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Neil Kelley
PeerJ Author & Reviewer
270 Points

Contributions by role

Author 135
Preprint Author 35
Reviewer 100

Contributions by subject area

Evolutionary Studies
Paleontology
Biodiversity
Taxonomy
Zoology

Neil Kelley

PeerJ Author & Reviewer

Summary

My primary research focus is the evolution and paleoecology of marine tetrapods, animals descended from land-dwelling ancestors that repeatedly readapted to marine life over the past 250 million years. Familiar living examples include whales, seals, penguins and sea turtles. The ecological roles of these modern animals were preceded by several extinct groups of marine reptiles during the Mesozoic such as ichthyosaurs and plesiosaurs.

These repeated invasions of the sea by land vertebrates provide a series of evolutionary ‘experiments’ helping to reveal the mechanisms that allow different organisms to achieve dramatic shifts in anatomy and ecology. Because these animals occupied a variety of ecological roles–from herbivores to apex predators–they provide an important index of changes in global marine ecosystems over many millions of years.

I investigate bones and fossils in museum collections to compare the anatomy and ecology of living and extinct species. I also pursue fieldwork, primarily in Triassic aged rocks in western North America, to collect additional fossil material and better understand the geological and paleoenvironmental context of these fossils.

Ecology Evolutionary Studies Marine Biology Paleontology Zoology

Past or current institution affiliations

UC Davis
Vanderbilt University

Work details

Assistant Professor

Vanderbilt University
Earth & Environmental Sciences

Websites

  • Google Scholar
  • Neil P Kelley

PeerJ Contributions

  • Articles 1
  • Preprints 1
  • Reviewed 2
January 26, 2016
A new Lower Triassic ichthyopterygian assemblage from Fossil Hill, Nevada
Neil P. Kelley, Ryosuke Motani, Patrick Embree, Michael J. Orchard
https://doi.org/10.7717/peerj.1626 PubMed 26855868
October 23, 2015 - Version: 1
A new Lower Triassic ichthyopterygian assemblage from Fossil Hill, Nevada
Neil P Kelley, Ryosuke Motani, Patrick Embree, Michael J Orchard
https://doi.org/10.7287/peerj.preprints.1447v1

Signed reviews submitted for articles published in PeerJ Note that some articles may not have the review itself made public unless authors have made them open as well.

May 6, 2021
Cranial anatomy of Besanosaurus leptorhynchus Dal Sasso & Pinna, 1996 (Reptilia: Ichthyosauria) from the Middle Triassic Besano Formation of Monte San Giorgio, Italy/Switzerland: taxonomic and palaeobiological implications
Gabriele Bindellini, Andrzej S. Wolniewicz, Feiko Miedema, Torsten M. Scheyer, Cristiano Dal Sasso
https://doi.org/10.7717/peerj.11179 PubMed 33996277
October 20, 2016
Taxonomy of Platypterygius campylodon and the diversity of the last ichthyosaurs
Valentin Fischer
https://doi.org/10.7717/peerj.2604 PubMed 27781178