Extinction And Evolution: What Fossils Reveal About ...

Item Information
Item#: 9780228101871
Author Eldredge, Niles
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"A splendidly illustrated and thoughtfully constructed account of one of the greatest ideas ever conceived by the human mind -- evolution."
--Donald C. Johanson, Founder of the Institute of Human Origins, and author of From Lucy to Language

"Splendid photographs, vivid language and concise text: a great read."
--Nature

"The amount of evolutionary ground covered in the relatively short text, and the clarity with which it's laid out for the benefit of the reader, are exemplary."
--Reports of the National Center for Science Education

Extinction and Evolution recounts the research of paleontologist Niles Eldredge, whose discoveries overturned Charles Darwin's theory of evolution as a slow and inevitable process. In his 1859 treatise On the Origin of Species, Darwin posited that evolutionary changes happen very slowly over millions of years. Eldredge's work, however, disproved the accepted Darwinian view, proving instead that significant changes occurred after a mass extinction event.

Eldredge's groundbreaking work is now accepted as the definitive statement of how life evolved on Earth. This book chronicles how Eldredge made his discoveries and traces the history of life through the lenses of paleontology, geology, ecology, anthropology, biology, genetics, zoology, mammalogy, herpetology, entomology and botany. Remaining rigorously accurate, the text is accessible, engaging and free of jargon.

Extinction and Evolution features 160 beautiful color plates (14 of which are new to this edition) that bridge the gap between science and art, and show more than 200 different fossil specimens, including photographs of some of the most significant fossil discoveries of recent years.



Table of Contents

Contents

Introduction by Carl Zimmer
Chapter 1. The Past as Prologue
Chapter 2. Adaptation
Chapter 3. Origin of Species
Chapter 4. Human Evolution
Chapter 5. Living Fossils
Chapter 6. Extinction
Chapter 7. Macroevolution
Epilogue. Old and New Pictures
Annotated Bibliography
Acknowledgments
Index



Review Quotes
Utilizing beautiful photos from the fossil record, Extinction and Evolution: What Fossils Tell Us About the History of Life takes us on a journey of how life has both changed and stabilized throughout time. A wide range of adults and older children would enjoy this book as it looks at extinction and evolution through various lenses: paleontology, biology, anthropology, genetics, and many more disciplines. Author Niles Eldredge has managed to take a complex topic and make it both interesting and easily digestible.

[Review of hardcover edition:] In a world where science is under assault from many angles, this wonderfully illustrated account of how evolution "joins nature in all its disparity into a single flow" is both timely and authoritative. Author Eldredge, a renowned paleontologist, explains in accessible prose how fossils reveal the hidden history of life in the earth's ancient past... Eldredge details how paleontology and genetics work together to reveal how the same evolutionary processes that drove the development of life over time continue to create the diversity of life on earth today. In seven chapters, he discusses the interconnected reasons for why life evolves, adapts, and dies out. Eldredge also covers key evolutionary concepts such as convergence (when natural selection produces similar organisms that nonetheless come from separate lineages), and he articulates why evolution explains the "pattern of similarity interlinking all forms of life." This book is richly illustrated with full-color photographs of fossils -- everything from trilobites to human ancestors -- and should appeal to both specialists as well as general readers.

[Review of hardcover edition:] Palaeontologist and acute thinker Niles Eldredge describes how life has evolved through geological time, partly through 160 beautiful colour plates depicting more than 200 specimens of fossil and living species. Among them are Eocypselus rowei, an extinct relative of swifts and hummingbirds that inhabited Wyoming some 52 million years ago, and the coelacanth Latimeria menadoensis, a 'living fossil' whose close relatives are nearly exclusively from the Palaeozoic and Mesozoic eras, 541 million to 66 million years ago. Most of the photographs are by the late, great Murray Alcosser. Eldredge emphasizes the existence of many species that resist evolutionary change for long periods (such as the brachio pod Mucrospirifer mucronatus), and the importance of mass extinctions in creating conditions that aid the emergence of new species. He argues convincingly that it is palaeontology, rather than evolutionary genetics, that allows us to recognize these points. Splendid photographs, vivid language and concise text: a great read.

[Review of hardcover edition:] Niles Eldredge has published a book in the Simpsonian tradition of evolutionary paleontology that is also indisputably "full of pictures of fossils"-- there are 160 color plates, the vast majority of which are beautiful photos of paleontological specimens. These pictures accompany seven concise chapters, plus an epilogue, that first bring the reader up to speed on the basics of evolutionary theory and then launch into a brief but admirably clear and informative exploration of some of the ways in which that theory has been augmented and modified by paleontologists over the past few decades of ongoing research... [including] an explanation of "punctuated equilibrium," the model of evolution that Eldredge developed with Gould beginning in the early 1970s. "Punk eek," as it's sometimes called, is the notion that species normally exist in a condition of stasis; most large-scale evolutionary change is associated with the formation of new species. Eldredge lays out the idea deftly and persuasively, drawing for his primary example on the trilobite fossils that first got him thinking about stasis during his graduate student days... The photos, most of which were taken by the late Murray Alcosser, add up to an important work of popular science in their own right: not only visually appealing, but also able to convey morphological information with an efficiency that makes them worth the proverbial thousands of words of written description. When the pictures are well integrated with the text, the book's presentational style works beautifully. In the chapter on human evolution, for example, the numerous photos of skulls and other bones of Homo erectus, Australopithecus afarensis, and other hominins do an excellent job of supporting the written discussion and bringing the reader almost literally face to face with the raw facts of the human fossil record... The amount of evolutionary ground covered in the relatively short text, and the clarity with which it's laid out for the benefit of the reader, are exemplary. I would recommend Extinction and Evolution to anyone who wants a quick, pithy, and authoritative, if sometimes idiosyncratic, introduction to some of the most important current thinking about evolution as revealed in the fossil record--or to anyone who appreciates excellent photos of interesting paleontological specimens.