Shell Fame
Paleobiologist Aaron O'Dea has made his name by sweating the small stuff
- By Laura Helmuth
- Smithsonian magazine, October 2007, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 2)
O'Dea is an accomplished photographer, and not just of fossilized sea creatures. He's now putting together a show of "People of Panama" for a January exhibition at the French embassy there. Last year his "Portraits of an Isthmus" photographs toured Spanish embassies around the world.
He's found a way to make both art and science part of his life, but for a while it looked as though science would lose out. After completing his PhD at the University of Bristol, he went to Panama for a short fellowship and worked with marine ecologist Jeremy Jackson of STRI and the University of California at San Diego. O'Dea got so sick from amoebic dysentery that he had to be hospitalized, and he was nearly killed by a falling coconut. "I went back to England and said I refused to ever set foot in that disgusting country again in my life," O'Dea says. He became a sculptor, working in slate and marble. After about a year and a half, Jackson wrote to him, O'Dea recalls, to say " 'Come on! Pull yourself together, and get yourself out of that hole!'" O'Dea came back to Panama, and this time it took.
Now, when he's not out photographing people on the streets (standing well clear of coconut trees), he's focusing again on Bryozoa. Did sexually or asexually reproducing lineages (Bryozoa come in both flavors) adapt better to the changing environment in the Caribbean? So far it looks like Bryozoa will score another point for sexual reproduction. In Panama, says O'Dea, "you can answer questions like this."
Laura Helmuth is a senior editor at Smithsonian.
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Comments (2)
I have very large encased mother of pearl, oriental goshawk, includes 4 characters and chinese chop. Estate sell and looking for ways to identify chop and charachters as well as authenticate and appraise
Posted by J Dickinson on November 4,2009 | 03:31 PM
I have a extremely large Mother of Pearl Shell. It is over 150 years old. I live in Atlanta, Ga Can you tell me where I need to go to get it appraised.
Posted by kathy Valentine on July 22,2008 | 11:02 PM