Vertebrate palaeontology

Bibliographic Information

Vertebrate palaeontology

Michael J. Benton

Blakwell Science, 2000

2nd ed

  • : pbk

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Note

First edition published in 1990 by Unwin Hyman

Includes index

Bibliography: p. [409]-435

"Cover and chapter opening illustrations drawn by John Sibbick" -- t.p. verso

Description and Table of Contents

Description

The story of the evolution of the vertebrates, the animals with backbones, is fascinating. There is currently an explosion of new research ideas in the field - the closest fossil relatives of the vertebrates, dramatic new fish specimens unlike anything now living, the adaptations required for the move on to land, the relationships of the early amphibians and reptiles, the origins and biology of the dinosaurs, the role of mass extinction in vertebrate evolution, new Mesozoic birds, the earliest mammals, ecology and mammalian diversification, the origins and evolution of human beings. This book presents a complete outline of the history of the vertebrates, based on the latest studies by palaeontologists around the world. The work is international in scope, and new material included here for the first time come from North and South America, Australia, Europe, China, Africa, and Russia. A key aim of the book is to show how vertebrate palaeontologists obtain their information. There is an illustrated account of how to dig up a dinosaur, and how to interpret the bones. In addition, detailed case studies are presented, which show how palaeontologists study taphonomy, exceptional preservation, form and function of bizarre animals, and reconstruct phylogeny from cladistic analyses of morphological and molecular data. The new edition is extensively revised, and there is a great deal of new material based on work in the 1990s. There is a new chapter on how to study fossil vertebrates. A further major change is that more emphasis has been given to the cladograms. They are set apart from the body of the text, and full lists of diagnostic characters are now given. The book is designed for palaeontology courses in biology and geology departments. It is also aimed at the enthusiast who wants to experience the real flavour of how leading palaeontologists design their research programmes and carry out multidisciplinary studies of ancient vertebrates. The book has a strong phylogenetic focus, and this makes it an up-to-date source of the latest broad-scale systematic data on vertebrate evolution.

Table of Contents

1. Vertebrate Origins2. How To Study Fossil Vertebrates3. Early Fishes4. The Early Tetrapods And Amphibians5. The Evolution Of Early Amniotes6. Reptiles Of The Triassic7. The Evolution Of Fishes After The Devonian8. The Age Of Dinosaurs9. The Birds10. The Mammals11. Human EvolutionAppendix: Classification Of The VertebratesGlossaryReferencesIndex

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Details
  • NCID
    BA48503398
  • ISBN
    • 0632056142
  • Country Code
    uk
  • Title Language Code
    eng
  • Text Language Code
    eng
  • Place of Publication
    London
  • Pages/Volumes
    xii, 452 p.
  • Size
    25 cm
  • Classification
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