Description
Columbia University Press, July 2009. 288 pages, Octavo, hardcover, dustwrapper, black and white photographs, other illustrations.
Prothero, Donald R.
$67.00
Bringing his trademark style and wit to an increasingly relevant subject of concern, Prothero links the climate changes that have occurred over the past 200 million years to their effects on plants and animals. In particular, he contrasts the extinctions that ended the Cretaceous period, which wiped out the dinosaurs, with those of the later Eocene and Oligocene epochs. Prothero begins with the “greenhouse of the dinosaurs,” the global-warming episode that dominated the “Age of dinosaurs” and the early “Age of mammals”. He describes the remarkable creatures that once populated the earth and draws on his experiences collecting fossils in the Big Badlands of South Dakota to sketch their world. Prothero then discusses the growth of the first Antarctic glaciers, which marked the Eocene-Oligocene transition, and shares his own anecdotes of excavations and controversies among colleagues that have shaped our understanding of the contemporary and prehistoric world.
Columbia University Press, July 2009. 288 pages, Octavo, hardcover, dustwrapper, black and white photographs, other illustrations.
Weight | 700 g |
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