Walking on Eggs: Discovering Eggs and Embryos of Giant Dinosaurs

Walking on Eggs: Discovering Eggs and Embryos of Giant Dinosaurs

by LuisM.Chiappe (Author), Lowell Dingus (Author)

Synopsis

Doctors Chiappe and Dingus led the research team which, on a field trip to the Patagonian desert in South America in 1997, came across an extraordinary palaeontological coup: the discovery of a kind of dinosaur "maternity ward", a field of eggs 80 million years old, some of which were still unhatched. Then, on a later expedition, they found a nearly complete skeleton of a completely new species of dinosaur a 20-foot predator they named Aucasaurus, after Auca Maheuvo, the name they had given the site. "Walking on Eggs" is not just the account of how these miraculous finds were made. Interweaving chapters featuring field adventures and dinosaur-collecting with others dealing with the history, processes and scientific models involved in solving the mysteries surrounding this spectacular site and its ancient inhabitants, the book is also about the nature of scientific discovery and how such finds contribute to knowledge.

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More Information

Format: Hardcover
Pages: 208
Edition: First Edition
Publisher: Little, Brown & Company
Published: 28 Jun 2001

ISBN 10: 0316854891
ISBN 13: 9780316854894

Media Reviews
Some while down the line from Jurassic Park, the dinosaur bandwagon still rumbles on. Fortunately this is a one of the better examples of its kind: An account of an extraordinary palaeontological coup in 1997 - the discovery of a kind of saurian maternity ward, a field of eggs 80m years old, some of which were still unhatched. Then, on a later expedition, a completely new species of dinosaur was discovered, since named Aucasaurus. This is the account of those genuinely exciting finds, their significance to palaentology and the process and scientific models used to solve the mysteries surrounding the unearthings. The authors work in a prestigious department in the LA Natural History Museum - which may make some fear their book will be as dry as the bones they found. In fact, this is not the case at all: Chiappe and Dingus keep their authoritative account reasonably short and accessible to the average reader. As an account of scientific discovery this could hardly be bettered. For dinosaur enthusiasts it all provides an opportunity to catch up on the latest, amazing discoveries.
Author Bio
Luis Chiappe and Lowell Dingus work as Associate Curator and Research Associate respectively in the Department of Vertebrate Palaeontology at the Natural History Museum in Los Angeles, California.