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A Fish Caught in Time: The Search for the Coelacanth by Samantha Weinberg
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A Fish Caught in Time: The Search for the Coelacanth

by Samantha Weinberg

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If you are standing on your head in an ocean about 200 meters down and using weak electric signals in your puppy dog-like caudal fin and limb-like pectoral fins to detect prey, chances are you may be a coelacanth. If you are interested in reading something about a fish that does that sort of thing, you may be looking for this book.

A Fish Caught in Time describes the discovery, search for, natural history (as much as we know) of, and the scientists and fishermen obsessed with this ancient fish that was thought to be an extinct 'missing link' between life in the oceans and life on land. Samantha Weinberg, the author, readily captures the excitement of the initial discovery in southern Africa that the fish was not extinct, and the recent discovery of another population in Indonesia, as well as the efforts to understand and capture a live fish and/or images of one during the time in between. The author makes it completely understandable why scientists, fishermen, and others become so enthralled they would travel halfway around the world to attempt to get a glimpse of this ungainly but beautiful and important fish.

But if you just want to stay in your armchair (or wherever) to get the picture, read this book. ( )
  bfertig | Aug 13, 2009 |
A wonderfully informative book about the coelacanth from it's modern discovery up to recent times. The characters are compelling and almost feel as if they should be a in a novel. This is a very quick read that still gives a wealth of information on the subject. ( )
  nateandjess | Nov 12, 2008 |
Exhaustive & well written. ( )
  JNSelko | Jun 15, 2008 |
This book is like an action novel for the person who is facinated with evolution and with the moden scientific method. It challenges our notions of what we consider to be fact and fiction related to what species are believed to be extinct. This book is a true Jurasic park tale. I loved every page and refer anyone who will listen to me to it. It is a wonderful book for any age, but may be particularly well suited for teenagers who like science. ( )
2 vote berrypuma | Aug 29, 2007 |
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Amazon.com (ISBN 0060194952, Hardcover)

In 1938, an alert young South African museum curator named Marjorie Courtenay-Latimer came upon a curious specimen in a fisherman's nets: a fish with "four limb-like fins and a strange little puppy dog tail," one that she thought resembled not a living being so much as a china ornament. When she could turn up no written descriptions of the find, she turned to other scientists for help, touching off a worldwide wave of interest in the creature that would come to be called the "coelacanth," long thought to be extinct, and now celebrated as one of the world's oldest species.

That interest took many forms, writes journalist Samantha Weinberg in her entertaining and instructive case study in scientific detective work. It spurred the development of new deep-sea craft to explore the farthest reaches of the ocean; it touched off more than one controversy over the coelacanth's lineage, and even over which nation claimed sovereignty over its oceanic haunts; and it launched or advanced the careers of dozens of researchers. The coelacanth continues to make news. In 1998, a young American scholar found a specimen in Indonesia, far from the western Indian Ocean waters where the coelacanth was thought to dwell. Although some scientists decried the discovery as a hoax at worst and an aberration at best, the find showed that the creature's range was widespread. It demonstrated, too, that international cooperation was necessary if the coelacanth were to be protected in the future, "continuing to exist," as Weinberg writes, "after this extraordinary duration of time." --Gregory McNamee

(retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:58:10 -0400)

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