Европейская академия
естественных наук

Hannover E.V.

 
 

Han GangHan Gang


Han Gang, born in Jinzhou, Liaoning, holds a PhD and is a researcher. Research directions: Protection and utilization of paleontological fossils, stratigraphy and paleontology, and museum science. Currently a researcher at Hainan Institute of Tropical Oceanography, director of the Geological and Paleontological Center at Hainan Vocational University of Science and Technology, and an expert in the National Paleontological Fossil Expert Database. previously served as the director of the Paleontological Center at Bohai University. Has won 1 Outstanding Science and Technology Paper Award from the 2nd China Association for Science and Technology, 2 Provincial and Ministerial First Prizes, 7 Second Prizes, and 3 Third Prizes. Awarded as excellent scientific and technological workers in Liaoning Province, excellent experts with outstanding contributions in Hainan Province, the most beautiful scientific and technological workers in Hainan Province, leading talents in Hainan Province, and China's "ordinary fossil story · Extraordinary contribution figure" in China. Published one Chinese and English monograph (728000 words), co-authored two Chinese monographs (1154000 words), co-authored and published two popular science books, and the main lecture "Exploring Fossils in Western Liaoning" was designated as a promotional textbook for overseas Confucius Institutes. Published over 40 papers as the first author in journals such as Nature, Nature portfolio, Nature Communications, Scientific Reports, and Current Biology in the United States. Hosted or participated in more than 10 projects, including the National Natural Science Foundation of China, the National Natural Science Foundation of China Basic Science Center (973 sub projects), and provincial-level major land and resources projects. His discovery of the named " Changyuraptor yangi" has been named one of the top ten prehistoric animal discoveries in the world in 2014, and the " Kunpengopterus antipollicatus " has been certified by the Guinness World Records as "the earliest known animal with a thumb that can be grasped", which was named one of the world's top 6 amazing scientific records for 2021 by Science News magazine in the United States.



 

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