March 4, 2024 By Will Cushman
University of Wisconsin-Madison News
"From March 12 to 14, Moore will visit campus to share her expertise in digital content creation and science communication with students in journalism and communication courses."
Vol. 19, No. 2, 2023 | Summer
By Maggie Neal Doherty | Photography by Lido Vizutti
Montana Quarterly Magazine
"Marc Hendrix, the Geosciences department chair and professor of geology at the university, considers Moore's role in public outreach as "invaluable"...Hendrix boasted about Moore's digital reach through Eons and pointed out the show's success is due in part to her dynamism."
Physical copies can be purchased by contacting: Admin@themontanaquarterly.com or call 406-333-2154, Prices are $8.95 + $3 s&h
August 4, 2022 By Jack M. Germain
Tech News World
"Coming from paleontology, where art is so interconnected to science, art is a huge benefit. In paleontology, art helps us imagine what ancient creatures and ecosystems would have been like, continued Moore. This allows us to get closer to our past. “Obviously, being really, really good-looking while totally nerding out is also a plus,” she said."
Jul 30, 2022 (updated Aug 01, 2022) By Phil Van Pelt
KTVQ Billings, Montana
"Cretoxyrhina is definitely the closest that Montana comes to a great white shark that lived around here and at least one has been found in the general vicinity of Lewistown and Billings," added Moore."
April 13, 2022 By Micah Drew
Flathead Beacon
"On April 14, Moore will dive into a sliver of the UM collection to discuss the paleontological history of the Bob Marshall Wilderness as a featured guest of the Wilderness Speaker Series at Flathead Valley Community College. Hosted by the Bob Marshall Wilderness Foundation, the Northwest Montana Lookout Association and the Flathead-Kootenai Chapter of Wild Montana, the Wilderness Speaker Series also receives support from FVCC and its Natural Resources Conservation and Management program."
Jan 3, 2020 By Darcy Shapiro & Roadtrippers
Roadtrippers Magazine
"The grasslands of the Midwest aren’t what most people think of when they hear “Pompeii,” but almost 12 million years ago, a massive volcanic eruption in present-day Idaho turned an ancient waterhole in Nebraska—1,000 miles away—into a graveyard for hundreds of prehistoric animals. “It’s a little depressing, [but] it’s been a wealth of information for paleontologists,” says Kallie Moore, former site intern and now collections manager at the University of Montana Paleontology Center."