erik simpson
2025-01-15 04:16:04 UTC
I posted this on scibio.paleontolgy, but I'll send it here too,
on the chance somebody is interested.
-------- Forwarded Message --------
Subject: book report
Date: Tue, 14 Jan 2025 17:13:26 -0800
From: erik simpson <***@gmail.com>
To: sci.bio.paleontology <***@googlegroups.com>
Newsgroups: sci.bio.paleontology
I've just finished reading "Macroevolutionaries" by Lieberman and
Eldredge. I recommend it highly. It's a history extending from the
beginning of the 19th century to the present of the evolution (no pun)
of the gradual development of our understanding of evolution itself. One
of the punctuations (pun intended this time) is the brilliance of SJ Gould.
Some of the more funny chapters involves the evolution of trumpets,
replete with a mass extinction of valveless trumpets around 1820, rapid
diversification and eventual slower evolution to the present day. Clades
can be identified. It seems that biology isn't the only thing that "only
makes sense as evolution".
on the chance somebody is interested.
-------- Forwarded Message --------
Subject: book report
Date: Tue, 14 Jan 2025 17:13:26 -0800
From: erik simpson <***@gmail.com>
To: sci.bio.paleontology <***@googlegroups.com>
Newsgroups: sci.bio.paleontology
I've just finished reading "Macroevolutionaries" by Lieberman and
Eldredge. I recommend it highly. It's a history extending from the
beginning of the 19th century to the present of the evolution (no pun)
of the gradual development of our understanding of evolution itself. One
of the punctuations (pun intended this time) is the brilliance of SJ Gould.
Some of the more funny chapters involves the evolution of trumpets,
replete with a mass extinction of valveless trumpets around 1820, rapid
diversification and eventual slower evolution to the present day. Clades
can be identified. It seems that biology isn't the only thing that "only
makes sense as evolution".