Yara Haridy

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Yara Haridy is an Egyptian-Canadian paleontologist and scientific communicator who specializes in the use of advanced analytical methods to study the evolution of bone and related skeletal tissues.

Haridy was born in Morocco and lived in Egypt until her family moved to Canada when she was 12 years old.[1] She obtained her B.Sc. in biology from the University of Toronto in 2016, where she originally intended to pursue the pre-medicine track en route to a medical career, followed by her M.Sc. in Ecology and Evolutionary Biology obtained from the University of Toronto in 2018, where she studied the evolution of acrodonty in reptiles.[2] She obtained her Ph.D. from Humboldt University of Berlin and the Museum für Naturkunde Berlin under the supervision of Florian Witzmann and Nadia Fröbisch in 2021.

Academic contributions

Haridy's research primarily focuses on the evolution of bone and other skeletal tissues.[3] She has extensive experience studying the evolution of different forms of dentition and tooth replacement, primarily in extinct and extant reptiles, as well as paleopathologies. Her research methods include bone histology, computed tomography (CT), and focused ion beam scanning electron microscopy (FIB-SEM). Some of her most notable work includes the identification of the earliest occurrence of a viral-induced metabolic disease (Paget's disease),[4] the earliest occurrence of bone cancer (osteosarcoma) in an amniote (in the stem turtle Pappochelys),[5] and the morphological characterization of osteocytes in early fish that could be linked to physiological advantages of osteocytes that led to the modern-day prevalence of osteocytic bone among vertebrates.[6] Her work has been published in several leading international scientific journals, including Biology Letters,[7] Scientific Reports,[8] Systematic Biology,[9] Science Advances,[6] and JAMA Oncology,[5] with over 140 citations to date,[10] and has received extensive media coverage, including from international outlets such as National Geographic,[11] the New York Times,[12] the Smithsonian Magazine,[13] Science Magazine,[14] the Toronto Star,[15] and Newsweek.[16]

Outreach and scientific communication

References

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