Walking on Eggs: The Astonishing Discovery of Thousands of Dinosaur Eggs in the Badlands of Patagonia

Walking on Eggs: The Astonishing Discovery of Thousands of Dinosaur Eggs in the Badlands of Patagonia
ISBN-10
0743212118
ISBN-13
9780743212113
Category
Science / Paleontology
Pages
219
Language
English
Published
2001
Publisher
Scribner
Authors
Lowell Dingus, Luis M. Chiappe

Description

"Walking on Eggs" is the riveting inside story behind one of the most significant paleontological discoveries in history. In November 1997, Luis M. Chiappe and Lowell Dingus led an elite team of paleontologists and geologists into the rugged and desolate badlands of Argentina. Unsure of what they would find, Chiappe and Dingus knew that this region had produced many spectacular specimens of dinosaurs and fossil birds over the last century. Nothing could have prepared them, however, for the headline-grabbing discovery they were about to make: a massive dinosaur nesting ground covering more than a square mile and littered with tens of thousands of large, unhatched dinosaur eggs. Containing the first fossils of embryonic dinosaur skin ever found, the eggs gave rise to a host of mysteries. What species laid the eggs, and when? How were they preserved? And most intriguingly, what ancient catastrophe -- deeply rooted more than 70 million years in the past -- prevented them from hatching?

In clear, comprehensible language, Chiappe and Dingus frame their scientific investigations within the context of a gripping detective story, illustrating how they used paleontological and geological evidence to establish the identity and age of the eggs, as well as how they established the cause of death. Chiappe and Dingus also recount a return trip to the badlands in 1999 in which they set out to learn more about dinosaur social and reproductive behavior. Their investigations once again unearthed a key piece of the historic puzzle: the bones of a twenty-foot predatory, carnivorous dinosaur.

As they decipher the evidence -- divining origins, discovering identities, and pinpointing possiblecauses of extinction -- Chiappe and Dingus interweave their field adventures with chapters illuminating the crucial precedents behind their groundbreaking work. Complementing the text are beautiful hand-drawn reproductions of what the dinosaurs and their landscape might have looked like, created by an artist who joined the expedition team in Patagonia. Infused with passion and an infectious sense of awe, "Walking on Eggs" illustrates the ups and downs of the scientific process and invites dinosaur lovers of all ages to experience the exhilarating sense of discovery.

Similar books

  • Human Skeletal Remains: Excavation, Analysis, Interpretation
    By Douglas H. Ubelaker

    Ubelaker's awareness of problems and inadequacies in the excavation procedures and preservation of osteological remains spurred him to publish this book.

  • Dinosaurs Under the Big Sky
    By John R. Horner

    Dinosaurs Under the Big Sky describes the different species of dinosaurs known to have lived in Montana and explains the scientific importance of their bones and skeletons. Photographs and hundreds...

  • The Great Dinosaur Discoveries
    By Darren Naish

    This elegantly illustrated volume is a journey through more than two centuries of remarkable discovery. Books on dinosaurs are usually arranged by classification or epoch, but this unique work tells...

  • Fossils: The Evolution and Extinction of Species
    By Niles Eldredge

    One of the leading paleontologists of our time, examines what the fossilized remains of earth's ancient flora and fauna reveal about mass extinction and the origin of the species, and...

  • Bringing Fossils To Life: An Introduction To Paleobiology
    By Donald R. Prothero

    This is the first text to combine both paleontology and paleobiology. Traditional textbooks treat these separately, despite the recent trend to combine them in teaching. It bridges the gap between...

  • Carbon Dates: A Day by Day Almanac of Paleo Anniversaries and Dino Events
    By Donald F. Glut

    This unique calendrically ordered book provides fascinating tidbits of information on significant events in the world of paleontology and happenings related to prehistoric life. The reader can look under any...

  • Paleoimagery: The Evolution of Dinosaurs in Art
    By Allen A. Debus, Diane E. Debus

    Other than seeing them in popular movies such as Jurassic Park, how do people today know what dinosaurs and other prehistoric animals looked like? Only their fossils remain, but...

  • Principles of Invertebrate Paleontology
    By Robert Rakes Shrock, William Henry Twenhofel

    Protozoa; Porifera; Coelenterata; Ctenophora; Worm phyla; Annelida; Bryozoa; Polyzoa; Phoronida; Brachiopoda; Mollusca; Annelida; Onychophora; Arthopoda; Echinoderma; Hemichordata; Conodontophoridia.

  • Palaeozoic Palaeobotany of Great Britain
    By C.J. Cleal, B.A. Thomas

    This volume of the GCR series, one of two dealing with palaeobotany, covers the first 200 million years of the history of land plant evolution, as represented by the palaeobotany...