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Paleontology - General & Miscellaneous, Fossils, Dinosaurs, Dinosaurs & Prehistoric Animals, Vocational Guidance - General & Miscellaneous
Dinosaur Scientist: Careers Digging up the Past by Thom Holmes β€” book cover

Dinosaur Scientist: Careers Digging up the Past

by Thom Holmes
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Overview

Travel to the badlands of Argentina, the rocky shores of Australia, and the island of Madagascar in search of fossils. Follow six real paleontologists as they make big discoveries that have shaped out knowledge of times long past. Find out what it takes to be a paleontologist, and how you can become one, too!

Synopsis

Travel to the badlands of Argentina, the rocky shores of Australia, and the island of Madagascar in search of fossils. Follow six real paleontologists as they make big discoveries that have shaped out knowledge of times long past. Find out what it takes to be a paleontologist, and how you can become one, too!

Children's Literature

After an introduction that compares paleoanthropology to a detective story, six chapters feature dinosaurs finds in Mongolia, the ocean, Argentina, Africa, Madagascar, and the Canadian Arctic through the eyes of well-known paleoanthropologists. A seventh chapter provides information for students interested in a paleontology career. The vivid text will draw students in; for example, "Imagine a life that requires you to travel to faraway and remote places every year: to camp in the wilderness, sample foreign cultures, and fight the elements of nature while discovering traces of long-extinct life" (p. eleven). Despite the twelfth grade reading level, most students interested in the subject would probably be able to handle the content-specific, multi-syllabic words (e.g., expedition, vertebrates). The author gives an excellent explanation of how fossils are formed and details the pros and cons of expeditions in unexplored terrain. The hardships and fellowship, the griminess and glory, the routine challenges and surprise discoveries are described. Chapter notes, glossary, further reading and Internet addresses, and an index round out back matter. Colored photos and sidebars, lots of white space, and dark serif font combine to present a readable book; and the colorful simulated rubber-stamp look of page numbers and headings suggest a by-gone appearance that complements the topic. Highly recommended as a resource that readily fits into middle school science standards. Reviewer: Mary Bowman-Kruhm, Ph.D.

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Editorials

Children's Literature - Mary Bowman-Kruhm

After an introduction that compares paleoanthropology to a detective story, six chapters feature dinosaurs finds in Mongolia, the ocean, Argentina, Africa, Madagascar, and the Canadian Arctic through the eyes of well-known paleoanthropologists. A seventh chapter provides information for students interested in a paleontology career. The vivid text will draw students in; for example, "Imagine a life that requires you to travel to faraway and remote places every year: to camp in the wilderness, sample foreign cultures, and fight the elements of nature while discovering traces of long-extinct life" (p. eleven). Despite the twelfth grade reading level, most students interested in the subject would probably be able to handle the content-specific, multi-syllabic words (e.g., expedition, vertebrates). The author gives an excellent explanation of how fossils are formed and details the pros and cons of expeditions in unexplored terrain. The hardships and fellowship, the griminess and glory, the routine challenges and surprise discoveries are described. Chapter notes, glossary, further reading and Internet addresses, and an index round out back matter. Colored photos and sidebars, lots of white space, and dark serif font combine to present a readable book; and the colorful simulated rubber-stamp look of page numbers and headings suggest a by-gone appearance that complements the topic. Highly recommended as a resource that readily fits into middle school science standards. Reviewer: Mary Bowman-Kruhm, Ph.D.

School Library Journal

Gr 5–8β€”An introduction to paleontological careers via the work of a half-dozen real-time fossil hunters digging away from Mongolia to Madagascar. The six men and women featured are passionate about their jobs and their finds, sharing their enthusiasm (and some good career advice) in personal quotes. Enhanced by full-color photos, well researched, and anchored by numerous chapter notes, but a tad dry in tone, this volume will appeal to dinophiles for its dino-data as well as to adventurers dreaming of an Indiana Jones-style career, battling sandstorms and coping with incoming tides. Green information boxes scattered about cover such topics as continental drift and the care and transport of fossils from field to lab. A chapter on preparing for a career in paleontology is appended.β€”Patricia Manning, formerly at Eastchester Public Library, NY

Book Details

Published
November 1, 2009
Publisher
Enslow Publishers, Incorporated
Pages
128
Format
Library Binding
ISBN
9780766030534

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