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Orphaned and Endangered Collections in Invertebrate Paleontology: A Call for a National Solution

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  26 July 2017

Warren D. Allmon
Affiliation:
Paleontological Research Institution, 1259 Trumansburg Road, Ithaca, NY 14850, USA
Meredith A. Lane
Affiliation:
Biodiversity Group, Academy of Natural Sciences, 1900 Benjamin Franklin Parkway, Philadelphia, PA 19103
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Extract

WITHIN BIOLOGY, the consummate synthetic, big-picture science is systematics and the fundamental resource and tool for systematics is natural history collections. Without systematics there is no unifying theme to the study of biology. Without natural history collections there is no systematics. Society and the institutions that house natural history collections must rediscover the value of those collections. These collections are a world treasure, a cultural heritage, an intellectual trust, a societal and institutional responsibility.

Paleontology and paleontological collections contribute uniquely to the sciences of systematics and ecology. They provide the record of change through geological time evidence of the changes in the characteristics of species, changes in ecological associations of biota, and a record of abiotic global and regional climatic change. The study of this historical record allows the identification of the locations of certain sets of conditions from the past, illuminates our understanding of the present, and enables our prediction of future changes on a global scale.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © 2000 by The Paleontological Society 

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