – July 16, 2005) was an American paleontologist who revolutionized the modern understanding of dinosaurs. Ostrom's work inspired what his pupil Robert T. Bakker has termed a "dinosaur renaissance".
Beginning with the discovery of Deinonychus in 1964, Ostrom challenged the widespread belief that dinosaurs were slow-moving lizards (or "saurians"). He argued that Deinonychus, a small two-legged carnivore, would have been fast-moving and warm-blooded.
Further, Ostrom's work made zoologists question whether birds should be considered an order of Reptilia instead of their own class, Aves. The idea that dinosaurs were similar to birds was first proposed by Thomas Henry Huxley in the 1860s, but was dismissed by Gerhard Heilmann in his influential book The Origin of Birds (1926). Prior to Ostrom's work, the development of birds was generally believed to have split off early on from that of dinosaurs.
Ostrom showed more bird-like traits common in dinosaurs and proved that birds themselves are in fact a group of coelurosaurian theropod dinosaurs. The first of Ostrom's broad-based reviews of the osteology and phylogeny of the primitive bird Archaeopteryx appeared in 1976. Ostrom lived to see the eventual discovery of feathered dinosaurs in northeastern China, confirming his theories about dinosaurs being progenitors of birds, and the existence of dinosaurs with feathered plumage.
Early life and education
Ostrom was born in New York on February 18, 1928 and grew up in Schenectady. As a pre-medical undergraduate student at Union College, he originally aimed to prepare for medical school in order to become a physician like his father. However, an elective course in geology and George Gaylord Simpson's book The Meaning of Evolution inspired him to change his career plans. He earned his bachelor's degree in biology and geology from Union College in 1951.
Ostrom enrolled at Columbia University as a graduate student with Ned Colbert as his advisor. In 1951 Simpson invited Ostrom to spend the summer as a field assistant in the San Juan Basin of New Mexico. Ostrom also worked as a research assistant with Colbert, who was the Curator of Vertebrate Paleontology at the American Museum of Natural History (AMNH), Ostrom earned his doctorate in geology (vertebrate paleontology) in 1960 with a thesis on North American hadrosaurs that was based on the skull collection housed at the AMNH.
In 1952 Ostrom married Nancy Grace Hartman (d. 2003). They had two daughters, Karen and Alicia.
Career
Ostrom taught for one year at Brooklyn College in 1955 before joining the faculty at Beloit College the following year. In 1961 he accepted a professorship at Yale University, where he remained throughout his career. As a new professor at Yale, Ostrom was named the assistant curator for vertebrate paleontology at the Peabody Museum of Natural History. He became full professor and curator in 1971.
Throughout his career, Ostrom led and organized fossil-hunting expeditions to Wyoming and Montana. He worked in the Cloverly Formation Site in Montana and Wyoming from 1962 to 1966. By 1964 he had made 10 expeditions to the Big Horn Basin, in Wyoming, east of Yellowstone National Park. Late in 1964, he discovered Deinonychus fossils near the town of Bridger, Montana. He also discovered and named Tenontosaurus fossils from the Cloverly Formation. In 1966 John H. Ostrom helped to establish Dinosaur State Park in Rocky Hill, Connecticut ("because the governor was besieged by letters from schoolchildren swayed into dino-mania by Ostrom".).
Ostrom edited the American Journal of Science, published over a dozen books for both scientific and lay audiences. He was the recipient of numerous awards and honors. In the 1960s, Ostrom wrote a paleontology themed guide for the National Park Service's National Natural Landmarks (NNLs) Program. He recommended 20 sites for designation and protection as NNLs, of which 13 became designated landmarks.
Others sites such as the Charles O. Wolcott Quarry near Manchester, Connecticut have since been destroyed. As early as October 20, 1884, stones from the Wolcott Quarry, reportedly containing fossils, were used to build a local bridge. In 1969, Ostrom surveyed over 60 bridges to find the missing blocks. They were part of a bridge over Hop Creek at Bridge Street which was scheduled for replacement. The highway department allowed Ostrom and his team to examine 400 sandstone blocks to find dinosaur fossils. Despite lobbying to preserve it, a shopping mall was built on the site of the Charles O. Wolcott Quarry in 2000.
Ostrom officially retired from Yale in 1992, but continued to write and research as a professor emeritus until his health failed. Ostrom died from complications of Alzheimer's disease in July 2005 at the age of 77 in Litchfield, Connecticut.
