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The Treatise on Invertebrate Paleontology (or TIP) published by the Geological Society of America and the University of Kansas Press, is a definitive multi-authored work of some 50 volumes, written by more than 300 paleontologists, and covering every phylum, class, order, family, and genus of fossil and extant (still living) invertebrate animals.
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Pages in category "Paleontology books" The following 31 pages are in this category, out of 31 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. A.
Comments on the phylogeny of the pterodactyloidea, by Alexander W. A. Kellner. (technical) The following museum databases may contain freely licenced images of palaeontological specimens: Smithsonian Institution Collections; University of California Museum of Paleontology Specimen Search; Natural History Museum Data Portal; Museums Victoria ...
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Saying it had a "wealth of scientific information", Shauna Yusko of Booklist praised the book, writing, "The collection of full-color photographs of fossils (ranging from spore to dinosaur) and skeletons show amazing detail and clarity."
Publishers Weekly called the book "provocative but frustrating", writing that aside from the main concept, "Much of the rest of the book offers background, but often digresses, for example, into hunting for DNA from 68-million-year-old dinosaur bones or the surfing habit of the man who discovered the polymerase chain reaction or how genetically ...
He coauthored another textbook, Paleontology (1998), [37] and a volume of the Handbook of Paleoherpetology on lepospondyls (1998). [38] He also edited a volume of the Amphibian Biology series on the evolutionary history of amphibians (2000). [39] Carroll contributed to naming an extensive number of new species, outlined below: