About: Storrs L. Olson   Sponge Permalink

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Storrs Lovejoy Olson (born April 3, 1944 in Chicago, Illinois) is an American biologist and ornithologist from the Smithsonian Institution. He is one of the world's foremost Avian paleontologists An appointment with Alexander Wetmore in 1967 led him to his main research field of paleornithology, and to his work on Ascension Island and Saint Helena where he made remarkable discoveries in the 1970s like the Giant Hoopoe and the Saint Helena Crake. In 1976, he met his future wife Helen F. James who later became another known paleornithologist herself, focusing on Late Quaternary prehistoric birds.

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  • Storrs L. Olson
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  • Storrs Lovejoy Olson (born April 3, 1944 in Chicago, Illinois) is an American biologist and ornithologist from the Smithsonian Institution. He is one of the world's foremost Avian paleontologists An appointment with Alexander Wetmore in 1967 led him to his main research field of paleornithology, and to his work on Ascension Island and Saint Helena where he made remarkable discoveries in the 1970s like the Giant Hoopoe and the Saint Helena Crake. In 1976, he met his future wife Helen F. James who later became another known paleornithologist herself, focusing on Late Quaternary prehistoric birds.
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  • Storrs Lovejoy Olson (born April 3, 1944 in Chicago, Illinois) is an American biologist and ornithologist from the Smithsonian Institution. He is one of the world's foremost Avian paleontologists An appointment with Alexander Wetmore in 1967 led him to his main research field of paleornithology, and to his work on Ascension Island and Saint Helena where he made remarkable discoveries in the 1970s like the Giant Hoopoe and the Saint Helena Crake. In 1976, he met his future wife Helen F. James who later became another known paleornithologist herself, focusing on Late Quaternary prehistoric birds. During their pioneering research work on Hawaii which last 23 years, Olson and James found and described the remains of 50 extinct bird species new to science, including the Nēnē-nui, the Moa-nalos, the apteribises, or the Grallistrix "stilt-owls". In 1982 he discovered subfossil bones of the long ignored Brace's Emerald on the Bahamas which gave evidence that this hummingbird is a valid and distinct species. . In November 1999 Olson became notable for his open letter to the National Geographic Society where he criticized Christopher P. Sloan's claims about the dinosaur-to-bird transition which referred to the fake species "Archaeoraptor". Olson was the 1994 recipient of the Loye and Alden Miller Research Award. He is currently curator of birds at the National Museum of Natural History. Several prehistoric bird species named after Storrs Olson, including Nycticorax olsoni, Himantopus olsoni, Puffinus olsoni , Primobucco olsoni, Gallirallus storrsolsoni, and Quercypodargus olsoni.
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