Dr. Scott Sampson – BIO

Scott D. Sampson, Ph.D.

Scott Sampson is a Canadian-born dinosaur paleontologist, evolutionary biologist, and educator who presently serves as Research Curator at the Utah Museum of Natural History, University of Utah.  After receiving his Ph.D. in Zoology from the University of Toronto in 1993, he spent a year working at the American Museum of Natural History in New York City, followed by five years as assistant professor of anatomy at the New York College of Osteopathic Medicine on Long Island.  From 1999-2007, he held a dual position with the Utah Museum of Natural History and the Department of Geology and Geophysics at the University of Utah, serving for the last several years of that period as chief curator and associate professor, respectively.  His research has focused on the ecology and evolution of Late Cretaceous dinosaurs, and he has conducted fieldwork in a number of countries, including Kenya, Zimbabwe, South Africa, Madagascar, Mexico, the United States, and Canada.  His current research efforts are focused on a large scale project in Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument, southern Utah, which has yielded abundant remains of a previously unknown assemblage of dinosaurs.  Sampson has published numerous scientific and popular articles, and has lectured extensively to audiences of all ages on dinosaurs and evolution.

In 2007, Sampson moved to the San Francisco Bay Area of California.  In addition to continuing dinosaur research through the University of Utah, he is now pursuing a range of new projects focused on education.  Sampson was the primary scientific consultant and on-air host of the four-part Discovery Channel series Dinosaur Planet.  Appearing as “Dr. Scott the Paleontologist,” he is presently serving the same pair of roles for the PBS children’s series called Dinosaur Train, produced by the Jim Henson Company.  Sampson recently completed a book, Dinosaur Odyssey: Fossil Threads in the Web of Life (University of California Press, 2009), the first comprehensive review of dinosaur paleontology for a general audience in more than two decades.