Sea Dragons
Predators of the Prehistoric Oceans
Richard Ellis
New in Paperback: April 2005
xii, 314 pages, 51 line drawings, 7 x 9
Paper ISBN 978-0-7006-1394-6, $19.95 (t)
Also available in cloth:
ISBN 978-0-7006-1269-7, $29.95 (t)
In
the days when dinosaurs dominated the earth, their marine counterpartsevery
bit as big and ferociousreigned supreme in prehistoric seas.
In this entrancing book, Richard Ellis, one of the worlds
foremost writers on the denizens of the deep, takes us back to the
Mesozoic era to resurrect the fascinating lives of these giant seagoing
reptiles.
Working from the fossil record, Ellis explores the natural history
of these fierce predators, speculates on their habits, and tells
how they eventually became extinctor did they? He traces the
200-million-year history of the great ichthyosaurs, plesiosaurs,
and mosasaurs who swam the ancient oceansand who, according
to some, may even still frequent the likes of Loch Ness.
Picture if you will seventy-foot dragons with foot-long serrated
teeth, or an animal that looked like a crocodile crossed with a
shark the size of a small yacht. With its impossibly long neck,
Plesiosaurus conybeari has been compared to a giant
snake threaded through the body of a turtle. At a length of
nearly sixty feet, Mosasaurus hoffmanni boasted powerful
jaws and teeth that could crunch up even the hardest-shelled giant
sea turtle. And Kronosaurus queenslandicus, perhaps the most
formidable of the lot, had a skull nine feet longmore than
twice that of Tyrannosaurus rexwith teeth to match.
The first book about these amazing animals in nearly a century,
Sea Dragons draws upon the most recent scientific research
to vividly reconstruct their lives and habitats. Their fossils have
been found all over the worldin Europe, Australia, Japan,
and even Kansasin lands that once lay on the floors of Jurassic
and Triassic seas. Along the way, the book also provides intriguing
insights into and entertaining tales about the work, discoveries,
and competing theories that compose the fascinating world of vertebrate
paleontology.
Ellis also graces his text with a set of incomparable illustrations.
Widely hailed as our foremost artist of marine natural history,
he depicts vividly how these creatures probably appeared and, through
these likenesses, invites us to speculate on their locomotion, their
predatory habits, their very lifestyles.
A genuine book of marvels and wonders, Sea Dragons will
certainly stir ones curiosity about our planets prehistoric
past.
“A must read for any dinosaur aficionado.”—Christian Science Monitor
“A wonderful grab bag of a book [that] will appeal to paleontologists and to people who never saw a taxonomic puzzle they could resist. It also might entice the child or teenager who, by contemplating the book’s murky wonders, may be drawn into the exhilarating exploration of the natural world. . . . The drawings are delightful.”—Los Angeles Times
“Ellis is America’s foremost writer on marine research. [Here] he conducts an exhaustive and generously illustrated survey of what paleontologists know about these monsters of the deep [and] skillfully applies his imagination and extensive knowledge of maritime animals [to] bring them back to life.”—Publishers Weekly
“Fires the imagination and invites rumination on great mysteries.”—Seattle Post-Intelligencer
“Flashy . . . and fun to browse.”—Journal of Scientific Exploration
Ellis has written the paleohistorical equivalent of Jaws.
Modern-day sharks are anchovies compared to the monstrous great
reptiles of prehistoric seas, most of which were bigger, faster,
more powerful, omnivorous, and better armed.--Peter Benchley,
author of Jaws and Shark Trouble
With this book, Richard Ellis complements his previously
published works on living marine creatures with a riveting account
of those long-necked, sharp-toothed, and in some cases, armor-plated
giants of the 100-million-year-old seas. His exploration of the
past brilliantly showcases creatures more astonishing than any
Loch Ness Monster we can dream up.--Michael Novacek,
Provost of Science and Curator of Paleontology, American Museum
of Natural History and author of Time Traveler: In Search of
Dinosaurs and Other Fossils from Montana to Mongolia
Dinosaurs were the most magnificent creatures that ever
walked the earth and remain a subject of enduring fascination,
as witnessed by the highly popular Jurassic Park. Elliss
vivid and delightfully illustrated book chronicles a lesser-known
but equally magnificent group of these extraordinary mega faunathe
remarkable giants that swam the great Mesozoic seas.--Sir
Arthur C. Clarke, author of 2001: A Space Odyssey
This is really the first book to present a detailed summary
of the history of ideas on marine reptile paleontology. Its
also very readable and accessible, which is one of Elliss
trademarks as a writer.--Michael Caldwell, curator
of higher vertebrates at the University of Alberta Museum of Paleontology
and associate editor of Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology
RICHARD ELLIS is renowned worldwide for his paintings of whales, sharks, and sea mammals, and has carved a reputation through such books as The Book of Whales, Great White Shark, Monsters of the Sea, The Search for the Giant Squid, The Empty Ocean, and Aquagenesis (selected as a book of the year by the Los Angeles Times). He is a research associate in vertebrate paleontology at the American Museum of Natural History.
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