Dinosaur Tracks and other Fossil Footprints of Europe
2000 edition
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Author
Publication
2000-01-15 - Columbia University Press
Language
English
Word Count
90,000 words, Guess
Page Count
360 pages
Physical Format
Hardcover
Identifiers
- Open LibraryOL9558205M
- ISBN-139780231107105
- ISBN-100231107102
- OCLC Control Number41347087
- OCLC Control Numberdinosaurtracksot00lock
and 3 more
- Library of Congress Control Number99031154
- LibraryThing407544
- Goodreads1216246
Classifications
- LCCQE845.L622 1999
Description
The long and distinguished tradition of tracking dinosaurs and other extinct animals in Europe dates back to the 1830s. Yet this venerable tradition of scientific activity cannot compare in magnitude and scope with the unprecedented spate of discovery and documentation of the last few years. Now, following on the heels of his Dinosaur Tracks and Other Fossil Footprints of the Western United States, Martin Lockley teams up with Christian Meyer to present an up to date synthesis of the recent findings in the field of European fossil footprints. Drawing extensively on their own research results from studies in Britain, Switzerland, Portugal, Spain, and elsewhere, the authors create a dynamic picture of mammal, reptile, bird, and amphibian "track-makers" throughout more than 300 million years of vertebrate evolution, placed in the context of Europe's changing ancient environments. Beginning with an introduction to tracking and a history of the European tracking tradition, Dinosaur Tracks and Other Fossil Footprints of Europe then charts a broad path of evolutionary proliferation from the proto-dinosaurs of the Early Triassic period to the dinosaurs' decline and disappearance in the Upper Cretaceous. The survey continues into the age of mammals and birds, ending with the cave art of our Paleolithic ancestors.
Description
"Martin Lockley teams up with Christian Meyer to present an up-to-date synthesis of the recent findings in the field of European fossil footprints. Drawing extensively on their own research results from studies in Britain, Switzerland, Portugal, Spain, and elsewhere, the authors create a dynamic picture of mammal, reptile, bird, and amphibian track-makers through more than 300 million years of vertebrate evolution, placed in the context of Europe's changing ancient environments."--BOOK JACKET.
First Sentence
Anyone who studies footprints can be referred to as a "tracker."
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