The UQ Palaeo Blog is hosted by the Vertebrate Palaeontology and Biomechanics Lab in The School of Biological Sciences, The University of Queensland. The blog fields articles from across multiple schools and from collaborators of researchers at UQ.
Ancient life can be studied from as many perspectives as modern life, and possibly more, and thus palaeontologists at UQ can be found in The School of Biological Sciences, The Centre for Marine Studies, The School of Earth Sciences, The Centre for Microscopy and Microanalysis, The School of Geography Planning and Environmental Management, as well as Anthropology and Archeology in the School of Social Sciences, in studies of the more recent past.
For more information on the focus of individual contributors, click on their name at the top of their articles, which links to their research homepage at UQ.
The photograph on which our banner is based is used with permission from the Fryer Library Photography collections at the University of Queensland. This sandstone frieze was carved by John Theodore Muller around 1950, based on the design by staff from the Department of Geology, including Frederick William Whitehouse and Dorothy Hill. It can be found above the entrance to the Richards Building (Geology), The University of Queensland. For more information on the palaeoart trail at UQ, visit the special collections page of the Fryer Library here.
The views expressed in this blog are not endorsed or the official views of The University of Queensland.
Ancient life can be studied from as many perspectives as modern life, and possibly more, and thus palaeontologists at UQ can be found in The School of Biological Sciences, The Centre for Marine Studies, The School of Earth Sciences, The Centre for Microscopy and Microanalysis, The School of Geography Planning and Environmental Management, as well as Anthropology and Archeology in the School of Social Sciences, in studies of the more recent past.
For more information on the focus of individual contributors, click on their name at the top of their articles, which links to their research homepage at UQ.
The photograph on which our banner is based is used with permission from the Fryer Library Photography collections at the University of Queensland. This sandstone frieze was carved by John Theodore Muller around 1950, based on the design by staff from the Department of Geology, including Frederick William Whitehouse and Dorothy Hill. It can be found above the entrance to the Richards Building (Geology), The University of Queensland. For more information on the palaeoart trail at UQ, visit the special collections page of the Fryer Library here.
The views expressed in this blog are not endorsed or the official views of The University of Queensland.