Key discoveries
In the field of paleontology, Ostrom is responsible for the following key discoveries:
Hadrosaurs
Ostrom's work first achieved international attention with his studies of the unique hadrosaur nasal apparatus, which had not been convincingly explained by the early 1960s. By examining the olfactory apparatuses of modern reptiles and drawing comparisons via comparative morphology, Ostrom concluded that hadrosaurs likely developed an acute sense of smell by a lengthening of the nasal passages into long chambers that wound around the skull and were protected by bony crests. He speculated in a subsequent paper that hadrosaurs had need for such an acute sense of smell as a defense against larger carnivorous dinosaurs, of which the hadrosaur body plan had little in the way of armor and speed.
This hypothesis led Ostrom to further conclude that ecology of hadrosaurs was more likely to be that of dry ground such as conifer forests, rather than swampy, aquatic environments, thought to be the case at the time. This idea was further justified by a 1922 paper that Ostrom rediscovered in 1964, which described the stomach contents of a mummified specimen of the hadrosaur Anatosaurus, which included conifer needles, twigs, fruit and seeds, plant matter that would be consumed in a terrestrial environment.
In the 1970s, Ostrom examined trackways at the Dinosaur Footprints Reservation in Holyoke, Massachusetts. He mapped the site, identifying preserved dinosaur tracks in the sandstone beds of various sizes and species. Ostrom's reading of fossilized Hadrosaurus trackways led him to the conclusion that these duckbilled dinosaurs were gregarious and traveled in herds.
Deinonychus
External videos | |
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"The Raptor That Made Us Rethink Dinosaurs", PBS. |
Ostrom worked in the Cloverly Formation Site in Montana and Wyoming from 1962 to 1966. Late in 1964, he detected unfamiliar fossils in the Bridger Fossil Area, near the town of Bridger, Montana. In subsequent seasons, his team unearthed four specimens of a small bipedal carnivorous theropod, and parts of a larger plant-eating dinosaur. The discovery of the Deinonychus fossils is considered one of the most important fossil finds in history.
Deinonychus was an active predator that clearly killed its prey by leaping and slashing or stabbing with its "terrible claw", the meaning of the animal's genus name. Ostrom also suggested that it had hunted in packs. John Ostrom's work on the functional morphology of dinosaurs found that the claws and tendon scars in the tail would indicate a running position. Evidence of a truly active lifestyle included long strings of muscle running along the tail, providing a stiff counterbalance for jumping and running. This changed the posture of bipedal dinosaurs to one of agile, fast-running, fearsome predators. He concluded that at least some dinosaurs had a high metabolism and were in some cases warm-blooded. This position was further popularized by Ostrom's student Robert T. Bakker.
This helped to change the impression of dinosaurs as sluggish, slow, cold-blooded lizards, which had prevailed since the turn of the century. The implications of Deinonychus changed depictions of dinosaurs both by professional illustrators and as perceived by the public eye. Museums worldwide changed their dinosaur bone displays. The altered view of dinosaurs inspired a new generation of dinosaur movies such as Jurassic Park, which based its murderous "Velociraptors" on Deinonychus.
Ostrom's work on Deinonychus is credited with triggering the "dinosaur renaissance", a term coined in a 1975 issue of Scientific American by Bakker to describe increased interest in paleontology. The "dinosaur renaissance" continues, with scientists describing new species of dinosaurs every year and expanding the understanding of dinosaur biology.
Energy and climate
Due in large part to his earlier research on hadrosaurs—and his conclusion that they were likely upright, terrestrial animals rather than sluggish, swamp-bound lizards—Ostrom was one of the first paleontologists to grasp the implications of the amount of energy it would take such large animals (and their still larger predators, such as Tyrannosaurus rex) to stand and move erect. At the first North American Paleontological Convention, held at the Chicago Field Museum in 1969, Ostrom spoke out against the accepted wisdom that Mesozoic climates were universally tropical and that such warm climates would be necessary to sustain large animals with lizard-like metabolisms. Ostrom supported this view by noting the correlation of erect posture and locomotion with high metabolism and body temperature in modern mammals and birds, stating that this relationship cannot be accidental.
