Douglas Palmer
Prehistoric Past Revealed
The Four Billion Year History of Life on Earth
176 pages, 8-1/2 x 11 inches, 153 color illustrations, 22 b/w photographs
December 2003, Not available in British Commonwealth, Europe; Include Canada;
Categories: History of Science; Earth Science; Paleontology; Ecology, Evolution, Environment
December 2003, Not available in British Commonwealth, Europe; Include Canada;
Categories: History of Science; Earth Science; Paleontology; Ecology, Evolution, Environment
"Loaded with photographs and illustrations, this book reads like the program of an elaborate museum exhibit. Images depict great fossil finds, maps, and time lines, and the text provides clear exposition about what these artifacts tell us about our past. . . . Human history comes to light as Palmer surveys internationally famous fossil sites."—Science News
Life on earth is now known to be an astonishing four billion years old. Yet as recently as two hundred years or so ago, much of world believed that all life was created in just six days. Over the past two centuries, the testimony of rocks has slowly revealed the Earth's deep prehistory and now scarcely a week passes without an important new discovery adding to our understanding of life's beginning and evolution. Written for a very wide audience, with an approachable text and many photographs and illustrations, Prehistoric Past Revealed tells the story of these discoveries. The book gives an overview history of life on Earth, including the most up-to-date research and discoveries from around the world, as it covers a wide range of fascinating topics—the fossil record, dinosaurs, extinction events, our earliest human ancestors, global environments, climate change—in a highly accessible format.
Using timelines, diagrams, sidebar discussions, and breaking down complex ideas into digestible topics, Palmer shows how it has been possible to recover the story of life from the petrified remains of shells and bones scattered through rock strata. He takes us from the present day gradually back into the "terra incognita" of the deep past with its extinct life forms, tracing human ancestry back by centering his discussion around internationally famous fossil sites. Each site reveals another episode in the history of life, as Palmer tells how the environment and life of the time have been reconstructed from its rocks and fossil remains. As it reveals the inner secrets of the Earth, Prehistoric Past Revealed also shows how these discoveries have irrevocably changed our worldview.
Using timelines, diagrams, sidebar discussions, and breaking down complex ideas into digestible topics, Palmer shows how it has been possible to recover the story of life from the petrified remains of shells and bones scattered through rock strata. He takes us from the present day gradually back into the "terra incognita" of the deep past with its extinct life forms, tracing human ancestry back by centering his discussion around internationally famous fossil sites. Each site reveals another episode in the history of life, as Palmer tells how the environment and life of the time have been reconstructed from its rocks and fossil remains. As it reveals the inner secrets of the Earth, Prehistoric Past Revealed also shows how these discoveries have irrevocably changed our worldview.
Maps of Time: An Introduction to Big History, by David Christian
Microcosmos: Four Billion Years of Microbial Evolution, by Lynn Margulis and Dorion Sagan
Discovering Dinosaurs: Evolution, Extinction, and the Lessons of Prehistory, Expanded and Updated, by Mark Norell, Lowell Dingus, and Eugene Gaffney
Beasts of Eden: Walking Whales, Dawn Horses, and Other Enigmas of Mammal Evolution, by David Rains Wallace
Microcosmos: Four Billion Years of Microbial Evolution, by Lynn Margulis and Dorion Sagan
Discovering Dinosaurs: Evolution, Extinction, and the Lessons of Prehistory, Expanded and Updated, by Mark Norell, Lowell Dingus, and Eugene Gaffney
Beasts of Eden: Walking Whales, Dawn Horses, and Other Enigmas of Mammal Evolution, by David Rains Wallace











