Jirahgorgon Ceto: New Gorgonopsian from Karoo | AcademicJobs
Discover Jirahgorgon ceto, a large-bodied gorgonopsian from the Karoo Basin, described by Wits researchers. This Permian predator pushes back evolutionary timelines for mammal precursors.
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Julien Benoit is an Associate Professor in Vertebrate Palaeontology at the Evolutionary Studies Institute of the University of the Witwatersrand. He holds an MSc and a PhD in Vertebrate Palaeontology from the Université de Montpellier in France, awarded in 2013. His academic career at the university includes roles as senior researcher focused on therapsid palaeontology, with research interests in paleobiology, paleoneurology, phylogeny, and the evolutionary biology of extinct synapsids from the Karoo region. Benoit contributes to teaching through lectures in palaeontology, geology, and related honours courses at the School of Geosciences. He has delivered public lectures on topics such as the origins of mammalness and the first synapsid egg. His work appears in peer-reviewed publications addressing brain size in Dinocephalia, the palaeoneurology of Middle Triassic specimens, and the evolutionary history of various fossil groups. Benoit maintains an active presence in academic outreach and fieldwork related to Permian-Triassic fossils.
Discover Jirahgorgon ceto, a large-bodied gorgonopsian from the Karoo Basin, described by Wits researchers. This Permian predator pushes back evolutionary timelines for mammal precursors.