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Cleveland Researcher Among Top 10 People Who Mattered in Science in 2019

Yohannes Haile-Selassie, Curator of Physical Anthropology at the Cleveland Museum of Natural History, has been named to Nature's 2019 list of 10 People Who Mattered in Science.
CMNH
Yohannes Haile-Selassie, Curator of Physical Anthropology at the Cleveland Museum of Natural History, has been named to Nature's 2019 list of 10 People Who Mattered in Science.

A Cleveland researcher has been named to the list of “10 People Who Mattered in Science” for 2019 by the prestigious journal .

Yohannes Haile-Selassie, Curator of Physical Anthropology at the , was recognized for his discovery of a 3.8-million-year-old fossil cranium of an early human ancestor in Ethiopia.

The partial skull of Australopithecus anamensis puts a face on a species closely related to the famous “Lucy” specimen's Au. afarensis.

The discovery further challenged the long-held view that hominin evolution proceeded in a linear fashion, with one species disappearing and giving rise to its descendant species.

This year’s list also includes 16-year-old Swedish climate activist Greta Thunberg, Brazilian physicist Ricardo Galvão, who brought global attention to the sharply rising deforestation rates in the Amazon, and Neuroscientist Nenad Sestan, who challenged thinking about the border between life and death by reviving the brains of pigs that had died hours earlier.

Other notables on the list are Sandra Díaz, an ecologist who helped produce the most authoritative assessment yet of Earth’s biodiversity and reported that 1 million species are headed toward extinction, and microbiologist Jean-Jacques Muyembe Tamfum  who is leading the fight of an ongoing Ebola epidemic in the Democratic Republic of the Congo.

The complete list is here.

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Jeff St. Clair
A career in radio was a surprising turn for me seeing that my first love was science. I studied chemistry at the University of Akron and for 13 years lived the quiet life of an analytical chemist in the Akron area,listening to WKSU all the while in the lab.
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