Horner, Jack: - John R.
He also plays with his favorite dinosaur, a parrot named Birdy..
In his spare time, he studies the stars and Earth\'s landscapes and takes a lot of photographs.
Today he teaches at Chapman University, continues his research on dinosaurs, including the Dino-Chicken project, and works with Horner Science Group to bring new Dinosaur stories and experiences to the world.
Jack has written two books and coauthored seven books on dinosaurs, including three books for children.
And four dinosaurs have been named after him! Jack worked with Universal Studios to imagine the Jurassic Park and Jurassic World dinosaurs and helped with the premier of the first Jurassic Park film in London with Diana, the Princess of Wales, and Steven Spielberg.
He has been listed in Newton Graphic Magazine\'s top twenty-four leading world scientists.
He went on to become a ground-breaking scientist and was granted an honorary doctorate degree from the University of Montana and received many awards in his long career, including a lifetime achievement award from the Society for Vertebrate Paleontology.
When Jack was in high school, he won the regional science fair for comparing dinosaurs from Montana and Canada.
In those hills, Jack discovered dinosaurs and he discovered science.
School was difficult for Jack because he is dyslexic, so he headed to the hills every chance he got to look for Dinosaur bones.
Never Stop Discovering describes Jack\'s attitude, an outlook formed as a young boy growing up in the plains of Montana.
Horner, known to most people as Jack, is a world-famous paleontologist known for his fieldwork and research on Dinosaur growth and behaviors and his important discoveries: the first Dinosaur eggs and embryos in the Western Hemisphere and the first evidence of dinosaurs nesting in colonies and taking care of their babies.
Horner, Jack: - John R