Carlos Peredo
Biographical Information
My research focuses on understanding the macroevolutionary patterns associated with mammals returning to a marine environment.
My lab studies the evolutionary origins of key innovations that facilitate life in the water, such as echolocation in toothed whales and filter feeding in baleen whales. These key innovations represent ecological shifts marked by morphological transformations akin to the transition from scales to feathers in dinosaurs and fins to limbs in tetrapods.
My research program uses high resolution CT scanning and 3D modeling of fossils to understand how the return to a marine environment broadly shapes mammalian evolution overall, and to understand the origins of modern groups and their ecologies.
Additional Information
More information on lab opportunities can be found at the following Website.
Education
- Ph.D., Environmental Science and Policy, George Mason University (2019)
- M.S., Environmental Science and Policy, George Mason University (2015)
- B.S., Biology, Seton Hill University (2012)