Horns, Tusks, and Flippers

Horns, Tusks, and Flippers
Author: Donald R. Prothero
Publisher: JHU Press
Total Pages: 334
Release: 2002
Genre: Nature
ISBN: 9780801871351

Since the extinction of the dinosaurs, hoofed mammals have been the planet's dominant herbivores. Native to all continents except Australia and Antarctica, recent paleontological and biological discoveries have deepened understanding of their evolution. This text reveals their evolutionary history.

The Rise of Animals

The Rise of Animals
Author: Mikhail A. Fedonkin
Publisher: JHU Press
Total Pages: 352
Release: 2007
Genre: Science
ISBN: 9780801886799

An essential resource for paleontologists, biologists, geologists, and teachers, The Rise of Animals is the best single reference on one of earth's most significant events.

Lycopodiales XI.

Lycopodiales XI.
Author: S. J. Dijkstra
Publisher: Alexander Doweld
Total Pages: 174
Release: 1994
Genre: Lycopodiales, Fossil
ISBN: 9062991130

Predator-Prey Interactions in the Fossil Record

Predator-Prey Interactions in the Fossil Record
Author: Patricia H. Kelley
Publisher: Springer Science & Business Media
Total Pages: 488
Release: 2012-12-06
Genre: Science
ISBN: 146150161X

From the Foreword: "Predator-prey interactions are among the most significant of all organism-organism interactions....It will only be by compiling and evaluating data on predator-prey relations as they are recorded in the fossil record that we can hope to tease apart their role in the tangled web of evolutionary interaction over time. This volume, compiled by a group of expert specialists on the evidence of predator-prey interactions in the fossil record, is a pioneering effort to collate the information now accumulating in this important field. It will be a standard reference on which future study of one of the central dynamics of ecology as seen in the fossil record will be built." (Richard K. Bambach, Professor Emeritus, Virginia Tech, Associate of the Botanical Museum, Harvard University)

Origin and Early Evolution of the Metazoa

Origin and Early Evolution of the Metazoa
Author: Jere H. Lipps
Publisher: Springer Science & Business Media
Total Pages: 568
Release: 2013-11-21
Genre: Science
ISBN: 1489924272

Several years ago, we realized that the most prominent ideas that had been ex pressed about the origin and early evolution of the Metazoa seemed to have been developed chiefly by zoologists using evidence from modern species without reference to the fossil record. Paleontologists had, in fact, put forth their own ideas but the zoological and the paleontological evidence were about the problem, seldom considered together, especially by zoologists. We believed that the paleon tological documentation of the first Metazoa was too scattered, too obscure to Western readers, and much of it too recent to have been readily available to our colleagues in zoology. Whether or not that was entirely true, we thought that a single volume reviewing the fossil record of the earliest Metazoa would be useful to many in both paleontology and zoology, especially since so much new informa tion has been developed in the last few years. Some of this information has been summarized in general articles recently, but an overview of most of the field does not exist. We therefore organized this book in five parts so that the evidence could be placed in perspective and summarized and inferences made from it. Part I intro duces the previous hypotheses that have been proposed for the origin and early radiation of Metazoa. Part II consists of two summary chapters that set the sedi mentological, geochemical, and biological background to the known radiations of Metazoa.