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Good Reads  Palaeontology  Palaeozoology & Extinctions

The Future of Dinosaurs What We Don't Know, What We Can, and What We'll Never Know

Popular Science
By: David Hone(Author)
260 pages, 8 plates with colour photos; b/w photos, b/w illustrations
The Future of Dinosaurs
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  • The Future of Dinosaurs ISBN: 9781473692244 Hardback Mar 2022 Not in stock: Usually dispatched within 5 days
    £25.00
    #252812
  • The Future of Dinosaurs ISBN: 9781473692282 Paperback Jun 2024 Availability uncertain: order now to get this when available
    £12.99
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About this book

Ever since we first started discovering dinosaurs in the early-1800s, our obsession for uncovering everything about these creatures has been insatiable. Each generation has made huge strides in trying to better our understanding of these animals and in the past twenty years, we have made more discoveries than in the previous two hundred.

There have been extraordinary advances in palaeontological methods and ever more dinosaur fossils promise a landslide of new data and huge leaps forward in our understanding of these incredible animals. Over time, we have been bale to look at the sizes and shapes of bones, we have identified patches of fossil skin, we have looked at footprints and bite marks and we've calculated mass estimates and walking speeds.

With surprisingly little data to work from, we can put together a picture of an animal that has been extinct for a million human lifetimes. But for all our technological advances, and two centuries of new data and ideas, there is stull much more we don't know. What parasites and diseases afflicted them? How did they communicate? Did they climb trees? How many species were there?

In The Future of Dinosaurs, palaeontologist David Hone looks at the recent strides in scientific research and the advanced knowledge we've gathered in recent years, as well as what we hope to learn in the future about these most fascinating of extinct creatures.

Published in the US by Princeton University Press as How Fast Did T. Rex Run? Unsolved Questions from the Frontiers of Dinosaur Science.

Customer Reviews

Biography

Dr David Hone is a palaeontologist, writer and lecturer at Queen Mary, University of London. His research focuses on the behaviour and ecology of the dinosaurs and their flying relatives, the pterosaurs. He writes about dinosaurs for the Guardian, the Telegraph, National Geographic and the Huffington Post.

Popular Science
By: David Hone(Author)
260 pages, 8 plates with colour photos; b/w photos, b/w illustrations
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