Architects of Eternity: The New Science of Fossils
By (Author) Richard Corfield
Headline Publishing Group
Headline Review
14th February 2002
New edition
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
Rocks, minerals and fossils: general interest
Popular science
General and world history
History of science
560
352
Width 195mm, Height 131mm
Man has always been fascinated by fossils, but it is only relatively recently that we have begun to appreciate fully what they actually tell us about our world. Scattered across eternity, the fossil record is our only clue to the vast tracts of Deep Time which precede the advent of humankind. Predictably, the way fossils have been interpreted in the past often tells us more about the personalities involved than it does about prehistory. But it is through these personalities, from Othniel Marsh and Edward Drinker Cope battling it out in the wildernesses of nineteenth-century Wyoming right up to the bitter feuds of scientists today, that in the end we have come to learn extraordinary things about the real origins of life on earth.
Here's a rip-roaring trip through deep time with a fossil whizz ... If I was an editor of FHM, GQ or Esquire and I needed a palaeontolgy correspondent, I'd try to get Richard Corfield - Ted Nield, New Scientist
Richard Corfield is a Research Associate in the Department of Earth Sciences at Oxford University. He has been at the forefront of palaeontological innovation for the past decade. This is his first book.