02108cz a2200289n 4500
n 83195183
DLC
20170506053539.0
831020n| azannaabn |a aaa
n 83195183
(OCoLC)oca01009096
DLC
eng
rda
DLC
AzPhBJB
IEN
1928-08-22
2010-09-13
edtf
Martin, Paul S.
(Paul Schultz),
1928-2010
Allentown (Pa.)
Tucson (Ariz.)
United States
Mexico
naf
Paleontology
Mass extinctions
Wildlife reintroduction
lcsh
University of Arizona
naf
1957
1989
Geologists
Paleontologists
lcsh
male
eng
Martin, P. S.
(Paul Schultz),
1928-2010
nnaa
Martin, Paul Schultz,
1928-
Quaternary extinctions, c1984:
CIP t.p. (Paul S. Martin)
LC data base, 10/18/83
(hdg.: Martin, Paul Schultz, 1928- ; usage: P.S. Martin)
Anthropology news, Dec. 2010:
p. 33 (Paul S. Martin, 82, d. Sept. 13, 2010, in Tucson, Ariz.; professor of geosciences, Univ. of Arizona; director, Desert Laboratory; M.S. and Ph.D. in zoology from Univ. of Michigan during 1950s)
SSDI, Dec. 16, 2010
(Martin, Paul Schultz; b. Aug. 22, 1928; issued by Arizona)
Wikipedia, May 3, 2017
(Paul S. Martin; born in Allentown, Pennsylvania, 1928; died in Tucson, Arizona, Sep. 13, 2010; American geoscientist, University of Arizona; his work bridged the fields of ecology, anthropology, geosciences, and paleontology; bachelor's in zoology 1953, Cornell University; master's and doctorate 1953 and 1956, University of Michigan; joined faculty of the University of Arizona in 1957, retired from there in 1989; developed theory known as "overkill" or "blitzkrieg model" about demise of large Ice Age mammal populations, coinciding with arrival of humans; championed the concept of "rewilding" or "resurrection ecology" in which extinct North American fauna could be restored by introducing animal populations analogous to extinct species, i.e., elephants for mammoths)