The Crucible of Creation: The Burgess Shale and the Rise of Animals

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The Crucible of Creation: The Burgess Shale and the Rise of Animals Author: Format: Paperback / softback First Published: Published By: Oxford University Press
string(3) "272"
Pages: 272 Illustrations and other contents: 4 colour plates, halftones, line drawings Language: English ISBN: 9780192862020 Categories: , ,

‘tells a great story and manages to be informative at all levels. Conway Morris has a collector’s eye for the sort of entertaining yet informative snippets that keep readers on their toes.’ New Scientist Located in the west of Canada, the Burgess Shale contains a unique collection of fossil remains, and has become an icon for those studying the history of life. This remarkable book takes us on a fresh journey back in time through the Burgess Shale and its astonishing collection of pre-Cambrian creatures. In an entertaining and readable style, Simon Conway Morris paints a vivid picture of the critical period which saw the diversification of all the major animal groups, and takes a controversial stance on current evolutionary theories that is sure to provoke much interest and debate. ‘It is less bleak in its assessment of life on earth and it is spiritually uplifting, rather than dry and mechanistic as some would have us believe’ THES ‘The centerpiece of The Crucible of Creation is a description, authoritative and readable, of the animals themselves. New York Times Book Review

Weight0.293 kg
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'tells a great story and manages to be informative at all levels. * New Scientist * spiritually uplifting * THES * The centerpiece of The Crucible of Creation is a descripion, authoritative and readable, of the animals themselves * New York Times Book Review *

Author Biography

Simon Conway Morris is Professor of Palaeontology in the Department of Earth Sciences at Cambridge. He was one of the team of three scientists who uncovered many of the fossils and worked on the interpretation of the Burgess Shale in the 1970s, for which work Stephen Jay Gould said "Palaeontology has no Nobel prizes though I would unhesitatingly award the first to Whittington, Briggs, and Conway Morris. He was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society in 1990, and presented the Royal Institution Christmas Lectures in 1996. His search for fossils has taken him all over the world, including China, Mongolia, Australia, and Greenland.