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Beth Shapiro
Beth Shapiro - PopTech 2010 - Camden, Maine (5103086839) (cropped).jpg
Shapiro in 2010
Born
Beth Alison Shapiro

(1976-01-14) January 14, 1976 (age 48)
Alma mater
Known for How to Clone a Mammoth
Awards
Rhodes Scholarship
Scientific career
Fields
  • Ancient DNA
  • Genomics
  • Molecular ecology
Institutions
Thesis Inferring evolutionary history and processes using ancient DNA (2003)
Doctoral advisor Alan J. Cooper

Beth Alison Shapiro (born January 14, 1976) is an American evolutionary molecular biologist, associate director for conservation genomics at the UC Santa Cruz Genomics Institute, and a Howard Hughes Medical Institute investigator. In March 2024, Shapiro became chief scientific officer of Colossal Biosciences. She also taught in the Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology at the University of California, Santa Cruz.

Shapiro's work has centered on the analysis of ancient DNA. She was awarded a Royal Society University Research Fellowship in 2006 and a MacArthur Fellowship in 2009.

Early life and education

Shapiro was born in Allentown, Pennsylvania, on January 14, 1976. She grew up in Rome, Georgia, where she served as a local news presenter while attending Rome High School.

She graduated from Rome High School with a GPA of 4.0, and entered the University of Georgia in 1994. She studied Mandarin Chinese, Spanish, English literature, and geology prior to choosing ecology as her major. She graduated summa cum laude in 1999 with BA and MA degrees in ecology. The same year, she was awarded a Rhodes Scholarship followed by a Ph.D. from the University of Oxford for research on inferring evolutionary history and processes using ancient DNA supervised by Alan J. Cooper.

Career

In 2004, Shapiro was appointed a Wellcome Trust Research Fellow at the University of Oxford and director of the Henry Wellcome Biomolecules Centre at Oxford, a position she held until 2007. In 2006, she was awarded a Royal Society University Research Fellowship. While at the Biomolecules Centre, Shapiro carried out mitochondrial DNA analysis of the dodo.

Shapiro's research on ecology has been published in journals including Molecular Biology and Evolution, PLOS Biology, Science, and Nature. In 2007, she was named by Smithsonian magazine as one of 37 young American innovators under the age of 36.

In 2024, Shapiro was appointed as chief science officer of Colossal Biosciences to help the company meet its de-extinction and species preservation goals. In the same year, Shapiro has received backlash and has become a target of fan activism and trolling from fans of the Jurassic Park media franchise due to her explanation for why dinosaur de-extinction is impossible, or at least not possible in the way it is commonly depicted in science-fiction.

Honors and awards

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