Profile
Jordan Bestwick
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About Me:
I am a dinosaur researcher. I research the diets and feeding behaviours of dinosaurs and other ancient reptiles.
My profile picture is me with the skull of a Komodo dragon, the world’s largest lizard!
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I’m Jordan, I live in Birmingham but I am originally from Nottingham.Β I work at the University of Birimingham as a post-PhD researcher studying the diets of many groups of extinct reptiles, such as dinosaurs.
Away from work, I like to go bird watching but since I moved to Birmingham last year that has been a bit difficult with Covid and the relative lack of forests! I also like to cook (and especially eat the things I cook) and to play Pokemon – I’m looking forward to the new games that are coming out later this year!
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I study the diets of many types of extinct reptiles, including: dinosaurs, pterosaurs (ter-ruh-saws; the reptiles that flew above the heads of the dinosaurs) and mosasaurs (mow-zah-saws: the giant swimming reptile from the Jurassic World films). I do this by studying the miniscule scratches on their teeth which form from the types of foods that the animals ate when they were alive. For example, if you eat a lot of crunchy foods like apples or peanuts, this will create a lot of scratches on your teeth. But if you eat a lot of soft and squishy foods such as Haribo you will not generate many scratches. By comparing the scratches on dinosaur teeth to those of modern reptiles such as crocodiles and lizards where we know what they were eating, we can then get an idea of the types of food that extinct reptiles were eating.
My work has taken me to museums all over the world to study modern and fossil reptiles, including Germany, France, USA, Canada and even China.
This is me in Beijing, China, holding a fossil of a pterosaur called Darwinopterus.
This is me in Chicago, USA, posing with the huge skull of a Nile crocodile. It has quite an impressive set of teeth!
This is me moulding the teeth of a pterosaur called Rhamphorhynchus (ram-four-rin-cus) in Drumheller, Canada. The blue stuff is the same rubber that is used to make fake teeth in people. This has given me the nickname of “palaeo-dentist” among my friends!
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My Typical Day:
I usually get up quite early in the morning before having breakfast and heading to the university. I usually either plan which museums to travel to next to sample reptile teeth or I spend time looking at the scratches from teeth I have previously collected.
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I usually get up quite early in the morning before having breakfast, usually either weetabix or shreddies. I then walk to uni and start by answering emails. I then start by planning which museums I need to travel to next to collect more scratch data from reptile teeth. Naturally because of Covid I haven’t been able to travel to any museums for over a year now and I really miss it. So for now I plan the trips that I will do later in the year when the world reopens. In the meantime I also look at the tooth scratches that I have collected from previous visits using a special kind of microscope that produces a big 3D image of the tooth surface. So I place the teeth below one of silver tubes on the right and the image on the left is a tooth surface (the one in this picture is of a modern alligator). In reality this surface is 0.1 mm by 0.1 mm! At the end of the working day I then head home and cook myself something nice such as stir fry, curry or (if it’s a Friday) a really cheesy pasta bake. I then watch a bit of TV (right now I’m watching Falcon and the Winter Soldier on Disney+) and then read for a bit before heading to bed.
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What I'd do with the prize money:
Create 3D printed replicas of extinct reptile skulls and teeth to use for a series of low-tech YouTube videos showcasing how palaeontologists reconstruct the diets and general lifestyles of extinct animals.
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Education:
Lynncroft Primary School, Eastwood, Nottingham. 1997 – 2004. Unfortunately this school was demolished a few years ago which is sad to see whenever I visit home and walk past where the place used to be.
Eastwood Comprehensive School, Eastwood, Nottingham. 2004 – 2009. This is where I completed my SATs and GCSEs.
Bilborough College, Bilborough, Nottingham. 2009 – 2011. This is where I did my A levels.
University of Leeds 2011 – 2015. I did my undergraduate degree in zoology (the scientific study of animals).
University of Leicester 2015 – 2019. I did my PhD degree researching the diets of pterodactyls, the flying reptiles that lived above the heads of the dinosaurs, by looking at the tiny scratches on their teeth and comparing them with the scratches on the teeth of modern crocodiles and lizards.
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Qualifications:
GCSEs: Science (Core and Additional), English (language and literature), Maths, History, Geography, Art, Psychology and French.
Looking back, Science, Geography and Maths were perhaps the useful subjects for my current job whereas I haven’t done any art or psychology since leaving school.
Funny story: in December 2016 I travelled to the French city of Lyon for a meeting hosted by other palaeontologists, and so I arrived a day early to do Christmas shopping. In one of the shops the cashier asked me something in French which I didn’t understand. I panicked because I didn’t want to be rude and at that moment I remembered the phrase “I’m sorry, I don’t understand, could you say that in English”. I had last said that phrase in 2009 when I was 16. The cashier instantly replied “oh, ok, would you like a bag?”. This sort of thing shows that you never know when the things you learn in school will come in handy!
A levels: Biology, Chemistry, Geography, Maths
University Degree: Zoology (the scientific study of animals). I loved doing my degree because it was more than simply fact-learning about different types of animals (although that is cool too). My degree was very much a training course on how to design and perform experiments that can help us understand the natural world. There are no right or wrong answers, especially when working with animals as they behave very unpredictably. This type of degree enabled to do my PhD effectively and efficiently.
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Work History:
Dog-walker
University Open Day and Events Assistant
Teaching Assistant
PhD student
Post-doctoral researcher
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Current Job:
Post-doctoral researcher
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My Interview
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How would you describe yourself in 3 words?
bird-watching fossil dentist
What did you want to be after you left school?
Palaeontologist - I guess I succeeded :)
Were you ever in trouble at school?
Once or twice
Who is your favourite singer or band?
Meat Loaf
What's your favourite food?
Chow mein
If you had 3 wishes for yourself what would they be? - be honest!
1) Have access to time-travel so I can see dinosaurs. 2) The ability to turn invisible so I can pull pranks on people. 3) The ability to sing and play the guitar so I can host my own rock concerts
Tell us a joke.
A panda walks into a restaurant and orders a plate of salad. When the panda has finished, he draws a gun and shoots the waiter and heads for the door. As he is about to leave the restaurant, the barman shouts "what did you do that for?!". The panda responds "look me up in the dictionary", so the barman opens the dictionary and finds: 'Panda: eats shoots and leaves'.
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