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  1. Fossils and the Birth of Paleontology: Nicholas Steno. If one day in history had to be picked as the birth of paleontology, it might be the day in 1666 when two fishermen caught a giant shark off the coast of Livorno in Italy. The local duke ordered that this curiosity be sent to Niels Stensen (better known as Steno), a Danish anatomist working ...

  2. Nicholas Steno. Despite a relatively brief scientific career, Nicholas Steno's work on the formation of rock layers and the fossils they contain was crucial to the development of modern geology. The principles he stated continue to be used today by geologists and paleontologists. Steno was born as Niels Stensen, but he is better known by the ...

  3. Nicolas Steno (January 11, 1638 to December 5, 1686 Gregorian Calendar) Steno made fundamental contributions to four branches of science: anatomy, paleontology, geology, and crystallography. He was Danish by birth (Nicolas Steno is a Latinized version of Niels Stensen).

  4. Niels Steensen ( Danish: Niels Steensen; Latinized to Nicolas Steno or Nicolaus Stenonius; 1 January 1638 – 25 November 1686 [ NS: 11 January 1638 – 5 December 1686]) was a Danish scientist, a pioneer in both anatomy and geology who became a Catholic bishop in his later years.

  5. Jul 20, 2004 · The author of the prayer was Niels Stensen, also known by his latinized name of Nicolaus Steno. After making unprecedented discoveries in anatomy, he changed course and established some of the most important principles of modern geology. Steno lived at a time when people believed that fossils grew inside rocks, lowly animals emerged ...

  6. Danish geologist and anatomist. The son of a Copenhagen goldsmith, Nicolas Steno had a short but varied scientific career. His given name was Niels Stensen, but he is generally referred to by the Latinized version, Nicolas Steno.

  7. May 8, 2018 · STENO, NICOLAUS ( Niels Stensen; 1638 – 1686), Danish anatomist, paleontologist, and geologist. Born 11 January 1638 to a Copenhagen goldsmith, Steno attended the University of Copenhagen from 1656 to 1660, where he studied medicine and anatomy with Thomas and Erasmus Bartholin.

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