The 206 contributors have excellent credentials and have written 328 articles that cover all areas of paleontology, including 79 biographies for individuals such as Jean Agassiz, Charles Darwin, and Louis Leakey. The articles are extremely well written, with line drawings, photographs, charts, and other illustrative matter, plus a list of works cited and a further reading list. To locate information about a particular species, one will need to use the comprehensive taxonomic and general indexes. Finding information about Ostracodas, for example, requires checking the taxonomic index, where the researcher would be directed to the entry Crustaceans. Many of the taxa that are listed as entries in the encyclopedia describe living species, discuss fossil species, and show how that species has evolved. The same is true when a particular anatomical feature is discussed, showing the relationships between the present and the past.
The biographies are fairly comprehensive, outlining not only the paleontological connection of the individual's work but also related fields of study. For anyone who wants to approach paleontology from the thematic route, an outline is presented, providing an approach through 12 broad topics, such as "Biology and Behavior," "Morphology," and "Regional Overviews."
This is an excellent work, recommended for all libraries from high school to academic. It is pleasing to the eye, well bound, authoritative, and highly readable. Although the set is somewhat expensive for smaller libraries, it should be recognized that the discipline of paleontology is not fast changing, making this set a standard reference source for many years without going out of date.
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Great breadth and depth, suited for paleo fanatics and college libraries,
This review is from: Encyclopedia of Paleontology 2 Volume set (Hardcover)
This is 1400+ pages packed with information on a myriad of topics in paleontology, with articles about notable paleontologists, prehistoric environments and habitats, climate, geology, biology, morphology, and various groups of organisms. You won't find full articles on individual species, but certain species can be found within chapters that cover a wider group such as a genus or family, for example. Or maybe not.
This set is not comprehensive. Instead, it is a rather large smattering of widely diverse articles -- and I suspect its creation was fully dependent on the whims and availability of its many contributing authors. No complaints from me, I enjoy reading any well written book on prehistoric life that isn't dino-centric. Now in the interest of full disclosure, I illustrated the Chelicerates chapter, and my illustration of coal forest chelicerates was selected for the cover of Volume One. I'd prefer that the entire encyclopedia focused on life in the coal forest...but perhaps that's not relevant to this review! With a hefty price tag of nearly $400 dollars, or roughly half that amount if purchased at Amazon's bargain and used book sources, I can't imagine anyone other than total paleo fanatics, the very wealthy, or college libraries purchasing this book. It would surely be the gift of a lifetime for a student with a deep interest in prehistoric life.
1 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
the most comprehensive encyclopedia on paleontology,
This review is from: Encyclopedia of Paleontology 2 Volume set (Hardcover)
undoubtly a most important scientific work.very rarely i encountered such a book-very clear explanation -cohen
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