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Next of Kin: Great Fossils at the American Museum of Natural History

Product ID : 19309010


Galleon Product ID 19309010
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About Next Of Kin: Great Fossils At The American Museum

Product Description The Halls of Invertebrate Evolution at the American Museum of Natural History display the world's greatest fossil collection and have long been a treasured landmark in New York; they currently attract about 1.5 million visitors each year. Dinosaurs fascinate people of all ages. A look at the Museum's giant Barosaurus skeleton rising up on its hid legs to face a predator, or at the specimen of the fierce Tyrannosaurus rex, enables us to journey back in time to imagine even earlier animals that lived as long as hundreds of millions of years ago. Most fossils are not actual bones but mineralized replicas of an animal's hard parts, yet they enable us to see that vertebrate animals, including humans, share an evolutionary heritage that includes the smallest jawless fish who lived 500 million years ago as well as massive dinosaurs, and mammals of the Ice Age such as wooly mammoths and saber-toothed cats. All of these specimens and hundreds more are collected in the spectacular, newly renovated fossil halls at the Museum. This book, liberally illustrated with beautiful new color and archival photography, and artwork and graphics produced especially for the renovated exhibits, is an in-depth look at the evolution of vertebrate animals in the collection. In an incisive, behind-the-scenes text, paleontologist Lowell Dingus discusses the earliest specimens: fish, amphibians, and primitive reptiles that represent evolutionary starting points for major groups; the popular saurischian dinosaurs, including the seventeen-ton Apatosaurus (once called Brontosaurus) skeleton; and ornithischian dinosaurs such as the horned Triceratops. He concludes with the mammal halls, where animals as diverse as the finbacked Dimetrodon, mastodons, and, after primates, our closest "next of kin"-- bats-- are shown to be related by one hole in the skull behind the eye socket. This modification illustrates the contemporary approach to evolution that readers will learn about called cladistics, which establishes animal relationships based on unique shared anatomical changes that were inherited over the course of time. The Museum galleries are organized to reflect how this approach has been used to reconstruct the family tree of vertebrate evolution: walking along the main pathway through the fossil halls is like walking along the trunk of the vertebrate evolutionary tree. The first of the seven halls was opened in 1877 and featured ornate columns, ironworks, high ceilings, and large arched windows with spectacular views of Central Park. A ten-year restoration project has now returned the halls to their original grandeur and redesigned the fossil installations. This volume celebrates the dynamic fossil displays and the magnificent architecture of the American Museum of Natural History; it also introduces provocative questions about long-extinct species and the mysteries of life on Earth. From Library Journal This beautiful, oversized book serves as a guide not only to the Halls of Vertebrate Evolution at the American Museum of Natural History but also to vertebrate evolution generally. Unlike Mark Norell's Discovering Dinosaurs (LJ 6/15/95), which focused strictly on those beasts, geological paleontologist Dingus uses the recent large-scale renovation of the fossil halls (he was project director) to illustrate principles of vertebrate evolution and paleontology, as well as the nature of the work involved in creating museum exhibits. The text is conversational and up-to-date and the photographs and illustrations copious and superb. Highly recommended for general collections.?Jeanne Davidson, Oregon State Univ., Corvallis Copyright 1996 Reed Business Information, Inc. Review The American Museum of Natural History's focus on the lives of prehistoric creatures focuses on archaeological findings and the preservation of relics which hold the keys to understanding the past. Hundreds of specimens and fossils are collected in the Museum's f