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DINOSAURS WITHOUT BONES

Anthony J. Martin

Dinosaur Lives Revealed by their Trace Fossils

CSI meets Jurassic Park in a fascinating, revelatory look at Dinosaur lives and their world through the millions-of-years-old clues they left behind.
What if we woke up one morning and all of the dinosaur bones in the world were gone? How would we know these iconic animals had a 165-million-year history on earth, and had adapted to all land-based environ- ments from pole to pole? What clues would be left to discern not only their presence, but also to learn about their sex lives, raising of young, social lives, combat, and who ate who? What would it take for us to know how fast dinosaurs moved, whether they lived underground, climbed trees, or went for a swim? Welcome to the world of ichnology, the study of traces and trace fossils such as tracks, trails, burrows, nests, toothmarks, and other vestiges of behavior and how, through these remarkable clues, we can explore and intuit the rich and complicated lives of dinosaurs. With a unique, detective-like approach, interpreting the forensic clues of these long-extinct animals that leave a much richer legacy than bones, Martin brings the wild world of the Mesozoic to life for the 21st century reader. Anthony J. Martin is a professor at Emory University, a paleontologist, geologist, and one of the world?s most accomplished ichnologists. He is the co-discoverer of the first known burrowing dinosaur, found the oldest dinosaur burrows in the geologic record, and documented the best assemblage of polar-dinosaur tracks in the Southern Hemisphere. He is the author of two textbooks on dinosaurs and lives in Atlanta, GA.
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Published 2014-03-01 by Pegasus

Comments

Martin’s greatest talent may be in evoking the lost world brought to light by dinosaur traces. Ichnology is a science of absence, one that re-creates an entire ecosystem out of a few dimples in some rocks. Martin is a skilled tracker and a worthy guide.

The energy behind Martin’s “what if” saurian life scenarios is no mere distraction; his science is solid and his descriptions of the current state of classification and knowledge are clear, up to date, and detailed. The books is great fun for anyone looking to revive their childhood dinosaur obsessions.

Walk into almost any dinosaur exhibit and you'll be overwhelmed by osteology. Bones upon bones, in the form of casts or the authentic petrified articles, will be laid out and reconstructed to represent the strange creatures that once ruled the Earth. But even in the most active poses, skeletons can seem inert—more like frozen sculptures than the moving parts of animals that were once alive. Fortunately for us, dinosaurs left us far more than just their bones: