← Leaderboards
K Christopher Beard
Carnegie Institute
$1,982,180
Attributed
$3,027,735
Total exposure
9
Grants
7
Lead (contact PI)
Attributed= this PI's even-split share of every grant they're on (the fair, additive number). Exposure = full size of all those grants.
Funding over time
peak $596.7K · FY2008–22$1M$750K$500K$250K$0
'08
'09
'10
'11
'12
'13
'14
'15
'16
'17
'18
'19
'20
'21
'22
Funding mix
By agency
NSF$3,027,735 · 9
By mechanism
—$3,027,735 · 9
Top collaborators
- James H Beach1 shared
- Jin Meng1 shared
- John E Rawlins1 shared
- John R Wible1 shared
- Kerry Handron1 shared
- Laurie C Anderson1 shared
- Maribeth H Price1 shared
- Michael H Taylor1 shared
Grant awards (9)
Island Biogeography in Deep Time: The Assembly and Demise of a Uniquely Insular Eocene Mammal Fauna$528,000
· FY2022 · GEO · contact PI
Digitization TCN: Collaborative Research: The Cretaceous World: Digitizing Fossils to Reconstruct Evolving Ecosystems in the Western Interior Seaway$519,636
· FY2016 · BIO
INSPIRE: Forging new connections among mammalian evolution, environmental change, and tectonics during the Eocene.$596,654
· FY2015 · GEO · contact PI
Into Africa: The Initial Colonization of Africa by Early Cenozoic Anthropoids$219,111
· FY2014 · SBE · contact PI
Into Africa: The Initial Colonization of Africa by Early Cenozoic Anthropoids$384,119
· FY2012 · SBE · contact PI
MRI: Acquisition of a Variable Pressure SEM to Enable Research, Education, and Services at Carnegie Museum of Natural History$280,000
· FY2008 · BIO
Collaborative Research: Paleontological Investigation of Early Primate Evolution in Asia$173,212
· FY2008 · SBE · contact PI
Investigating the Origin and Early Evolution of Primates in Asia$267,002
· FY2003 · SBE · contact PI
SGER: Salvaging a Unique Early Eocene Biota from the Gulf Coastal Plain of Mississippi$60,001
· FY2000 · BIO · contact PI