I have some very upsetting and devastating news, though this happened earlier this year on May 8th, I just found out about this today. Dr. Richard Stucky , a personal friend of mine, and the former President of the Society of Vertebrate Paleontology and former Curator of Paleoecology & Evolution at the Denver Museum of Nature & Science in Denver, Denver County, Colorado passed away. I first met Dr. Stucky when I was last in Denver in August of 2018 and have kept in contact with him ever since. He was a very nice guy and has been very helpful with regards to career advice for pursuing the natural sciences, particularly paleontology. He was a warm and generous man and I am grateful that he took the time to out of his day to meet with me when I was in town. I am also grateful that he took the time he did to read through my manuscript before it was published (and polished) to share his thoughts, feedback, and advice. I also appreciate the time when he came through after telling him about failing a test in my physical geology class at Pima Community College, and reminded me that pursuing a degree in paleontology didn't have to be done through geology, but could also be done through physical anthropology (which is how he got into paleontology). I greatly miss him and always will... Dr. Stucky had an extensive career which started at the Carnegie Museum of Natural History in Pittsburgh, Allegheny County, Pennsylvania. His specialization was mammals of the Eocene Epoch (56.0 to 33.9 million years ago) and has done a great deal of field work in the southwestern Wyoming which included his discoveries and descriptions of Malfelis badwaterensis (A Hypercarnivorous Creodont of the family Oxyaenidae) in 2008 and Gagadon minimonstrum (an Eocene Artiodactyl from the family Homacodontidae) in 2014. The holotype of the former is kept at the Carnegie Museum of Natural History and the holotype of the latter is kept at the University of Colorado Boulder Museum of Natural History in Boulder, Boulder County, Colorado. When coming across and reading through scientific papers that he has written or contributed to, I often texted him and told him, and he would ask me what I learned from them. Though Dr. Stucky's main area of interest and study was the Eocene, he was largely involved with the excavation and research at the Snowmastodon Site (also known as the Ziegler Reservoir fossil site) which is the location of an important Pleistocene fossil excavation near Snowmass Village, Pitkin County, Colorado. After retirement from the Denver Museum of Nature & Science, Dr. Stucky was an avid and passionate artist, which he was quite talented at. I miss you Richard, I appreciate your friendship. I wish I could have done more to be in consistent contact and nurture our friendship...
Rest in Peace, Richard...
For those of you that are interested, here is his profile on Researchgate; https://www.researchgate.net/scientific-contributions/Richard-K-Stucky-2002012034
Rest in Peace, Richard...
For those of you that are interested, here is his profile on Researchgate; https://www.researchgate.net/scientific-contributions/Richard-K-Stucky-2002012034
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