In 2011 he, along with Roger Hildebrand, participated in the ceremony of the opening of the Enrico Fermi time capsule.[9]
In 1975 he wrote a book called Trilobites, which was reissued in 1993.[10] In 2014 his third book, called The Trilobite Book: A Visual Journey, was published.[11]
Death and legacy
Riccardo had died from natural causes on November 8, 2018, after a brief stay at Montgomery Place, Chicago.[4] After his death, his findings were donated to various museums, including the Field Museum and the American Museum of Natural History as well as Manuels River Hibernia Interpretation Center in Newfoundland, Canada.[1]
His name also present at the exhibit at Manuels River, Newfoundland, Canada. In 2000, an asteroid orbiting between Jupiter and Mars was given his name as 45700 Levi-Setti.[1]
Personal life
Riccardo was married to Nika Semkoff Levi-Setti, a former teacher at the University of Chicago Laboratory Schools and former public relations manager of the Field Museum of Natural History. Together with first wife, Katharine Gould Straight, he had two sons, Emile and Matteo, who were born in 1965 and 1968 respectively. He also had two grandchildren, Allegra and Colette.[1]