We live in a geometric world. From the rectangular skylines of our cities and the orbiting planets of our solar system to the symmetry of butterfly wings and the spiraling double helix of DNA, every shape has its place.
For as long as he can remember, Ryosuke Motani has been fascinated by shapes. And he’s built an illustrious paleobiology career studying them.
For decades, Geerat Vermeij has forged an illustrious career in the sciences by studying the intricacies of ancient seashell fossils. The findings he’s gleaned from his meticulous work have yielded broader insights about evolution, humanity, biology, economics and now, the role of power. In his new book, Vermeij explores how “the history of life on Earth can be meaningfully and informatively interpreted as a history of power” with the human species representing the current apex.
As we reckon with the effects of climate change, so too must the other organisms that
call Earth home. But what if you couldn’t move away from your dwelling to escape a
threat? What if your shelter, your refuge, was a part of your body? Shellfish face this
plight. Supported by an $80,000 California Sea Grant Graduate Research Fellowship,
UC Davis doctoral candidate Hannah Kempf is exploring how to unify modern scientific
techniques with Indigenous shellfish management practices to help protect shellfish
from ocean acidification.
Working in the lab of Professor of Earth and Planetary Sciences Ryosuke Motani, doctoral candidate Benjamin Faulkner is exploring how plant-eating developed in diapsids, a lineage that includes dinosaurs and modern day lizards, snakes, turtles, birds and crocodilians.