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Recommended: "Note to Tyrannosaurus rex: Avoid the water"



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richellis@nyc.rr.com has recommended this article from 
The Christian Science Monitor's electronic edition.

Review in the Christian Science Monitor

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Headline:  Note to Tyrannosaurus rex: Avoid the water
Byline:  Lori Valigra 
Date: 10/16/2003

In "Sea Dragons" Richard Ellis gives us the first detailed look in 
nearly a century at the fiercest predators in the prehistoric oceans. 
Ellis is uniquely qualified to meet this huge task: A research 
associate at the American Museum of Natural History in New York, he is 
also an artist who draws his subjects as well as an accomplished author 
of books on the oceans and their inhabitants throughout history.

He admits that information about these sea beasts is sometimes skimpy, 
merely a few bone fragments in some cases. But he describes how 
paleontologists use comparative anatomy, which looks at characteristics 
of known sea creatures, to identify unknown species. As with the 
dinosaurs, scientists can piece together what the entire creature 
looked like and make educated deductions about their eating habits, 
mating practices, and methods of moving through the seas.

Although the book's tone is scientific, it's written in language 
accessible to the lay reader, and it's clearly a must read for any 
dinosaur aficionado.

Ellis's descriptions and rich illustrations spark curiosity, letting 
the reader realize, for instance, that the great white shark in "Jaws" 
was basically a wannabe menace. Carcharodon megalodon, a giant predator 
that resembled today's great white shark, was three times longer, an 
estimated 60 feet. Its teeth were six-inches long, three times as long 
as those of the great white.

Throughout the book Ellis brings up various theories about extinction. 
Some scientists, he notes, believe a massive asteroid that hit the 
Earth about 65 million years ago may have led to the extinction of the 
dinosaurs. Others think that climate change, large volcanic eruptions, 
and elimination of food sources were partly responsible. A more recent 
theory is that today's living birds actually are descended from 
terrestrial, feathered dinosaurs. This, writes Ellis, means that 
dinosaurs are not extinct at all.

As for the marine reptiles, Ellis says it is hard to imagine why they 
did not endure, as fossil evidence suggests they were numerous, 
efficient, and diversified. Extinctions of animals can be caused by a 
combination of factors that work together but remain little understood. 
They include global change as continents slid about, mountains were 
pushed up, and oceans cooled, warmed, dried up, or were formed once 
again. Ellis says the watery climate may have changed in such a way 
that only the warm-blooded mammals could survive. But since little is 
known about the primary prey of the large marine reptiles, the cause of 
their extinction remains a mystery.

The only extinctions we truly understand, Ellis concludes, are the ones 
we ourselves engineered, such as the dodo, passenger pigeon, and 
Tasmanian wolf.

* Lori Valigra is a science writer in Cambridge, Mass.



By Richard Ellis
University Press of Kansas312 pp., $29.95
(c) Copyright 2003 The Christian Science Monitor.  All rights reserved. 

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