Martin I. Simpson

Martin I. Simpson is a British palaeontologist, not to be confused with Martin Simpson (1800–1892), a geologist best known for his work in the Whitby area. He lives on the Isle of Wight and runs Island Gems at Isle of Wight pearl. Though perhaps best known for his appearances in the British news media, he is also an established expert on Cretaceous fossil crustaceans and has produced important papers on the Cretaceous Lower Greensand Group. His proposal that the five units of the Atherfield Clay Formation be formally recognised as local members has been widely adopted. He has produced a popular book on fossil hunting, titled Fossil Hunting on Dinosaur Island, and was heavily involved in the excavation of a significant specimen of the ankylosaur Polacanthus.

Simpson has been quite vocal in his criticism of the Isle of Wight's Dinosaur Isle Visitor Centre and its staff. He has also written about the trade in fossils and on the relationship between academic palaeontologists and amateur dealers and collectors. In the BBC TV series Life from Dinosaur Island Simpson was associated with the discovery of Isle of Wight amber.

Famous quotes containing the words martin and/or simpson:

    Granddaddy used to handle snakes in church. Granny drank strychnine. I guess you could say I had a leg up, genetically speaking.
    Wesley Strick, U.S. screenwriter, and Martin Scorsese. Max Cady (Robert DeNiro)

    I’m afraid this man will kill me some day.
    —Nicole Brown Simpson (1957–1994)