ammonites
Pterodactylus
Aralia
Agelacrinites
Mesopithecus
Neolenus
Xiphacantha
Microdon
Eunema
Apply now for the 2012 Intensive Workshop in Analytical Methods!
The deadline is Wednesday, 15 February.
Current totals
references
taxa
collections
occurrences
contributors
institutions
countries
shadow paleogeographic animation
Site addition
Our heavily revised diversity curve generator now performs shareholder quorum subsampling, optionally uses the Fossil Record 2 time scale, reports extra stats, and plots multiple colored curves on the same graph - but download some data first
Featured publication
S. Villéger, P. Novack-Gottshall, and D. Mouillot. 2011. The multidimensionality of the niche reveals functional diversity changes in benthic marine biotas across geological time. Ecology Letters 14:561-568 (#132).
This month's top contributors
Matthew Clapham
UC Santa Cruz
Jered Karr
UC Santa Cruz
Uta Merkel
Museum für Naturkunde
Philip Mannion
Museum für Naturkunde
Briony Mamo
Macquarie University
Mark Uhen
George Mason University
Roger Benson
University of Cambridge
Carrie Schweitzer
Kent State University
Lindy Edwards
UC Santa Cruz
David Mathieson
Macquarie University
Featured new contributors
Melanie Hopkins, Field Museum
Nathan Jud, Smithsonian Institution
Matthew Oreska, Smithsonian Institution
Hallie Street, Smithsonian Institution

About the site

The Paleobiology Database seeks to provide researchers and the public with information about the entire fossil record.

You can use the site to find out about fossil collections, individual plants and animals, taxonomic groups, references to publications, stratigraphic units, time scales, and time intervals.

All of our data can be downloaded, including collection, occurrence, or specimen records, taxonomic names and opinions, measurements of specimens, and Neptune occurrences.

Tools on the site also let you generate paleomaps, data summary tables, lists of common taxa, first appearances, diversity curves, ecological statistics, time scale confidence intervals, stratigraphic confidence intervals, and (just for fun) paper title stats.

Students may want to see our paleogeographic animations, virtual globes, and lists of dinosaur facts and figures, or learn about a random species.

Professional researchers are encouraged to join the Database and students may want to apply for the 2012 analytical methods workshop.

We maintain mirror sites at Macquarie University, the Museum für Naturkunde, UCSB, and the University of Wisconsin-Madison.

Finally, you may want to read our FAQ and our lists of participating researchers, participating institutions, personnel, Online Systematics Archives, and official publications.

list collections list taxa