4 years ago I suggested this to LYNX, they didn't
even bother to reply
Fred Ruhe
----- Original Message -----
Sent: Sunday, April 28, 2002 4:07
PM
Subject: del Hoyo's avian volumes
For those seeking a rather breath-taking
scholarly examination of all known post-K/T dinosaurs, I strongly recommend
the collaborative volumes published by Lynx Ediciones in Barcelona, all edited
by Josep del Hoyo, Andrew Elliott, and Jordi Sargatal as Handbook of the
birds of the world 1992 vol. 1, Ostrich to ducks, 696pp
1994 vol. 2, New World vultures to guineafowl, 638pp 1996 vol.
3, Hoatzin to auks, 752pp 1997 vol. 4, Sandgrouse to cuckoos,
664pp 1999 vol. 5, Barn-owls to hummingbirds, 762pp 2001
vol. 6, Mousebirds to hornbills, 589pp 2002 vol. 7, Jacamars to
woodpeckers, 600pp Used in conjunction with the Sibley volumes, one
encounters bibliographies making one's head spin with the realization of how
thorough they are, descriptive analyses by dinosaur scholars worldwide,
photographs and paintings...in short, volumes which present one with the
amazing diversity of the dinosaur clades which survived the K/T event(s). I
especially stress that the chapters on New/Old World vultures are inundated
with data easily adaptable (with imagination and, need I say, logic) to
certain late Cretaceous theropods re: behaviour systems, brooding strategies,
pack/flock hunting patterns, sexual size dimorphism, female ornamentation,
etc. Alas, the prices for each volume -- even when bought as an entire set
-- are prohibitive for those of us who, as independent scholars, struggle
month-to-month. However, if you do have the resources, then I would recommend
these as necessary components of dinosaur scholarship. As exciting as
unfolding pre-K/T discoveries are for all of us, it is time we also turn as
much attention to the dinosaur clades of every continent, as some of these
clades are, indeed, preserving the modular paradigms I cite above which
existed in other, now extinct theropod clades.
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