MESSAGE
DATE | 2015-10-20 |
FROM | Ruben Safir
|
SUBJECT | Re: [Hangout-NYLXS] Time for a career change?
|
this thing has a mind of its own.... fuck it
On Tue, Oct 20, 2015 at 09:18:33PM -0400, Ruben Safir wrote: > So I've accumulated some of these ;) > > > http://www.businessinsider.in/Leading-paleontologists-share-advice-for-breaking-into-the-dinosaur-business/articleshow/47727711.cms > > Leading paleontologists share advice for breaking into the dinosaur business > Rachel Gillett > > Paleontology may be one of the coolest careers to break into, but it's > far from the easiest. > > As Smithsonian Magazine and National Geographic writer Brian Switek > laments, while some people develop other interests, quite a few > "would-be" paleontologists simply didn't know where to start. > > Luckily, Robert T. Bakker, author of "The Dinosaur Heresies," "Raptor > Red," and "The Big Golden Book of Dinosaurs," and curator of > paleontology at the Houston Museum of Natural Science and Matthew T. > Mossbrucker, director and curator of the Morrison Natural History > Museum, and discoverer of the first baby Stegosaurus fossils, shed some > light on how to get your start as a paleontologist during a recent > Reddit AMA. > > First, there are a few myths and misconceptions that need dispelling. > The first is that paleontologists spend all their time digging for > dinosaurs. > > According to the University of California Museum of Paleontology > website, "Paleontology is a rich field, imbued with a long and > interesting past and an even more intriguing and hopeful future. Many > people think paleontology is the study of fossils. In fact, paleontology > is much more." > > Paleontology is divided into various sub-disciplines including the study > of microscopic fossils, fossil plants, invertebrate animal fossils, > vertebrate fossils, and prehistoric human and proto-human fossils. > > And as Bakker and Mossbrucker explain, there are many jobs you can hold > within the paleontology field. > > Bakker says most vertebrate paleontologists make a living teaching > geology or anatomy. "A few lucky ones" get full time jobs working in a > museum. Fossils are also a hot commodity right now, since scientists can > use them to teach basic science literacy, so fossil-sleuth could be a > lucrative route. > > Generally, though, the pay isn't as much as you might hope. > > "Doc [Bakker] always told me to 'marry money,'" Mossbrucker jokes. > "Seriously though, this is a calling. Most of us live a monastic > lifestyle, while some took his sage advice." > > After all this, if pursuing a career in paleontology is still your > calling, Bakker and Mossbrucker have a couple tips before you pursue the > required higher education: > > 1. The best way to begin a career in dinosaurology is to start young. > Bakker suggests studying living animals at a zoo or in your own > backyard, filming them, and then using photo prints to sketch in the bones. > > "Find the nearest display of fossils - whether at the natural history > museum, science center, or state/national park - and visit," Mossbrucker > suggests. "While visiting, take a guided tour. Ask questions. Then, slow > down, put the phone away and bask in the glory of the old dead things. > Read the labels. (Seriously, nobody reads the labels...) and soak it all > in." > > 2. The next step is to volunteer, preferably in a program at your > nearest natural history museum with a paleontology department. This will > provide a chance to experience various aspects of what paleontology is > all about and explore undergraduate programs. > > "Get involved with your local museum and get your hands dirty," > Mossbrucker says. > > "In museums where I work - one huge, two small - volunteers are > essential," Bakker says. "They find most of the specimens and do most of > the tour-guide duties. In exceptional cases, volunteers are so good that > we move heaven and earth to get a salary for them. And succeed." > > "This life is a calling and I'm grateful for every moment of it," > Mossbrucker says of his job as a paleontologist. "I'm surrounded by > interesting objects, curious people, and a constant stream of weirdness." > _______________________________________________ > hangout mailing list > hangout-at-nylxs.com > http://www.nylxs.com/mailman/listinfo/hangout _______________________________________________ hangout mailing list hangout-at-nylxs.com http://www.nylxs.com/mailman/listinfo/hangout
|
|