Background
James was born in a United States. Army hospital in Hot Springs, Arkansas, to two ecologists.
ornithologist paleontologist Zoologist
James was born in a United States. Army hospital in Hot Springs, Arkansas, to two ecologists.
On returning from Ghana, at the age of 16, James attended the University of Arkansas, graduating in 1977 after studying archaeology and biological anthropology.
During her studies, James was a summer volunteer in the Paleobiology Department of the National Museum of Natural History in Washington. She also researched Amerindian skeletons in the museum"s Physical Anthropology section and worked on the anatomy and systematics of hummingbirds with Richard Zusi.
She is the curator in charge of birds, in the Department of Vertebrate Zoology, at the National Museum of Natural History in Washington, District of Columbia She was brought up on a farm at the base of Kessler Mountain near Fayetteville, in the Arkansas Ozarks. At age eight, her family moved up slope to a custom-built house in the woods, where she developed an interest in natural history and archaeology. James found some Amerindian artifacts on these excursions, leading her to join the Northwest Arkansas Archaeological Association at age twelve.
James" father accepted a one-year Fulbright Fellowship and the family moved to Cape Coast, Ghana.
Following graduation, James continued to work on hummingbirds with Zusi. When his grant ran out, she accepted a position helping Storrs Olson identify fossil birds from the Hawaiian Islands.
The study of Hawaii’s fossil birds, of which there were an abundance of undescribed species, became a long-term collaborative research program for James and Olson, who were married in 1981. In 2000, James earned a Doctor of Philosophy in zoology from the University of Oxford, with a dissertation on the comparative osteology and phylogeny of the Hawaiian finches (Drepanidini).
She has also conducted research on the fossil vertebrates and paleoecology of Madagascar, the comparative osteology and phylogenetics of perching birds, and the evolution of island waterfowl.