Nizar Ibrahim (born in 1982) is a German-Moroccan vertebratepaleontologist and comparative anatomist. He is currently a senior lecturer at the University of Portsmouth.[2] Ibrahim has led several expeditions to Africa's Sahara and is notable for his research on fossil vertebrates from the Kem Kem Group, including pterosaurs, crocodyliforms, and dinosaurs.[3][4][5] In recent years, research led by Ibrahim radically changed ideas about the morphology and life habits of one of the largest predatory dinosaurs, Spinosaurus aegyptiacus.[6][7] Ibrahim also has interests in bioinformatics and contributed to the NSF-funded Phenoscape project.[8] He regularly engages with the public and is a speaker with the National Geographic Speakers Bureau.[9][10][11]
Biography
Youth and education
Nizar Ibrahim was born on 8 September 1982 in West Berlin, West Germany.[12] He has German and Moroccan ancestry, with his grandfather being the third Prime Minister of Morocco, Abdallah Ibrahim.[13] Since his childhood, he has been very enthusiastic about animals and their diversity, anatomy, and evolution. He also loved fiction and nonfiction stories of adventures around the world. At 5 years old, he decided that he was going to become a paleontologist while reading a book on dinosaurs.[14]
He was an assistant professor at the University of Detroit Mercy, where he taught human anatomy, comparative anatomy, and evolution between 2018 and 2020.[13] Ibrahim is a senior lecturer at the University of Portsmouth.[15] In Morocco, he works with a number of Moroccan researchers and students based at Hassan II University.[13] Ibrahim was one of 21 people selected as a TED fellow in 2015, which makes him the "first paleontologist in the history of the program".[16]
Awards and recognition
In 2014, he was selected as a member of National Geographic's Emerging Explorer Program.[17]
^ abcdIbrahim, Nizar (30 April 2020). "نزار إبراهيم: المغرب جنة الحفريات بالعالم .. و"كم كم" أخطر مكان" [Nizar Ibrahim: Morocco is a paradise of fossils in the world ... and "Kem Kem" is the most dangerous place] (Interview) (in Arabic). Interviewed by youssef lakhder. Hespress.