Un incroyable voyage dans le monde des dinosaures !
Les dinosaures occupent une place à part dans notre culture. Au-delà d’être l’objet de découvertes scientifiques aussi passionnantes qu’importantes, ils fascinent littéralement les foules de tous âges. Ces créatures spectaculaires titillent et défient à la fois l’imagination. Souvent gigantesques, elles dépassent tout ce que notre expérience du vivant nous a enseigné. Et leurs fossiles nous prouvent que cet ancien monde si différent du nôtre a bel et bien existé. Mais que savons-nous de lui aujourd’hui ? Combien de nouvelles fracassantes du côté de la recherche ? Vous allez le voir, elles sont nombreuses. À commencer par l’un des triomphes de la paléontologie moderne : faire admettre que les oiseaux sont en fait des dinosaures vivants, l’unique branche qui a survécu à l’extinction dite des dinosaures, voilà 66 millions d’années ! Tant de preuves scientifiques viennent aujourd’hui étayer cette théorie autrefois si controversée, voire discréditée, qu’une écrasante majorité de scientifiques y adhérent – une reconnaissance qui n’a pas échappé au grand public. Mais cette avancée décisive n’est qu’un début. Différentes sources jettent un nouvel éclairage sur les dinosaures : les découvertes récentes de fossiles extraordinaires et remarquablement préservés, les dernières techniques analytiques et d’imagerie, et bien sûr une connaissance pointue de la biologie des dinosaures actuels, les oiseaux. Nous en savons désormais beaucoup sur les dinosaures du passé – des connaissances qui relevaient voici peu de la spéculation : leur vitesse de croissance, leur mode de reproduction, les soins aux petits et jusqu’à leur couleur.
Tyrannosaure, Tricératops, Archeopteryx, etc. : c’est à travers le portrait de ces espèces que Mark A. Norell, paléontologue de renommée mondiale, aborde l’histoire, la science et l’attractivité de ces incroyables animaux. Superbement illustré avec des images des archives du museum américain d’Histoire naturelle de New-York, qui détient l’une des collections les plus diverses de fossiles dans le monde, ce livre vous emmène sur un incroyable voyage dans le monde de dinosaures.
Features of this appear to diminish its standing against similar volumes—for example, the Princeton Field Guide ... For example, the latter has uniform series of facts about each of the species. Norell’s does not. However, given the fragmented nature of paleontological evidence, Norell’s tactic is a bit more conservative. He presents the actual evidence, the fossils themselves in photographic representation. Then he rarely provides estimates for weight (size more frequently) because such data would be highly speculative. While this may disappoint the imagination, it soothes the understanding.
One fascinating reflection in the last few pages: if birds are dinosaurs, then the adaptations that we so fetishize for their advantages to flight—adaptations that are frequently common to dinosaurs (heart and lungs functioning, bone structure, feathers) end up not leading necessarily to flight, as we are wont to conclude. Instead, it’s the case that flight is the unnecessary feature—it’s an accident of evolution, not a natural telos.
Very good large format, recent book on dinosaurs. Great for kids and adults. Very representative of what is in the American Museum of Natural History in New York City (which is where I bought it). Only issue I have with the book (other than it is just about dinosaurs and not other fossils) is that I was hoping it would have the detailed "clades" (sort of family trees of related dinosaurs) organized in a useful fashion. The museum has partial clades on its displays, but nothing you can really climb through other than one or two steps up or down. Nonetheless, a very nice book, good pictures and history and some of the dino pictures DO show their feathers!
A very nice overview of what's going on in the world of dinosaur studies these days. Great photo, many from the collection on display at the American Museum of Natural History in New York. It was a walk down memory lane for me, where as a child l first saw and fell in love with dinosaur bones. If you can't get there to see it in person, this book is the next best thing.
More detailed than my 5 year old needs, but she enjoyed the book. We'll come back and revisit it in a few years if she's still as engrossed with dinosaurs as she is now.
Another dinosaur book that we'll need to come back to when she's older is the Princeton Field Guide to Dinosaurs.
This is a must read for anyone interested in dinosaur paleontology, paleoecology, biology, and their relation to birds plus their extinction. I enjoyed it thoroughly.
A good book that highlights a handful of species that show the width and breadth of dinosaur diversity. Lots of pictures and data. While it seems to mostly look at therepods, it still does cover the major dinosaur group. A nice blend of data and images in a great dinosaur book for an adult audience.
Most natural histories of dinos have a chronological or day-in-the-life format. This makes sense given that they're the easiest & best ways to tell the story of dinos, respectively. However, a few have a phylogenetic format, including Norell's "The World of Dinosaurs: An Illustrated Tour" (henceforth TW). The most similar example to TW I can think of is Barrett's "National Geographic Dinosaurs": For 1, they're both for casual readers; For another, they're both collections of ~50 dino profiles. In this review, I list the 3 main reasons why TW is so much better than most of the other examples.*
1) TW was published by 1 of the best natural history museums, the American Museum of Natural History (& thus, is extra high-quality/authoritative). I can't overstate the importance of books like TW (in conjunction with museum websites) to people like me (who can't visit those museums in person).
2) TW is more well-illustrated: Not only is TW full of great photos & drawings of fossils, but also great life reconstructions based on said fossils; Those by Mick Ellison & PNSO are especially note-worthy for obvious reasons (E.g. See Chuang/Yang's "THEM: Age Of Dinosaurs", another great natural history of dinos for casual readers); 1 of my only gripes is that some of the life reconstructions are a bit shrink-wrapped &/or have too many claws (E.g. The Mononykus on the front cover & the Styracosaurus on the back cover, respectively).**
3) TW's dino profiles are more complete & in-depth: For 1, TW doesn't profile just any dinos, but ~50 of the AMNH's most well-represented dinos; For another, not only are the dinos arranged in order of when their sub-groups evolved (E.g. "Theropoda" begins with Coelophysis, a primitive meat-eater, & ends with Gastornis, a modern-style bird), but each dino is put in perspective ecologically & with its relatives (E.g. See the Norell quote); In other words, TW puts the AMNH's dinos into an evolutionary & ecological context, making it feel both personal & broad at the same time.
**My other gripe is a few weird bits in the writing (E.g. "These include[...]very un-crocodile-looking primitive crocodiles"). Otherwise, TW is very well-written, as you can see in the Norell quote.
Quoting Norell: "The specimen consists of a Velociraptor mongoliensis entangled with a Protoceratops andrewsi specimen. Protoceratops (see p.190) is an herbivorous dinosaur, and as an adult would have been about the size of a large pig. It was probably the ecological equivalent of the sheep that are predated on by wolves in Mongolia's rural ecosystem today. Because of the nature of preservation in these beds (see Citipati, p.100), there is strong evidence that they were buried alive. What is preserved in this instance is an adult Velociraptor seemingly in combat with a Protoceratops. The large raptorial claw is embedded in an area that would have covered the important blood vessels feeding the head of Protoceratops. Velociraptor's right arm is in its mouth, and the hand with its sharp talons is tearing the face while the forearm is being crushed. Without doubt this is the smoking gun of a predation event that happened about 80 million years ago. Velociraptor has several characteristics that provide evidence of its close affinity to birds. It has a wishbone (see p.227), large hollow air sinuses in its skull, a swivel wrist, an S-shaped neck, and three primary toes on the foot that all face forward."