Education
And a Doctor of Philosophy in Biology at Yale University in 1984.
paleontologist university professor
And a Doctor of Philosophy in Biology at Yale University in 1984.
Growing up as a teenager in Livingston, New Jersey, he was instrumental in Riker Hill Fossil Site being named a National Natural Landmark as a teenager by sending President Richard Nixon a dinosaur footprint cast from the site. He received a Master of Philosophy His thesis was on the Newark Supergroup.
His interests and research examine patterns of ecosystem evolution and extinction as a response to climate change over geological time, and Triassic and Jurassic Continental Ecosystems.
His research methods include structural geology, paleontology, palynology, geochemistry, and geophysics. Professor Olsen is currently Arthur Doctorate. Storke Memorial Professor of Earth and Environmental Sciences, Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences, Lamont–Doherty Earth Observatory at Columbia University.
Research Associate at the Carnegie Museum of Natural History, Pittsburgh, the American Museum of Natural History and the Virginia Natural History Museum. Vice President, Board of Directors, Black Rock Forest Consortium, and on the Honorary Board of Directors, Fundy Geological Museum, Parrsboro, Nova Scotia.
Olsen,, Dinosaur and Other Fossil Tracks of Eastern North America: Columbia University Press.