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| View Larger Image | Thunder-Lizards: The Sauropodomorph Dinosaurs (Life of the Past) | Hardcoverby Virginia Tidwell (Editor), Kenneth Carpenter (Editor)
| List Price: | $59.95 | | Price: | $53.31 | | You Save: | $6.64 (11%) | | | Available: | Usually ships in 24 hours |
| | Binding: | Hardcover | | Publisher: | Indiana University Press | | Page Count: | 512 Pages | | Publication Date: | July 20, 2005 | | Sales Rank: | 1,139,600st |
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EDITORIAL REVIEWS | Product Description The large, quadrupedal herbivores known as sauropods were widespread around the planet from the Jurassic to the end of the Cretaceous. With the longest necks and tails of all of the dinosaurs, some sauropods were 40 meters in length and weighed upwards of 100,000 kilograms, more than 20 tons. The popular image of these lumbering giants, placidly consuming ferns has been greatly revised in recent years. New discoveries and new theories about behavior and physiology have continued to enrich the study of these remarkable beasts. This book presents 21 new studies of the sauropods. The book is organized into four parts. The first part looks at some sauropods old and new, the second at juvenile and adult specimens and ontogenetic variation within species. Part three concerns morphology and biomechanics, while part four takes up issues of biogeography. The contributors are Sebastián Apesteguía, Malcolm W. Bedell, Jr., David S. Berman, Matthew F. Bonnan, Kenneth Carpenter, Sankar Chatterjee, Rodolfo A. Coria, Fabio M. Dalla Vecchia, John Foster, Peter M. Galton, Jacques van Heerden, Takehito Ikejiri, Jean Le Loeuff, D. M. Mohabey, John S. McIntosh, J. Michael Parrish, Bruce M. Rothschild, Leonardo Salgado, Steven W. Salisbury, Allen Shaw, Kenneth Stadtman, Kent A. Stevens, Virginia Tidwell, David Trexler, Ray Wilhite, Adam M. Yates, and Zhong Zheng. |
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| The Carnivorous Dinosaurs (Life of the Past) by Kenneth Carpenter (Editor)
The meat-eating dinosaurs, or Theropoda, include some of the fiercest predators that ever lived. Some of the group’s members survive to this day—as birds. The theropod/bird connection has been explored in several recent works, but this book presents 17 papers on a variety of other topics. It is organized into three parts. Part I explores morphological details that are important for understanding theropod systematics. Part II focuses on specific regions of theropod anatomy and biomechanics....
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| The Armored Dinosaurs (Life of the Past) by Kenneth Carpenter (Editor)
The incredible diversity of armored dinosaurs has only recently been appreciated, owing to the discovery of new stegosaurs in the Jurassic of China and the United States, and of new ankylosaurs from the Lower Cretaceous of North America. These discoveries have been the impetus in recent years for renewed interest in thyreophorans, until recently the least studied of the dinosaurs.
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| Horns and Beaks: Ceratopsian and Ornithopod Dinosaurs (Life of the Past) by Kenneth Carpenter (Editor)
Horns and Beaks completes Ken Carpenter’s series on the major dinosaur types. As with his volumes on armored, carnivorous, and sauropodomorph dinosaurs, this book collects original and new information, reflecting the latest discoveries and research on these two groups of animals. The Ornithopods include Iguanodon, one of the first dinosaurs ever discovered and analyzed, and perhaps the most common and best-documented group, the hadrosaurs or "duckbilled dinosaurs." The Ceratopsians include...
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| The Sauropods: Evolution and Paleobiology by Kristina Curry Rogers (Editor), Jeffrey Wilson (Editor)
Sauropod dinosaurs were the largest animals ever to walk the earth, and they represent a substantial portion of vertebrate biomass and biodiversity during the Mesozoic Era. The story of sauropod evolution is told in an extensive fossil record of skeletons and footprints that span the globe and 150 million years of earth history. This generously illustrated volume is the first comprehensive scientific summary of sauropod evolution and paleobiology. The contributors explore sauropod anatomy,...
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| Jurassic West: The Dinosaurs of the Morrison Formation and Their World (Life of the Past) by John Foster (Author)
The famous bone beds of the Morrison Formation, whose rocks are exposed from Wyoming down through the red rock region of the American Southwest, have yielded one of the most complete pictures of any ancient vertebrate ecosystem in the world. After more than a century of exploration, the Morrison continues to yield new discoveries about a time so different from our own that it almost seems imaginary. Aimed at the general reader, Jurassic West tells the story of the life of this ...
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