I've been reading a lot of essay collections recently, in particular those of Stephen Jay Gould and now Leonard Krishtalka, having gotten them at a local book sale for pennies! They are all decades old, but I hesitate to call them "out of date." They represent the growth of the field of anthropology, and are therefore fascinating to read. (The more so when you watch YouTube videos today of religious apologists today still trying to debunk science knowledge that is thirty years old...or in Darwin's case, 150 years old. Tip - Darwin wasn't the first to talk about evolution, and yes, his book was extremely impactful, but the science of evolution has come a loooong way since then.)
This book, published in 1989, has 25 essays, each from Leonard Krishtalka's "Missing Links" column in Carnegie Magazine (published quarterly by the Carnegie Museums, of course).
Dinosaur Plots
The Naming of the Shew (love that title)
Lesser-known Principles
Begging the Question
Aromtic Man
Art on the Rocks
All about Eve
The Archaeopteryx "Hoax"
Intelligent Life in the Universe
Gregorian Chance
Backing into the Future
Bonehunter's Stew
Local Heroes
Measure for Measure
Til the Cows Come Home
Oat Cuisine
Designed by a camel
Life from the cheap seats
Mammoth Tales
Chewing the Cud
Face Value
Monkey Trials
Natural Predictions
Body Double: Duplicating Dinosaurs
Scientific Literacy
The history of science is important - and it's important to keep the history straight in your head.
Highly recommended.