Ermine Cowles Case

Ermine Cowles Case
Born1871 (1871)
Died1953 (1954)
NationalityAmerican
Other namesE.C. Case
Alma materUniversity of Kansas
University of Chicago (PhD)
Scientific career
FieldsPaleontology

Ermine Cowles Case (1871 – 1953), invariably known as E.C. Case, was a prominent American paleontologist in the second generation that succeeded Othniel Charles Marsh and Edward Drinker Cope. A graduate of the University of Kansas, with a PhD from the University of Chicago (1896),[1] Case became a paleontologist of international stature while working at the University of Michigan.[2] He was a Member of the American Philosophical Society (1931).[3]

Case began by sorting out some of the taxonomic synonymies and other puzzles created by the "Bone Wars" of the two giants of the age of dinosaur-hunting in the American West, in a series of three monographs dealing with the vertebrates of the Permian or Permo-Carboniferous of North America. He then turned to his lifelong interest, filling in the fossil record of Permian and Carboniferous vertebrates from the Red Beds of Texas, New Mexico, and Oklahoma. He also made extensive Jurassic collections at Como Bluff, Wyoming, in the Cretaceous deposits in Kansas, and Cenozoic formations of the Green River Basin and the Badlands of South Dakota. Among Case's prolific output, several monographs about Permo-Carboniferous vertebrates stand out: Revision of the Amphibia and Pisces of the Permian of North America (1911)), The Permo-Carboniferous Red Beds of North America and their Vertebrate Fauna (1915), The Environment of Vertebrate Life in the Late Paleozoic in North America, a paleographic study (1919), and Environment of Tetrapod Life in the Late Paleozoic of Regions Other than North America (1926). All were published by the Carnegie Institution, Washington D.C.[4]

The Ermine Cowles Case Collegiate Professor of Paleontology is an endowed chair at the University of Michigan, which conserves Case's extensive collections.[citation needed] The Ermine Cowles Case Memorial Lecture is given there annually.[citation needed]

References[edit]

  1. ^ Alumni Directory, the University of Chicago, 1919
  2. ^ Robert H. Dott, Jr, "Ermine Cowles Case: Turn of the century master of Permo-Carboniferous terrestrial life" (Geological Societyof America 2005 Annual Meeting (Salt Lake City , October 2005) Archived August 6, 2011, at the Wayback Machine
  3. ^ "APS Member History". search.amphilsoc.org. Retrieved June 30, 2023.
  4. ^ Dott 2005.