1862 - 1931 (68 years)
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Name |
Earl Douglass |
Prefix |
Dr |
Birth |
28 Oct 1862 |
Medford, Minnesota, USA |
Gender |
Male |
Death |
13 Jan 1931 |
Salt Lake City, Utah, USA |
Person ID |
I79431 |
My Genealogy |
Last Modified |
16 May 2016 |
Father |
Fernando Douglass, b. 20 Dec 1829, Jefferson Co, NY, d. 26 Jan 1916, Jensen, Utah, USA (Age 86 years) |
Mother |
Abigail Louisa Carpenter, b. 1835, V.T., USA d. 1896, Steele Co, MN (Age 61 years) |
Marriage |
1857 |
Family ID |
F49964 |
Group Sheet | Family Chart |
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Notes |
- Earl Douglass was born in Minnesota in 1862. As a young adult he studied and taught the sciences in the Midwest. In 1902, he joined the staff of the Carnegie Museum of Natural History in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania and, in 1908, started looking for dinosaur fossils in the Uinta Basin. After some disappointments, he found the quarry that became Dinosaur National Monument. He continued to excavate it for the Carnegie even after President Woodrow Wilson declared the quarry a national monument on October 4, 1915. Douglass died in 1931, but his legacy lives on with the monument.
Aside from discovering the famous Carnegie Quarry, Earl Douglass was one of the first people to suggest that, rather than excavating all the bones, they be left in place for public viewing. Dinosaur was the first place to leave the bones in situ for public viewing, but many other sites have done so since. Even before Dinosaur was a national monument, Douglass gave tours, lectures, and classes to those interested in his work. Today, The Quarry Exhibit Hall gives visitors the opportunity to see the famous dinosaur quarry.
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