Synopses & Reviews
It greatly puzzled Darwin that the most ancient rocks, those dating before the Cambrian period, seemed to be barren of fossils when he would expect them to be teeming with life. Decades of work by modern paleontologists have indeed brought us amazing fossils from far beyond the Cambrian, from the depths of the Precambrian. Yet hidden in these depths is a great mystery--something happened around the Cambrian to dramatically speed up evolution and produce many of the early forms of animals we know today--and scientists don't really know what provided that spark.
In this vibrantly written book, Martin Brasier, a leading paleontologist working on early life, takes us into the deep, dark ages of the Precambrian to explore Darwin's Lost World. Brasier is a master storyteller. As he explains what we now know of the strange creatures of these truly ancient times--540 million years ago--he takes readers to many far flung places around the globe, interweaving an engaging account of cutting-edge science with colorful and amusing anecdotes from his expeditions to Siberia, Outer Mongolia, and other remote places. As he shows, decoding the evidence in these ancient rocks--piecing together the puzzle of the Cambrian Explosion--is very challenging work. What they have discovered is that, just at the beginning of the Cambrian period, animals (mostly worms) began burrowing into the mud. Why they suddenly began burrowing, and how this might have changed the atmosphere, may be important clues to the mystery. Brasier gives his own take on the emerging answers, as one of the leading players in the field.
A richly readable account of exciting expeditions and leading-edge science, Darwin's Lost World is a must-have book for all natural history buffs.
"A rollicking account of Brasier's adventures seeking an answer to a question that vexed Charles Darwin."
--Library Journal
"Engaging." --New Scientist
"If there is one book in this crop that Darwin himself would surely have appreciated, it is Darwin's Lost World."
--Financial Times
Review
"Accurately subtitled
The History of Animal Life, this discourse by Brasier is part travelogue (without maps of the out-of-the-way geological formations he visited around the world), part memoir (not chronological by author's career or geologic record), and part commentary on multicellular life near the Cambrian-Precambrian boundary 543 million years ago. Readers with some knowledge of Earth's geologic history and of invertebrates will appreciate the book."--
CHOICE"A rollicking account of [Brasier's] adventures seeking an answer to a question that vexed Charles Darwin."
--Library Journal
Review
"The story is part travelogue, part memoir, told in an individual style with singular anecdotes. This is a scientific adventure that will entertain and inform general readers and has the potential to inspire the next generation of young researchers."--The Quarterly Review of Biology
About the Author
Martin Brasier is Professor of Paleobiology at the University of Oxford. He is also Adjunct Professor at the Memorial University of Newfoundland, and membership of NASA Exobiology/Evolutionary Biology Peer Review Panel.
Books by the Same Author -
Microfossils, 2nd edition |a Brasier and Armstrong
The Precambrian-Cambrian Boundary |a Brasier and Cowie
Table of Contents
1. Introduction
2. In Search of Lost Worlds
3. Quest for a Devil's Toenail
4. Hunting for an Ubermonster
5. The Worm that Changed the World
6. Decoding the Ediacaran Enigma
7. The First Cold War
8. Sex and the Single Cell
9. Towards the Apex
10. A Cosmic Hall of Mirrors
11. The Unexpected Twist
12. Crystal gazing