Scott Hocknull

Scott Hocknull is a vertebrate palaeontologist and Senior Curator in Geology at the Queensland Museum in Brisbane. He was the 2002 recipient of the Young Australian of the Year Award.[1]

He is the youngest Australian to date to hold a museum curatorship and has described and named 10 new species and four new genera.[2]

Awards

References

  1. "Young Australian of the Year 2002". National Australia Day Council. Retrieved 29 January 2014.
  2. Profile at UNSW.edu

Published Papers

Hocknull SA, Piper PJ, van den Bergh GD, Due RA, Morwood MJ, Due RA, Morwood MJ, Kurniawan I,. (2009). Dragon's Paradise Lost: Palaeobiogeography, Evolution and Extinction of theLargest-Ever Terrestrial Lizards (Varanidae). PLoS ONE; 4(9)

Cramb, J; Hocknull, SA; Webb, GE (2009). High diversity Pleistocene rainforest Dasyurid assemblages with implications for the radiation of the dasyuridae AUSTRAL ECOLOGY. 34: 6, pp 663–669.

Hocknull, SA; White, MA; Tischler, TR, Cook AG, Calleja ND, Sloan T, Elliott DA (2009). New Mid-Cretaceous (Latest Albian) Dinosaurs from Winton, Queensland, Australia. PLOS ONE. 4: 7 e6190.

Hocknull, SA.; Cook, AG (2008). Hypsilophodontid (Dinosauria : Ornithischia) from latest Albian, Winton formation, central Queensland. Memoirs of the Queensland Museum. 52: Part 2: pp212.

Hocknull, SA (2005) Ecological succession during the late Cainozoic of central eastern Queensland: Extinction of a diverse rainforest community. Memoirs of the Queensland Museum. 51: Part 1, pp39–122

Price, GJ.; and Hocknull, SA (2005). A small adult Palorchestes (Marsupialia, Palorchestidae) from the Pleistocene of the Darling Downs, southeast Queensland. Memoirs of the Queensland Museum. 51: 1, pp 202.

Hocknull, SA (2003) Etnabatrachus maximus gen. et sp. nov., a Plio-Pleistocene frog from Mount Etna, central eastern Queensland. Memoirs of the Queensland Museum. 49: 1, 327-330

Hocknull, SA (2002). Comparative maxillary and dentary morphology of the Australian dragons (Agamidae: Squamata): A framework for fossil identification. Memoirs of the Queensland Museum. 48: 1, pp 125–145

Hocknull, SA (2000). Remains of an Eocene skink from Queensland. ALCHERINGA. 24: 1-2, pp 63–64

Hocknull, SA (2000). Mesozoic freshwater and estuarine bivalves from Australia. Memoirs of the Queensland Museum. 45: 2, pp 405–426

Hocknull, SA (1997). Cretaceous freshwater bivalves from Queensland. Memoirs of the Queensland Museum. 42: 1, pp 223–226

Hocknull, SA (1994). A new freshwater bivalve from the Triassic of southeastern Queensland. Memoirs of the Queensland Museum. 37: 1, pp 146 Published

External links

Wikinews has related news: Three new dinosaurs discovered in Australia
Awards
Preceded by
James Fitzpatrick
Young Australian of the Year
2002
Succeeded by
Lleyton Hewitt