10-minute read
keywords: evolutionary biology, paleontology
Independent palaeontologist and palaeoartist Gregory S. Paul is well-known for his scientifically informed diagrams of dinosaur skeletons. Over the course of four decades, he has perfected this style of infographic, showing white bones laid out on the black silhouette of a body. After writing and illustrating three editions of The Princeton Field Guide to Dinosaurs and two companion volumes on pterosaurs and extinct marine reptiles, I was ready to congratulate him on a job well done. He has collated arguably the largest collection of skeletal reconstructions of extinct Mesozoic reptiles in print. Imagine my surprise, then, when Princeton published this book on predatory dinosaurs only six months after the most recent iteration of the dinosaur guide. But… hang on. Does that mean that the dinosaur guide is not as complete as claimed? Have there been that many developments that a separate book is already warranted? I am confused by this book: time for an in-depth comparison.