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Loading... The Rise and Reign of the Mammals: A New History, from the Shadow of the Dinosaurs to Us (original 2022; edition 2022)by Steve Brusatte (Author)
Work InformationThe Rise and Reign of the Mammals: A New History, from the Shadow of the Dinosaurs to Us by Stephen L. Brusatte (2022)
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Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. No current Talk conversations about this book. Erudite, readable, informative, literate, and various other words of phrase. Paleontologist Steve Brusatte describes the history of mammals from miniscule teeth in the Triassic to whales, cows, cats, and people today. It’s pretty hard to make the details of jaw articulation and molar cusps interesting, but Brusatte does it with elan. Lots of relevant photographs and line drawings. No numeric end- or footnotes, but there are extensive “Notes on Sources” by chapter, so you can run down further information if desired. One thing that might have been useful is a taxonomic diagram, so you can tell (for example) how docodonts and haramiyidans fit in with everything else. For more mammalian paleontology, see Mammals From the Age of the Dinosaurs, The Evolution of North American Rhinoceroses, and The Other Saber-Tooths. ( ) A worthy follow-up to Steve Brusatte’s The Rise and Fall of the Dinosaurs. The Rise and Reign of the Mammals goes further back in evolutionary history than the illustration on its cover would suggest. It begins with the diapsid/synapsid split and follows through to the earliest mammaliaforme fossils before introducing the megafauna shown on the cover. If the terms diapsid, synapsid, mammaliaforme and megafauna are new to you, you are not alone.Thankfully the author’s accessible writing style kept me from being overwhelmed by the amount of scientific terminology and detailed information presented here. The best part of the book turned out to be the Notes on Sources section. It read as if Brusatte’s editor had less sway there and he could really geek out on the minutiae his editor had probably red‑lined from the main body of the book. His enthusiasm is contagious and spills over from his subject – mammals - to the books and publications he used as sources in writing this. So I’ve now taken one title off of my tbr shelf only to replace it with at least three more. I just hope they're half as well written as this is. A few hundred thousand years after the asteroid impact that killed the dinosaurs, a tiny individual primate called Purgatorius died in the Purgatory Hill badlands of Montana. Its tiny fossilized teeth led scientists to conclude that it was the species that broke away from its insect-eating cousins and was the first primate. Much, much earlier, in the Carboniferous period of Paleozoic Era, about 330 million years ago, the first synapsids split apart from their reptilian contemporaries and started the lineage that led to mammals. These are two salient points in Dr. Steve Brusatte’s The Rise and Reign of the Mammals. Brusatte, PhD, is an American Paleontologist who teaches at the University of Edinburgh in Scotland. The book’s notes identify him as the author of the international bestseller The Rise and Fall of the Dinosaurs. The paleontology advisor on the Jurassic World film franchise, Brusatte has named more than fifteen new species, including the tyrannosaur “Pinocchio rex” (Qianzhousaurus), the raptor Zhenyuanlong, and several ancient mammals. This is a book by a scientist for the general public. It’s conversational, not overloaded with jargon, and personal: he declaims his own take on the state of the science, and peppers his insights with idiosyncratic anecdotes about the principal intrepid scientists whose preceded his own. His reverence for these pioneering specialists — his heroines and heroes — never flags. If you have an interest in the evolution of mammals, I can’t imagine there is a better book or a better author with whom to start. https://bassoprofundo1.blogspot.com/2024/03/the-rise-and-reign-of-mammals-by-ste... I loved the Rise and Fall of the Dinosaurs, and this was just as good. Brusatte knows how to map out a good book about a complex and vast topic so that you never get lost in the weeds. We watch how some mammal characteristics were inherited from reptiles, how the first mammals lived among the dinosaurs, and how they slowly outpaced and survived the dinosaurs through mass extinction events. Fascinating animals are covered here, and honestly, any book that brings up the giant ground sloth is a winner. That thing was nuts. no reviews | add a review
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"Beginning with the earliest days of our lineage some 325 million years ago, Brusatte charts how mammals survived the asteroid that claimed the dinosaurs and made the world their own, becoming the astonishingly diverse range of animals that dominate today's Earth. Brusatte also brings alive the lost worlds mammals inhabited through time, from ice ages to volcanic catastrophes. Entwined in this story is the detective work he and other scientists have done to piece together our understanding using fossil clues and cutting-edge technology." -- inside front and back jacket flaps.
"Renowned paleontologist and New York Times bestselling author of The Rise and Fall of the Dinosaurs Steve Brusatte charts the extraordinary story of the dinosaurs' successor: mammals, which emerged from the shadows to rule the Earth"-- No library descriptions found. |
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Google Books — Loading... GenresMelvil Decimal System (DDC)569Natural sciences and mathematics Fossils & prehistoric life MammalsLC ClassificationRatingAverage:
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