María Dolores Soria Mayor (1948 – 5 June 2004), also known as Loli Soria, was a Spanish paleontologist.[1][2][3]
Biography
María Dolores Soria Mayor earned a degree in Biological Sciences in 1971, and until 1973 she was a professor of Natural Sciences at the Corazón de María school in Ciudad Lineal. In 1973 and 1974 she studied and worked in Germany, and after her return she began her thesis on the canid Nyctereutes, found in the karst field of Layna [es]. At that time she also published about another species of that site, the rodent Blancomys neglectus.[4]
In 1974 she contributed to the international conference on Continental Biostratigraphy of the Upper Neogene and Lower Quaternary. The following year she participated in the 6th Congress of the Regional Committee of Stratigraphy of the Neogene Mediterranean, in Bratislava. She was also part of the research teams of the Miocene fossils of Venta del Moro, Loranca, and Cerro de los Batallones, among others.[4]
She directed several research projects that deepened the knowledge of diversity, evolution, biostratigraphy, and paleoecology of ruminant groups. Among them, her work with the French team that has studied the paleontology of the Cenozoic of Namibia since 1994,[4] and with the Spanish team along Lake Natron, Tanzania stand out. She was an expert in carnivores of the Cenozoic era, extinct lineages of ruminants, and in the evolution of mammals in South America.[3]
Tributes
In 2009 the National Museum of Natural Sciences dedicated the monographic volume Notas para la historia reciente del Museo Nacional de Ciencias Naturales. Homenaje a Dolores Soria Mayor to her.[1]