3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Go to the AMNH without setting foot outside your home!, December 10, 1996
By A Customer
This review is from: Discovering Dinosaurs: in the American Museum of Natural History (Hardcover)
Even if you think you have no interest whatsoever in
dinosaurs, you can still enjoy Discovering Dinosaurs in the
American Museum of Natural History. Reading this book rivals
taking an actual trip to the museum's splendid dinosaur halls.
Norell, Gaffney, and Dingus present the first half of the book
in question-answer format and dedicate the second half to AMNH
specimens and expeditions. Questions range from the simple
(What are dinosaurs?) to the complicated (How did nonavian
dinosaurs become extinct?) to the unusual (How did dinosaurs
mate?). You can poke in a coprolite (fossilized dung) to find
what dinosaurs ate or see how workers mount colossal
skeletons. Along with answers and information, you get a bonus
prize: the incredible illustrations of Erwin Christman. Few
contemporary artists can compete with the beauty and accuracy
of Christman's nearly century-old work. A drawing or
photograph graces nearly every page of Discovering Dinosaurs.
Photographs depict paleontology's past, specimens of dinosaurs
and of animals that lived at the same time as them,
trackways, and current assignments. The book includes the
stunning results of the AMNH Gobi expeditions of 1991-1995:
beautifully preserved skeletons of oviraptors. Whether you
want to examine the texture of dinosaur skin or peer into a
tyrannosaur's mouth, Discovering Dinosaurs gets two claws
up--20 feet up!
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