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Sanjukta Chakravorti is a geologist and palaeobiologist. She completed her PhD from the Geological Studies Unit, [1] [2] Indian Statistical Institute Kolkata, India where she is an Honorary Visiting Scientist. [3] Her research focuses on Gondwanan Geology and Triassic temnospondyl amphibians from India. She also actively works on palaeoecology and palaeobiology of marine vertebrates in India. Sanjukta currently conducts her research at the State Museum of Natural History Stuttgart.
Chakravorti received her undergraduate degree (B.Sc.) in geology (2012) and a master's degree (M.Sc.) in applied geology (2014) from the University of Calcutta. She has extensively revised maps of the Early, Middle and Late Triassic Gondwana Formations of all the four major Gondwana Basins in India. [4] She initially joined the Indian Statistical Institute after being awarded the prestigious and competitive junior research fellowship (2014) [3] and was subsequently awarded the senior research fellowship in 2016. [3]
During her PhD, Chakravorti has been a visiting scientist studying vertebrate fossils at Teylers Museum, Haarlem, Netherlands (2016), Muséum National d'Histoire Naturelle (MNHN), Paris (2017), University of Opole, Poland and Institute of Palaeobiology, Polish Academy of Sciences (2018) and Department of Earth Science, Faculdade de Ciências e Tecnologia, Caparica, Portugal (2018).
She has active collaborations with University of Opole, Poland, University of Bonn, Germany; Institut de Catala, Barcelona, Spain, University of California-Riverside, United States and Universidade Federal de Santa Maria · Departamento de Ecologia e Evolução, Brazil; [5] Indian Institute of Technology, Kanpur, India.
Chakravorti is a staunch advocate of interdisciplinary scientific research combined with outreach and aims to promote women in STEM and make STEM-based learning accessible to children from grassroot levels of society.
Chakravorti's discussion on her experience as a woman researcher in the Indian scientific community at the European Association of Vertebrate Palaeontology (EAVP) in 2018 earned her international accolades. [6] Her work has promoted conservation of fossil sites in schools in rural and urban areas of India, organizing mass social awareness programmes. She convened the first keynote outreach programme organised in January 2020 at the Indian Statistical Institute titled 'বাংলার জীবাশ্ম' – "Fossils of Bengal" [7] targeted not only at preservation of fossil sites of Bengal but also promoting the importance of interdisciplinary sciences in younger generations. Her outreach [8] has been covered by Anandabazar Patrika - a leading Bengali newspaper.
She has been mentioned as a young female vertebrate palaeontologist in the book Rebels, Scholars, Explorers – Women in Vertebrate Paleontology – a book by Annalisa Berta and Susan Turner. [9] [10]
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This article has multiple issues. Please help
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Sanjukta Chakravorti is a geologist and palaeobiologist. She completed her PhD from the Geological Studies Unit, [1] [2] Indian Statistical Institute Kolkata, India where she is an Honorary Visiting Scientist. [3] Her research focuses on Gondwanan Geology and Triassic temnospondyl amphibians from India. She also actively works on palaeoecology and palaeobiology of marine vertebrates in India. Sanjukta currently conducts her research at the State Museum of Natural History Stuttgart.
Chakravorti received her undergraduate degree (B.Sc.) in geology (2012) and a master's degree (M.Sc.) in applied geology (2014) from the University of Calcutta. She has extensively revised maps of the Early, Middle and Late Triassic Gondwana Formations of all the four major Gondwana Basins in India. [4] She initially joined the Indian Statistical Institute after being awarded the prestigious and competitive junior research fellowship (2014) [3] and was subsequently awarded the senior research fellowship in 2016. [3]
During her PhD, Chakravorti has been a visiting scientist studying vertebrate fossils at Teylers Museum, Haarlem, Netherlands (2016), Muséum National d'Histoire Naturelle (MNHN), Paris (2017), University of Opole, Poland and Institute of Palaeobiology, Polish Academy of Sciences (2018) and Department of Earth Science, Faculdade de Ciências e Tecnologia, Caparica, Portugal (2018).
She has active collaborations with University of Opole, Poland, University of Bonn, Germany; Institut de Catala, Barcelona, Spain, University of California-Riverside, United States and Universidade Federal de Santa Maria · Departamento de Ecologia e Evolução, Brazil; [5] Indian Institute of Technology, Kanpur, India.
Chakravorti is a staunch advocate of interdisciplinary scientific research combined with outreach and aims to promote women in STEM and make STEM-based learning accessible to children from grassroot levels of society.
Chakravorti's discussion on her experience as a woman researcher in the Indian scientific community at the European Association of Vertebrate Palaeontology (EAVP) in 2018 earned her international accolades. [6] Her work has promoted conservation of fossil sites in schools in rural and urban areas of India, organizing mass social awareness programmes. She convened the first keynote outreach programme organised in January 2020 at the Indian Statistical Institute titled 'বাংলার জীবাশ্ম' – "Fossils of Bengal" [7] targeted not only at preservation of fossil sites of Bengal but also promoting the importance of interdisciplinary sciences in younger generations. Her outreach [8] has been covered by Anandabazar Patrika - a leading Bengali newspaper.
She has been mentioned as a young female vertebrate palaeontologist in the book Rebels, Scholars, Explorers – Women in Vertebrate Paleontology – a book by Annalisa Berta and Susan Turner. [9] [10]
This article needs additional or more specific
categories. (February 2021) |