The observation that dinosaurs, thought to be uniformly cold-blooded at the time, could not be used as indicators of paleoclimate was further validated in 1973 with the discovery of hadrosaur fossils above the Cretaceous Canadian Arctic Circle by the Canadian paleontologist Dale Russell. Ostrom's reappraisal of dinosaurs as endothermic was considered radical at the time, but its ability to resolve outstanding contradictions in dinosaur physiology immediately drew many followers, and would be supported by many future discoveries.
Archaeopteryx and the origin of flight
Ostrom's interest in the dinosaur-bird connection started with his study of what became known as the Haarlem Archaeopteryx. Discovered in 1855, it was actually the first specimen recovered but, incorrectly labeled as Pterodactylus crassipes, it languished in the Teylers Museum in the Netherlands. Ostrom's 1970 paper (and 1972 description) identified it as one of only four specimens known to exist at that time. In his 1973 paper in Nature, "The Ancestry of Birds", Ostrom argued for a coelurosaurian (Theropoda) ancestry of birds, based on the skeletal anatomy of Archaeopteryx. He suggested that dinosaurs, far from becoming extinct, had evolved into a wide variety of descendants in the form of birds. Ostrom's work led to a revolution in the classification of fossils and the understanding of dinosaur-bird lineages.
As a result of subsequent research and comparison with more recently found specimens from the Tiaojushan Formation of China, it was suggested in 2017 that the Haarlem Archaeopteryx actually represents a separate taxon. The genus has been given the generic name Ostromia, after John Ostrom. The Haarlem fossil is now considered to be of the species Ostromia crassipes. It is the first representative of the basal avialian clade Anchiornithidae to be found outside eastern Asia.
In considering the possible evolution of flight, Ostrom theorized that birds might have evolved the ability for powered flight as a result of cursorial, or ground-upward movement such as leaping up to capture prey. This position was opposed to the arboreal hypothesis in which activities such as gliding down from trees were suggested to have been a precursor to flight.
Scientific classification
- In 1970, John Ostrom gave Microvenator celer its formal name (meaning "fast small hunter").
- Also in 1970, he named Tenontosaurus tilletti (meaning "tendon lizard").
- In 1993, James Kirkland, Robert Gaston, and Donald Burge named a fossil Utahraptor ostrommaysorum for John Ostrom and Chris Mays. The largest discovered example of this species is 23 feet long and had an estimated live weight over 1000 pounds.
- In 1998, Catherine Forster named a fossil Rahonavis ostromi (meaning "Ostrom's menace from the clouds") in honour of John Ostrom. The fossil is that of a primitive winged creature with a two-foot wingspan, feathers and a sickle-shaped claw on its second toe designed for slashing prey, similar to Deinonychus and Archaeopteryx.
- In 2017, Ostromia (a new genus named for the Haarlem specimen, formerly of Archaeopteryx) was named in his honor.
Selected publications
- Ostrom, J. H. (1961). "Cranial morphology of the hadrosaurian dinosaurs of North America" (PDF). Bulletin of the AMNH. 122 (2).
- Ostrom, John H. (1962). "The cranial crests of hadrosaurian dinosaurs". Postilla. 62: 1–29.
- Ostrom, John H. (1964). "A reconsideration of the paleoecology of hadrosaurian dinosaurs". American Journal of Science. 262 (8): 975–997. Bibcode:1964AmJS..262..975O. doi:10.2475/ajs.262.8.975.
- Ostrom, John H. (1969). "Osteology of Deinonychus antirrhopus, an unusual theropod from the Lower Cretaceous of Montana" (PDF). Bulletin of the Peabody Museum of Natural History. 30.
- Ostrom, John H. (1 June 1972). "Were some dinosaurs gregarious?". Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology. 11 (4): 287–301. Bibcode:1972PPP....11..287O. doi:10.1016/0031-0182(72)90049-1. ISSN 0031-0182.
- Ostrom, JH (1972). "Description of the Archaeopteryx specimen in the Teyler museum, Haarlem". Proc K Ned Akad van Wet B. 75: 289–305.
- Ostrom, John (March 9, 1973). "The Ancestry of Birds" (PDF). Nature. 242 (5393): 136. doi:10.1038/242136a0. S2CID 29873831.
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Sources
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- 1928 births
- 2005 deaths
- Deaths from Alzheimer's disease in the United States
- Deaths from dementia in Connecticut
- American paleontologists
- Scientists from New York City
- Columbia University alumni
- Union College (New York) alumni
- Beloit College faculty
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- Presidents of the Society of Vertebrate Paleontology