Harry Seeley | |
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Born | 18 February 1839 London, UK |
Died | 8 January 1909 Kensington, London, UK |
(aged 69)
Nationality | British |
Fields | Paleontology |
Harry Govier Seeley (18 February 1839 – 8 January 1909) was a British paleontologist.
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Seeley was born in London, the son of Richard Hovill Seeley, goldsmith, and his second wife Mary Govier. He attended classes at the Royal School of Mines, Kensington before becoming an assistant to Adam Sedgwick at the Woodwardian Museum, Cambridge, from 1859. He matriculated as a student at Sidney Sussex College, Cambridge in 1863.[1] He turned down positions both with the British Museum and the Geological Survey of Britain to work on his own. Late in his career he accepted a position as Professor of Geology at King's College, Cambridge and Bedford College (London) (1876). He was later Lecturer on Geology and Physiology at Dulwich College and Professor of Geology and Mineralogy at King's College, London (1896–1905).
He died in Kensington, London and was buried in Brookwood Cemetery. He had married in 1872 Eleanora Jane, daughter of William Mitchell of Bath. Their daughter Maude married Arthur Smith Woodward, FRS.
He determined that dinosaurs fell into two great groups, the Saurischians and the Ornithischians, based on the nature of their pelvic bones and joints. He published his results in 1888, from a lecture he had delivered the previous year.[2] Paleontologists of his time had been dividing the Dinosauria various ways, depending on the structure of their feet and the form of their teeth. Seeley's division, however, has stood the test of time, though the birds have subsequently been found to descend, not from the "bird-hipped" Ornithischia, but from the "lizard-hipped" Saurischia. He found the two groups so distinct that he also argued for separate origins: not until the 1980s did new techniques of cladistic analysis show that both groups of dinosaurs really did have common ancestors in the Triassic. Seeley described and named numerous dinosaurs from their fossils in the course of his career.
His popular book on Pterosaurs, Dragons of the Air (1901) found that birds and pterosaurs are closely parallel. Although his belief that they had a common origin has not proved correct, he upset Richard Owen's characterization of the pterosaurs as cold-blooded, sluggish gliders, and recognized them as warm-blooded active fliers.
He was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society in June 1879 for his work on reptiles and dinosaurs.[3] and delivered their Croonian Lecture in 1887.