Leonard Radinsky
#189,661
Most Influential Person Across History
US paleontologist and geologist
Leonard Radinsky's AcademicInfluence.com Rankings
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Earth Sciences Biology
Leonard Radinsky's Degrees
- PhD Geology University of Chicago
- Bachelors Geology University of Chicago
Why Is Leonard Radinsky Influential?
(Suggest an Edit or Addition)According to Wikipedia, Leonard Burton Radinsky was an American paleontologist and expert in fossil odd-toed ungulates and their relatives. He was professor at the University of Chicago from 1967 until his death, serving as chairman of the Department of Anatomy from 1978 to 1983. Born in Staten Island, New York, he earned a bachelor's degree from Cornell University and his master's and doctorate degrees from Yale University. His works include "Origin and early evolution of North American Tapiroidea", "The fossil record of primate brain evolution", and the textbook The Evolution of Vertebrate Design.
Leonard Radinsky's Published Works
Number of citations in a given year to any of this author's works
Total number of citations to an author for the works they published in a given year. This highlights publication of the most important work(s) by the author
Published Works
- Primate brain evolution. (1975) (312)
- Evolution of skull shape in carnivores: 1. Representative modern carnivores (1981) (275)
- Functional analysis of sabertooth cranial morphology (1980) (202)
- Evolution of Brain Size in Carnivores and Ungulates (1978) (168)
- A new approach to mammalian cranial analysis, illustrated by examples of prosimian primates (1968) (168)
- Evolution of skull shape in carnivores: 2. Additional modern carnivores (1981) (143)
- Relative Brain Size: A New Measure (1967) (123)
- ONTOGENY AND PHYLOGENY IN HORSE SKULL EVOLUTION (1984) (90)
- THE ADAPTIVE RADIATION OF THE PHENACODONTID CONDYLARTHS AND THE ORIGIN OF THE PERISSODACTYLA (1966) (87)
- The Evolution of Vertebrate Design (1987) (86)
- Evolution of skull shape in carnivores. 3. The origin and early radiation of the modern carnivore families (1982) (83)
- OUTLINES OF CANID AND FELID BRAIN EVOLUTION * (1969) (75)
- Early primate brains: Facts and fiction (1977) (75)
- Evolution of somatic sensory specialization in otter brains (1968) (74)
- Approaches in Evolutionary Morphology: A Search for Patterns (1985) (73)
- Evolution of the tapiroid skeleton from Heptodon to Tapirus (1965) (71)
- THE FOSSIL RECORD OF PRIMATE BRAIN EVOLUTION (1979) (60)
- Evolution of the canid brain. (1973) (58)
- Brains of early carnivores (1977) (54)
- Aegyptopithecus endocasts: oldest record of a pongid brain. (1973) (51)
- Evolution of the felid brain. (1975) (46)
- Patterns in the Evolution of Ungulate Jaw Shape (1985) (43)
- Viverrid neuroanatomy: Phylogenetic and behavioral implications. (1975) (40)
- A review of the Rhinocerotoid family Hyracodontidae (Perissodactyla). Bulletin of the AMNH ; v. 136, article 1 (1967) (38)
- Brain evolution in extinct South American ungulates. (1981) (36)
- Basicranial axis length v. skull length in analysis of carnivore skull shape (1984) (36)
- AN EXAMPLE OF PARALLELISM IN CARNIVORE BRAIN EVOLUTION (1971) (36)
- Do albumin clocks run on time? (1978) (36)
- EARLY TERTIARY TAPIROIDEA OF ASIA (35)
- The Families of The Rhinocerotoidea (Mammalia, Perissodactyla) (1966) (34)
- Some Cautionary Notes on Making Inferences about Relative Brain Size (1982) (34)
- Oldest horse brains: more advanced than previously realized. (1976) (32)
- ARE STINK BADGERS SKUNKS? IMPLICATIONS OF NEUROANATOMY FOR MUSTELID PHYLOGENY (1973) (30)
- The oldest primate endocast. (1967) (29)
- Notes on Eocene and Oligocene fossil localities in Inner Mongolia. American Museum novitates ; no.2180 (1964) (28)
- Allometry and Reorganization in Horse Skull Proportions (1983) (27)
- Hyrachyus, Chasmotherium, and the early evolution of helaletid tapiroids. American Museum novitates ; no. 2313 (1967) (18)
- The brain of Mesonyx, a Middle Eocene mesonychid condylarth / Leonard Radinsky --. (1976) (15)
- Vertebrate paleontology: new approaches and new insights (1980) (14)
- The fossil record of primate brain evolution (James Arthur lecture on the evolution of the human brain, no. 49, 1979). (1979) (12)
- Paleomoropus, a new early Eocene chalicothere (Mammalia, Perissodactyla), and a revision of Eocene chalicotheres. American Museum novitates ; no. 2179 (1964) (10)
- The skull of Ernanodon, an unusual fossil mammal (1984) (7)
- EVOLUTION OF THE BRAIN AND INTELLIGENCE (1975) (6)
- A new genus of early Eocene tapiroid (Mammalia, Perissodactyla) (1966) (5)
- Early Tertiary Tapiroidea of Asia. Bulletin of the AMNH ; v. 129, article 2 (1965) (4)
- Endocasts of amphicyonid carnivorans. American Museum novitates ; no. 2694 (1980) (4)
- The perissodactyl hallux. American Museum novitates ; no. 2145 (1963) (4)
- Evolution of the Felid Brain; pp. 243–254 (1975) (3)
- Evolution of the Canid Brain; pp. 186–202 (1973) (3)
- Pataecops, new name for Pataecus Radinsky, 1965 (1966) (3)
- Primate studies. (1976) (1)
- Endocasts of Amphicyonid Carnivorans LEONARD RADINSKY (1)
- Evolution of the Felid Brain; pp. 229–242 (1975) (1)
- Contents Vol. 18, 1981 (1981) (0)
- Back Matter (1988) (0)
- Primate Studies: Phylogeny of the Primates . A Multidisciplinary Approach. Proceedings of a symposium, Burg Wartenstein, Austria, July 1974. W. Patrick Luckett and Frederick S. Szalay, Eds. Plenum, New York, 1975. xiv, 484 pp., illus. $39.50. (1976) (0)
- DISCUSSION (1976) (0)
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Leonard Radinsky is affiliated with the following schools:
