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   » » Wiki: Victoria Arbour
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Victoria Megan Arbour is a Canadian evolutionary biologist and vertebrate palaeontologist at Royal BC Museum, where she is Curator of Palaeontology. An "expert on the armoured dinosaurs known as ", Arbour analyzes fossils and creates 3-D computer models. She named the possible from , and a partial dinosaur from Sustut Basin, British Columbia (now named ), and has participated in the naming of the ankylosaurs , , , and .


Early life and education
Born in 1983, Arbour is from Halifax, Nova Scotia. Her mother, a math teacher, and father, a soil scientist, supported her science interests. Arbour completed a B.Sc. Honours Thesis supervised by Milton Graves, An ornithischian dinosaur from the Sustut Basin, British Columbia, Canada, and graduated from Dalhousie University in 2006. She completed her master's thesis, Evolution, biomechanics, and function of the tail club of ankylosaurid dinosaurs (Ornithischia: Thyreophora) in 2009, and her Ph.D. thesis, Systematics, evolution, and biogeography of the ankylosaurid dinosaurs, in 2014, both advised by paleontologist Philip Currie at the University of Alberta.


Career
Arbour became Curator of Palaeontology at Royal BC Museum in 2018.

She previously worked as a Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada postdoctoral fellow at the University of Toronto and Royal Ontario Museum. As the top-ranked female candidate for the fellowship, she also received a supplement available to applicants who demonstrate "exemplary involvement in science promotion, mentorship, and leadership".

From 2014 to 2016 she was a postdoctoral researcher with a joint appointment at North Carolina Museum of Natural Sciences and North Carolina State University.

Arbour primarily studies in the group , including biomechanical analyses of tail clubs. Arbour has studied from . She has also named the possible from , and a partial dinosaur from Sustut Basin, both locations in . She has participated in the naming of the ankylosaurs , , , , , as well as resurrecting , and publishing a new phylogenetic analysis on the interrelationships of .

According to Brian Alary of the University of Alberta, "She's contributed to history-making research by analyzing fossils and creating 3-D computer models, developed course materials and taught 35,000 students at a time through the Dino 101 ." Philip Currie credits Arbour for involving the paleontology discipline with the University of Alberta's "Women in Scholarship, Engineering, Science & Technology", making study of dinosaurs more appealing to women.

Below is a list of taxa that Arbour has contributed to naming:

2022 gen. et sp. nov.Riguetti, Pereda-Suberbiola, Ponce, Salgado, Apesteguía, Rozadilla, & Arbour
2019 gen. et sp. nov.Arbour & Evans
2017 gen. et sp. nov.Arbour & Evans
2014 gen. et sp. nov.Arbour, Currie, & Badamgarav
2014 gen. et sp. nov.Arbour, Burns, Sullivan, Lucas, Cantrell, Fry, & Suazo
2011 gen. et sp. nov.Arbour & Currie


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