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catena photoAngeline M. Catena
Department of Biology
Case Western Reserve University
10900 Euclid Avenue
Cleveland, Ohio, 44106
USA
angeline.catena@case.edu

Angeline Catena received her Master’s of Science in Geology from Ohio University and is currently a Ph.D. student at Case Western Reserve University. Her interests involve reconstructing the paleoenvironments, paleoclimates and paleocologies of diverse terrestrial environments through the use of ichnology, paleopedology, and mammalian ecological diversity analyses.

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hembree photoDaniel I. Hembree (corresponding author)
Department of Geological Sciences
Ohio University
316 Clippinger Laboratories
Athens, Ohio, 45701
USA
hembree@ohio.edu

Daniel Hembree is an Associate Professor in the Department of Geological Sciences at Ohio University. His research interests primarily lie with animal-substrate interactions in ancient and modern continental environments. These interactions are preserved in the fossil record as trace fossils. Trace fossils provide an in situ record of ancient biodiversity, ecology, and environment. The study of trace fossils, therefore, provides vital information for accurate paleoenvironmental reconstructions. This involves not only the study of paleosols and continental trace fossils throughout geologic time, but also the experimental study of burrowing behaviors of extant terrestrial annelids, arthropods, amphibians, and reptiles. Current research projects involve the study of the influence of climate changes on ancient soils and soil ecosystems including those of the Pennsylvanian and Permian of southeast Ohio, Permian of eastern Kansas, and the Eocene to Miocene of Colorado and Wyoming.

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