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Rise of the Dragon: Readings from Nature on the Chinese Fossil Record
 
 
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Rise of the Dragon: Readings from Nature on the Chinese Fossil Record [Paperback]

Henry Gee (Editor)

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Book Description

November 1, 2001 0226284913 978-0226284910 1
Over the past decade, fossil finds from China have stunned the world, grabbing headlines and changing perceptions with a wealth of new discoveries. Many of these finds were first announced to English speakers in the journal Nature. Rise of the Dragon gathers together sixteen of these original reports, some augmented with commentaries originally published in Nature's "News and Views" section.

Perhaps the best known of these new Chinese fossils are the famous feathered dinosaurs from Liaoning Province, which may help end one of the most intense debates in paleontology—whether birds evolved from dinosaurs. But other finds have been just as spectacular, such as the minutely preserved (to the cellular level) animal embryos of the 670 million-year-old Duoshantuo phosphorites, or the world's oldest known fish, from the Chengjiang formation in southwestern Yunnan Province.

Rise of the Dragon makes descriptions and detailed discussions of these important finds available in one convenient volume for paleontologists and serious fossil fans.

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Editorial Reviews

About the Author

Henry Gee is a senior editor at Nature. He is the author of Before the Backbone: Views on the Origin of the Vertebrates and In Search of Deep Time: Beyond the Fossil Record to a New History of Life and the editor of Shaking the Tree: Readings from Nature in the History of Life, the last also published by the University of Chicago Press.

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More About the Author

Henry Gee (b. 1962) is a Senior Editor at Nature, the international weekly journal of science. His writing has appeared in magazines and newspapers around the world. He lists his recreations as playing blues organ, supporting Norwich City FC and falling asleep. His blog 'The End Of The Pier Show' continues to delight its three regular readers. He lives in Cromer, Norfolk, England, with his family and numerous pets.

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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
Phosphorites of the late Neoproterozoic (570 20 Myr BP) Doushantuo Formation, southern China, preserve an exceptional record of multicellular life from just before the Ediacaran radiation of macroscopic animals. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
equivocal apomorphies, pericardic cavity, archaic therians, integumentary filaments, cingular cuspules, cylindrical trochlea, derived therians, new symmetrodont mammal, succeeding molar, chinese triconodont mammal, other dromaeosaurids, peroneal process, postdentary trough, meckelian groove, alular digit, living therians, integumentary structures, major metacarpal, manual unguals, triconodont mammals, cranial vascular system, antorbital fossa, lower postcanines, pubic peduncle, obturator process
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Yixian Formation, Lower Cambrian, Conway Morris, Earth Sci, New York, Doushantuo Formation, Oxford Univ, Chinese Geol, Cretaceous of Mongolia, San Diego, Cambridge Univ, Middle Jurassic, Yale Univ, Acta Geol, Acta Palaeont, China Ocean, Geological Publishing House, Jurassic of China, National Geographic Society, National Geological Museum of China, Burgess Shale-type, California Press, Encyclopedia of Dinosaurs, Fish Canyon Sanidine, Inner Mongolia
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