Charles W. Gilmore

For those with a similar name, see Charles Gilmour (disambiguation).
Charles Whitney Gilmore

Charles W. Gilmore in 1924 with caudal vertebrae of Diplodocus longus
Born March 11, 1874
Died September 27, 1945
Nationality American
Occupation Paleontologist
Employer United States National Museum
Title Curator of Vertebrate Paleontology

Charles Whitney Gilmore (March 11, 1874 – September 27, 1945) was an American paleontologist who gained renown in the early 20th century for his work on vertebrate fossils during his career at the United States National Museum (now the National Museum of Natural History). Gilmore named many dinosaurs in North America and Mongolia, including the Cretaceous sauropod Alamosaurus, Alectrosaurus, Archaeornithomimus, Bactrosaurus, Brachyceratops, Chirostenotes, Mongolosaurus, Parrosaurus, Pinacosaurus, Styracosaurus and Thescelosaurus.

Career

Gilmore was working as a paleontologist for the Carnegie Museum of Natural History in 1901 when he found the skeleton of a young sauropod, which was classified the following year as an Apatosaurus.

In 1903 Gilmore was hired by the United States National Museum (now the National Museum of Natural History), part of the Smithsonian Institution.[1] His first assignment there was to work on the vast O. C. Marsh collection amassed during the Bone Wars; the fossils had been transferred from Yale University's new Peabody Museum of Natural History after the collection outgrew the smaller museum's storage capacity.[2][1]

Gilmore and assistant preparator Norman H. Boss, who later became Chief Preparator at the museum, mounted a complete Edmontosaurus in 1903.[1] Together they built the world’s first mounted Triceratops skeleton, which went on display in 1905.[3] In May 1907, Gilmore headed an expedition to Alaska to search for fossils of Pleistocene vertebrates.[4] Gilmore was named Custodian of Fossil Reptiles in 1908,[1] and settled in the Park View neighborhood at 451 Park Road, NW.[5]

In 1923 Gilmore and Boss collected a Diplodocus longus in Dinosaur National Monument, Utah.[6] Under Gilmore's direction, the specimen was mounted and displayed at the National Museum of Natural History in 1931,[6][7] where the 70-foot (21 m) specimen proved the museum's most popular exhibit for the next 20 years.[1] The museum promoted Gilmore to Curator of Vertebrate Paleontology in 1924.[1]

Gilmore led sixteen expeditions to collect vertebrate fossils during his tenure as Curator.[1] While much of his work was concentrated in Utah and Wyoming, he led an excavation of Montana's Two Medicine Formation in 1913, returning for further work in 1928 and again in 1935.

As Curator, Gilmore was often asked to identify fossils brought to the museum by the public. In 1938, he examined fossilized teeth discovered by a limestone quarrying operation and identified them as rare Pleistocene fossils of tapir, bear, and an extinct North American lion.[8]

A prolific writer, Gilmore published 170 scientific papers during his career, including monographic studies on the osteology of Apatosaurus and Camptosaurus and the osteology of carnivorous and armored dinosaurs. As well as describing new dinosaurs, Gilmore wrote several monographs, including a 1914 monograph on Stegosaurus, a 1920 monograph on carnivorous dinosaurs, a 1936 review of Apatosaurus, as well as a more focused 1925 study of the Carnegie juvenile Camarasaurus.

Gilmore retired from the Smithsonian in 1945,[1] and died on September 27, 1945. He was buried on September 29, 1945 at Arlington National Cemetery.[9]

The scientific names of Gilmoremys (an extinct soft-shelled turtle named in 2011), Shuangmiaosaurus gilmorei (an herbivorous dinosaur named in 2003), Richardoestesia gilmorei (a bipedal dinosaur named in 1990), and Gilmoreosaurus (a disputed dinosaur genus named in 1979) honor Gilmore's contributions to vertebrate paleontology.

Selected works

See also

Wikisource has original works written by or about:
Charles Whitney Gilmore
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References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 "The Start of Dinosaur Research and Collections". Smithsonian Institution. Retrieved November 15, 2012.
  2. "A short history of the Yale Peabody Museum". Yale Peabody Museum of Natural History. Retrieved November 16, 2012.
  3. "Building a Dinosaur". Smithsonian Institution. September 2000. Retrieved November 15, 2012.
  4. "List of Smithsonian Expeditions, 1878-1917". Retrieved November 15, 2012.
  5. "Historic Profile: Charles W. Gilmore (1874-1944)". September 22, 2010. Park View, D.C. blog. Retrieved November 15, 2012.
  6. 1 2 "Extinct Monsters Hall in National Museum of Natural History, late 1930s". Smithsonian Institution. Retrieved November 18, 2012.
  7. "Monster Dinosaur Skeleton Displayed in Washington". The Science News-Letter 19 (528): 328. May 23, 1931. JSTOR 3907471.
  8. Clark, Austin H (July 22, 1938). "Some Pleistocene Mammals from Warren County, Virginia". Science. New Series 88 (2273): 82. doi:10.1126/science.88.2273.82. JSTOR 1664047.
  9. National Cemetery Administration. U.S. Veterans Gravesites, ca. 1775-2006 [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations Inc, 2006. Original data: National Cemetery Administration. Nationwide Gravesite Locator.

External links

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