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Marvelous Microfossils

Creators, Timekeepers, Architects
Buch | Hardcover
256 Seiten
2020
Johns Hopkins University Press (Verlag)
978-1-4214-3673-9 (ISBN)
64,20 inkl. MwSt
Training a powerful lens on the microscopic wonders of the universe, hundreds of photos, both exquisite and strange, accompany this startling exposé of a secret world invisibly evolving around us for billions of years.

Silver Winner of the 2021 IBPA Benjamin Franklin Award for Nature & Environment

Microfossils—the most abundant, ancient, and easily accessible of Earth's fossils—are also the most important. Their ubiquity is such that every person on the planet touches or uses them every single day, and yet few of us even realize they exist. Despite being the sole witnesses of 3 billion years of evolutionary history, these diminutive fungi, plants, and animals are themselves invisible to the eye. In this microscopic bestiary, prominent geologist, paleontologist, and scholar Patrick De Wever lifts the veil on their mysterious world.

Marvelous Microfossils lays out the basics of what microfossils are before moving on to the history, tools, and methods of investigating them. The author describes the applications of their study, both practical and sublime. Microfossils, he explains, are indispensable in age-dating and paleoenvironmental reconstruction, which guide enormous investments in the oil, gas, and mining industries. De Wever shares surprising stories of how microfossils made the Chunnel possible and have unmasked perpetrators in jewel heists and murder investigations. He also reveals that microfossils created the stunning white cliffs on the north coast of France, graced the tables of the Medici family, and represent our best hope for discovering life on the exoplanets at the outer edges of our solar system.

Describing the many strange and beautiful groups of known microfossils in detail, De Wever combines lyrical prose with hundreds of arresting color images, from delicate nineteenth-century drawings of phytoplankton drafted by Ernst Haeckel, the "father of ecology," to cutting-edge scanning electron microscope photographs of billion-year-old acritarchs. De Wever's ode to the invisible world around us allows readers to peer directly into a minute microcosm with massive implications, even traversing eons to show us how life arose on Earth.

Patrick De Wever is a professor of geology and micropaleontology at the Muséum national d'Histoire naturelle. He is the author of Temps de la Terre, temps de l'Homme and Carnet de curiosités d'un géologue. Alison Duncan is a translator and book editor. She earned her master of science in translation from New York University and her bachelor of arts in French and Francophone studies from Vassar College.

Preface
Introduction
A Marvelous Microscopic World
What Is a Microfossil?
Why Study Microfossils
Part A: The Study of Microfossils
Part B: Microfossils through the Geologic Ages
Part C: The Diversity of Microfossils
Part D: Architects, Builders, and Markers of Time

Erscheinungsdatum
Übersetzer Alison Duncan
Vorwort Hubert Reeves
Zusatzinfo 100 Illustrations, black and white; 200 Illustrations, color
Verlagsort Baltimore, MD
Sprache englisch
Maße 216 x 279 mm
Gewicht 1225 g
Themenwelt Naturwissenschaften Biologie
Naturwissenschaften Geowissenschaften Geologie
Naturwissenschaften Geowissenschaften Mineralogie / Paläontologie
ISBN-10 1-4214-3673-6 / 1421436736
ISBN-13 978-1-4214-3673-9 / 9781421436739
Zustand Neuware
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