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Bringing Fossils To Life: An Introduction To Paleobiology

Bringing Fossils To Life: An Introduction To Paleobiology

Bringing Fossils To Life: An Introduction To Paleobiology

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Manufacturer: McGraw-Hill Science/Engineering/Math
Author: Donald Prothero
Binding: Paperback
Publication Date: 2003-05-08
Publisher: McGraw-Hill Science/Engineering/Math
Label: McGraw-Hill Science/Engineering/Math
Number Of Pages: 512
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Editorial Review:
This is the first text to combine both paleontology and paleobiology. Traditional textbooks treat these separately, despite the recent trend to combine them in teaching. It bridges the gap between purely theoretical paleobiology and purely descriptive invertebrate paleontology books. The text is targeted at undergraduate geology and biology majors, with the emphasis on organisms, rather than dead objects to be described and catalogued. Current ideas from modern biology, ecology, population genetics, and many other concepts will be applied to the study of the fossil record.
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Customer Reviews
Average Customer Rating: 4.5

The intro paleontology book your grandpappy wished for 2008-06-10
In the late Paleocene, when I took upper division paleontology, we used Clarkson's Invertebrate Paleontology and Evolution, which was very good. But in all honesty, it was a lovely grad student/lab instructor who made paleontology interesting and kept students motivated. Prothero does the same here with his words (rather than his figure!) since he's consulted over the years with those who matter most: his students.
I've read his EVOLUTION: WHY IT MATTERS and AFTER THE DINOSAURS and find Prothero's writing style easy to digest. He also packages chapters efficiently. I picked up an older and cheaper edition of this title and confirmed that his method is no fluke. If you can afford the price of the latest edition, it's probably worth it.


Interesting material, great pedagogy 2007-09-09
In my opinion, this book provides a great introduction to the study of paleobiology. It is an introductory book in the sense that it does not require any previous knowledge, but it is a serious textbook that would typically require more that just casual reading.

The first few chapters cover the basic material need to understand the history of life on Earth. It starts with fossilization and fossils, which provide the currently existing record of life in the past. The next few chapters cover the concepts of species, cladistics and evolution. There are also chapters on functional morphology which is very important when trying to determine how animals lived by studying their fossils and paleoecology which is important to understanding how they interacted. This material provides the backbone for the rest of the book. I thought it was really well done and was definitely written by someone that wanted the reader to understand the material.

The next several chapters cover the evolution of animals. It is broken up in terms of phyla, with one or more phyla being covered per chapter. The coverage is not excessively deep for any phyla, if it were the book would be far too large.

The final two chapters were quite interesting. One covered the fossil evidence for animal behavior. The other covered the evolution of plants. Since the evolution of plants seems to be ignored in most books on evolution, I found this to be particularly nice.

There is no coverage of human evolution. I thought this was a good choice because there are so many other resources for this topic.

In addition to being a good book on paleobiology, I thought this was a good book on science in general. Rather than just presenting the material as a list of facts, the book gives a nice emphasis on why various things are believed to be true. I think this makes the material more interesting, it certainly gives the reader more reason to believe it other than because it is in a book. It also gives a better sense of what science is and how it is done. If there is any downside it is that a fair amount of space is spent covering ideas that have been discredited.

To summarize, I thought this was a great book that was truly intended to teach the subject.



Bringing Fossils to Life by D. Prothero 2003-08-09
I have not read this book yet (for my fall class in college), but I am happy with the professional courtesy that I received during shipment. I would buy books from the seller again. The book description was accurate and as expected for a used text book. I am happy with my purchase. Thank you.


not bad at all 2003-05-20
Like a fellow reviewer, I also took the a class from Don Prothero (using this book, obviously) at Caltech, and I actually did hear his voice reading the book back at us. The book is fairly detailed for a general class, while still maintaining excellent readability, since Don uses a very conversational tone. It should be enough for an undergraduate interested in the subject. He also includes classic research experiments along with the descriptive passages and offers rare insight into what paleontologists do besides looking at specimens.

For the advanced specialist in geobiology, something more detailed would probably be necessary, but if you're simply interested in knowing about fossils and paleontology theory, this book is not bad at all.


You could not find a better book 2001-02-21
This book has got to be one of the finest introductory paleontonlogy books on the market. I actually took Paleontology class from Don Prothero and found that this book was an excellent guide and very well written. At times I could hear his vocie reading the chapters to me. Thre are considerable references to outside sources and Don does an excellent job of removing many of the rote memorization that introductory books of this type often have. Some sections appear to be dwelled on for much longer than seems necessary, but about a week later you find yourself realizing that those subjects really are deserving of the in depth coverage they recieve. I cannot heap enough praise on this book.




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