Michael Bruce Habib

Assistant Professor 
Integrative Anatomical Sciences
Keck School of Medicine
United States of America

Professor Pathology
Biography

Dr. Michael Habib is an Assistant Professor in the Keck School of Medicine of USC and a Research Associate in the Dinosaur Institute at the Los Angeles County Museum of Natural History. Michael is a paleontologist and biomechanist who reconstructs the anatomy, physiology, and motion of extinct animals. Michael is most widely recognized for his work on giant pterosaurs (the largest flying animals in Earth’s history), feathered dinosaurs, and the origin of flight in birds. Michael runs ongoing field projects in New Mexico and Alberta focused on the discovery and excavation of Cretaceous vertebrate fossils. He has ongoing research projects related to the mechanics of pterosaurs, birds, titanosaurs, and mosasaurs. Michael is also a freelance illustrator who enjoys working at the interface of science and art. His work on the behavior and anatomy of extinct animals has improved modern reconstructions of past species and helped inspire creature creation efforts for television and film.

Research Intrest

physiology, and motion of extinct animals

List of Publications
Dececchi TA, Larsson HC, Habib MB. The wings before the bird: an evaluation of flapping-based locomotory hypotheses in bird antecedents. PeerJ. 2016 Jul 7;4:e2159.
Marchi D, Ruff CB, Capobianco A, Rafferty KL, Habib MB, Patel BA. The locomotion of Babakotia radofilai inferred from epiphyseal and diaphyseal morphology of the humerus and femur. Journal of morphology. 2016 Sep 1;277(9):1199-218.