J. John Sepkoski Papers

Mss.Ms.Coll.111

Date: 1969-1999 | Size: 117.5 Linear feet

Abstract

J. John Sepkoski, University of Chicago paleontologist, is best known for his quantitative analyses of the history and diversity of life. Sepkoski's efforts to define the shape of evolutionary expansion and extinction. helped facilitate acceptance of theories of the extraterrestrial origins of mass extinction. The J. John Sepkoski Papers are a comprehensive collection of Sepkoski's professional correspondence and research notes.

Background note

Trained as a stratigrapher and paleontologist at Harvard (Ph.D., 1977), Jack Sepkoski accepted his first academic appointment at the University of Rochester while he was still working on his degree. In 1978, he and David Raup were lured away to the University of Chicago, where they rapidly helped establish that school as the center of the new quantitative paleobiology. Sepkoski is best known for his quantitative analyses of the history and diversity of life and his efforts to define the shape of evolutionary expansion and extinction. His discovery of a statistically significant periodicity of mass extinction events was enormously influential, and helped facilitate acceptance of theories of the extraterrestrial origins of mass extinction. Sepkoski died of a heart attack at age 50 on May 1, 1999.

Collection Information

Physical description

67 linear feet.

Provenance

The Sepkoski Papers were donated to the APS in July 2001 by his widow, Christine Janis, and son David, with the cooperation of the Department of Geophysical Sciences, University of Chicago (50 linear feet).

Two accessions of 50 linear feet and .5 linear feet were acquired from the family in 2002.

Preferred citation

Cite as: J. John Sepkoski Papers, The American Philosophical Society.

Indexing Terms