My research focuses on evolutionary and ontogenetic studies of bone growth in modern and fossil vertebrates, principally archosaurs (including crocodylians, dinosaurs, and birds). I deal with skeletal change both at the gross level and through histological studies of bone microstructure. I am also interested in vertebrate taphonomy.
Current and ongoing projects (including supervised undergraduate research) include:
- Comparison of thin-section and MicroCT analyses as sources of bone microstructure data
- Implications of changes in bone surface textures for assessing relative ontogenetic age
- Paleopathology
Research projects by former M.S. students include:
- Histology and geochemistry of polar dinosaur bone tissue
- Histology, mineralogy, and geochemistry of normal vs. pathological bone tissue in dinosaurs and modern birds
- Cladistic analysis of craniofacial ontogeny in ceratopsian dinosaurs