'' found by Levi and George in 1908 Levi Sternberg was born in 1894 at a farm near
Lawrence, Kansas to Charles H. Sternberg and Anna Reynolds, the youngest of the three brothers to survive into adulthood. In 1902 the family moved off the farm into the town, visiting the fossil sites of the
Niobrara Chalk in 1906 when Levi Sternberg was 11. Charles H. Sternberg felt that his sons were sufficiently ready to join him in his fossil collecting profession full time by 1908, when George was 23, Charles was 23, and Levi was 14. As a family the Sternbergs went to
Wyoming, with Levi working as an excavator and helping to lift the heavy bones. This expedition took three field seasons to complete, with Sternbergs returning to Lawrence each winter. In August 1908, Levi and George discovered the skull of a
Triceratops along Schneider Creek, and later a skeleton of
Edmontosaurus including skin, which would become known as a
mummified dinosaur. Returning from the expedition, Levi Sternberg completed high school at
Lawrence High School. Levi then returned to expeditions with Charles H. and Charles M., returning to Wyoming and contributing many discoveries, including hundreds of skulls of
Oreodon in 1911. In 1912, Levi joined the other Sternbergs on an expedition to the
Red Deer River of
Alberta under the
Geological Survey of Canada, where they worked parallel to American paleontologist
Barnum Brown of the
American Museum of Natural History, before shipping all their collections to
Ottawa, where their families also moved. Levi established a more permanent camp near
Steveville, Alberta than the river barge the Sternbergs had been working from, which became the area known as
Dinosaur Provincial Park. Charles H. and Levi Sternberg then left the Geological Survey in 1916, returning independently for two more seasons to the park, discovering specimens of
Albertosaurus,
Corythosaurus, and
Panoplosaurus. Charles H. Sternberg then retired in 1918 and left Canada. ==Professional work and later life==