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People
Name:
Shi Gongle
Education:
Ph.D.
Research direction:
 
Academic
title:
Professor
Postal Code:
210008
Subject
categories:
palaeontology
Mailing
Address:
39 East Beijing Road, Nanjing, 210008, China
E-mail:
glshi@nigpas.ac.cn

Resume:

EMPLOYMENT: 

  2011: Research Associate. Nanjing Institute of Geology and Palaeontology, CAS.  

  2015: Associate Professor. Nanjing Institute of Geology and Palaeontology, CAS. 

        2021: Professor. Nanjing Institute of Geology and Palaeontology, CAS. 


EDUCATION AND PROFESSIONAL EXPERIENCE:  

  2014–2015: Associate Research Scientist, School of Forestry and Environmental Studies, Yale University. 

  2013–2014: Postdoctoral Fellow, School of Forestry and Environmental Studies, Yale University. 

  2011:  Ph.D. in Paleontology & Stratigraphy. Nanjing Institute of Geology and Palaeontology, CAS. 

  2007:  M.Sc. in Paleontology & Stratigraphy. Nanjing Institute of Geology and Palaeontology, CAS. 

  2004:  B.Sc. in Biological Sciences. Nanjing University. 


RESEARCH INTERESTS:  

  Origin, phylogeny and biogeographic history of major groups of extant seed plants  

  Origin and evolution of Asian tropical rainforests  

  Origin and evolution of modern plant diversity in South China 

 

Direction:

  Origin, phylogeny and biogeographic history of major groups of extant seed plants  

  Origin and evolution of Asian tropical rainforests  

  Origin and evolution of modern plant diversity in South China 

Achievements:
 
Publications:

(1) Shi G.*, Herrera F., Herendeen P.S., Clark E.G., Crane P.R., 2021. Mesozoic cupules and the origin of the angiosperm second integument. Nature 594, 223–226.

(2) Wang B.*, Shi G.*, et al., 2021. The mid-Miocene Zhangpu biota reveals an outstandingly rich rainforest biome in East Asia. Science Advances 7, eabg0625.

(3) Dong C., Shi G.*, Herrera F., Wang Y., Herendeen P.S., Crane P.R., 2020. Middle–Late Jurassic fossils from northeastern China reveal morphological stasis in the catkin-yew. National Science Review 7, 1765–1767.

(4) Song B.*, Spicer R.A., Zhang K.*, Ji J., Farnsworth A., Hughes A.C., Yang Y., Han F., Xu Y., Spicer T., Shen T., Lunt D.J., Shi G.*, 2020. Qaidam Basin leaf fossils show northeastern Tibet was high, wet and cool in the early Oligocene. Earth and Planetary Science Letters 537, 116175.

 

(5) Shi G.*, Leslie A.B., Herendeen P.S., Herrera F., Ichinnorov N., Takahashi M., Knopf P., Crane P.R., 2016. Early Cretaceous Umkomasia from Mongolia: Implication for homology of corystosperm cupules. New Phytologist 210, 1418–1429.

Community service:
 
Research Projects: