Salvador Moyà-Solà (born 1955) is a Spanishpaleontologist. He works in the Institut Català de Paleontología Miquel Crusafont in Sabadell, Catalonia. From 1983 to 2006, he was affiliated with the Diputación Provincial de Barcelona. In 2006 he became investigator of the Physical Anthropology unit of the Universidad Autónoma de Barcelona.
He is an expert in primates of the miocene. He has directed two important excavations in Catalonia:
Can Llobateres, in Sabadell (Barcelona province), where he found remains of Dryopithecus laietanus, the first Catalan fossil, nicknamed “Jordi.”
... the prevailing resource conditions as do ectothermic reptiles," researchers Meike Köhler and Salvador Moyà-Solà wrote in a study published in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences in 2009.
From left, the Pierolapithecus cranium shortly after discovery, after initial preparation, and after virtual reconstruction. DavidAlba (left)/Salvador Moyà-Solà (middle)/Kelsey Pugh (right) ... ....
... the prevailing resource conditions as do ectothermic reptiles," researchers Meike Köhler and Salvador Moyà-Solà wrote in a study published in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences in 2009.