Survivors: The Animals and Plants that Time has Left Behind
By (Author) Richard Fortey
HarperCollins Publishers
HarperPress
4th December 2012
13th September 2012
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
Popular science
Evolution
578
Paperback
352
Width 129mm, Height 198mm, Spine 22mm
280g
An awe-inspiring journey through the eons and across the globe in search of visible traces of evolution in the living creatures that have survived from earlier times.
In this groundbreaking book, prize-winning science writer Richard Fortey chronicles lifes history not through the fossil record, but through the stories of organisms that have survived, almost unchanged, through geological time.
Fortey takes us on a journey to ancient worlds: on a moonlit beach in Delaware where the horseshoe crab shuffles its way through a violent romance, we catch a glimpse of life 450 million years ago. Along a stretch of Australian coastline, we bear witness to the sights and sounds that would have greeted a Precambrian dawn. And, in the dense rainforests of New Zealand, where the secretive velvet worm burrows into the rotting timber of the jungle floor, we marvel at a living fossil which has survived unchanged since before the break-up of Gondwana, the ancient supercontinent, over 150 million years ago.
Written with Forteys customary sparkle and gusto, this wonderfully engrossing exploration of the worlds oldest flora and fauna brilliantly combines the best science writing about the origins of life with an explorers sense of adventure and a poets wonder at the natural world.
I was thrilled by Survivors. Reading Richard Fortey is always pure pleasure. Bill Bryson
Fortey has a unique way with the most humble of lifeforms and an infectious curiosity that can slide into near rapture Evening Standard
An epic, globe-circling scientific adventure story intriguing. Entertaining, accessible and intensely stimulating and highly recommended Sunday Times
A great story, and no one is better equipped than Fortey to tell it. Excellent natural history Guardian
Unequivocally my book of the year, a happy mix of global travel, high art and very low life Tim Radford, Books of the Year, Guardian
An elegant celebration TLS
Richard Fortey retired from his position as senior palaeontologist at the Natural History Museum in 2006. His previous books include the critically acclaimed Life: An Unauthorized Biography, shortlisted for the Rhne-Poulenc Prize in 1998, Trilobite! Eyewitness to Evolution, shortlisted for the Samuel Johnson Prize in 2001, The Hidden Landscape, which won the Natural World Book of the Year in 1993 and Fossils - A Key to the Past which is now in its third edition. He also won the Lewis Thomas Prize for Science Writing in 2003. He was Collier Professor for the Public Understanding of Science in 2002, has been elected to be President of the Geological Society of London for its bicentennial year of 2007, and is a member of the Royal Society. His latest book is Dry Store Room no 1 The Secret Life of the Natural History Museum.