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Books > Earth & environment > Earth sciences > Palaeontology
Picture a world of dog-sized scorpions and millipedes as long as a
car; tropical rainforests with trees towering over 150 feet into
the sky and a giant polar continent five times larger than
Antarctica. That world was not imaginary; it was the earth more
than 300 million years ago in the Carboniferous period of the
Paleozoic era. In Carboniferous Giants and Mass Extinction, George
R. McGhee Jr. explores that ancient world, explaining its origins;
its downfall in the end-Permian mass extinction, the greatest
biodiversity crisis to occur since the evolution of animal life on
Earth; and how its legacies still affect us today. McGhee
investigates the consequences of the Late Paleozoic ice age in this
comprehensive portrait of the effects of ancient climate change on
global ecology. Carboniferous Giants and Mass Extinction examines
the climatic conditions that allowed for the evolution of gigantic
animals and the formation of the largest tropical rainforests ever
to exist, which in time turned into the coal that made the
industrial revolution possible-and fuels the engine of contemporary
anthropogenic climate change. Exploring the strange and fascinating
flora and fauna of the Late Paleozoic ice age world, McGhee focuses
his analysis on the forces that brought this world to an abrupt and
violent end. Synthesizing decades of research and new discoveries,
this comprehensive book provides a wealth of insights into past and
present extinction events and climate change.
A classic work from the Yale Peabody Museum of Natural History
describing the mosasaurs, a group of large predatory marine lizards
of the Mesozoic Mosasaurs have captured the imagination of readers
everywhere interested in prehistoric life, and they remain a focus
of paleontological study to this day. This edition of Dale
Russell's Systematics and Morphology of American Mosasaurs presents
the complete, classic text, generously illustrated with more than
one hundred drawings and photographs, and includes a new foreword
by vertebrate paleontologist Jacques A. Gauthier (Yale University
and Yale Peabody Museum of Natural History). Distributed for the
Yale Peabody Museum of Natural History
Our understanding of vertebrate origins and the backbone of human
history evolves with each new fossil find and DNA map. Many species
have now had their genomes sequenced, and molecular techniques
allow genetic inspection of even nonmodel organisms. But as
longtime Nature editor Henry Gee argues in Across the Bridge,
despite these giant strides and our deepening understanding of how
vertebrates fit into the tree of life, the morphological chasm
between vertebrates and invertebrates remains vast and enigmatic.
As Gee shows, even as scientific advances have falsified a variety
of theories linking these groups, the extant relatives of
vertebrates are too few for effective genetic analysis. Moreover,
the more we learn about the species that do remain--from seasquirts
to starfish--the clearer it becomes that they are too far evolved
along their own courses to be of much use in reconstructing what
the latest invertebrate ancestors of vertebrates looked like.
Fossils present yet further problems of interpretation. Tracing
both the fast-changing science that has helped illuminate the
intricacies of vertebrate evolution as well as the limits of that
science, Across the Bridge helps us to see how far the field has
come in crossing the invertebrate-to-vertebrate divide--and how far
we still have to go.
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