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Winner!
Middle Grades Science Book

Dinosaur
Eggs Discovered: Unscrambling the Clues! by Lowell Dingus,
Luis M. Chaippe, and Rodolfo Coria (Twnety-First Century Books)
SB&F
Review:
This slim book is a sequel to Chiappe and Dinguss Walking
on Eggs (an SB&F Best Book of 2001 selection for
junior high and high schools), except that the authors seniority
is reversed and a third coauthor is added. The book summarizes 1997
and 1999 paleontologic expeditions to a spectacular fossil-collecting
site in Patagonia where the authors discovered hundreds of eggs
laid by 40-foot-long titanosaur dinosaurs on a floodplain of Late
Cretaceous age. Some of the eggs contained embryos, and many were
found in clutches within nests excavated by the huge sauropods.
The exciting find of a skeleton of a probable predator of the titanosaurs
is also described. An innovative format posing the reasoning followed
in answering nine questions about the site, its former environment,
and its former inhabitants provides an introduction to scientific
methodology for younger readers. An especially thought-provoking
question discusses the shaky scientific premises and methods used
in re-creating living dinosaurs in the movie Jurassic Park. Color
photographs taken in the field and excellent color reconstructions
further enhance the book. Of special interest are feature boxes
on a yellow background that amplify topics mentioned in the text.
Among the topics discussed in these boxes are radioactive dating,
dinosaur classification, and plate tectonics. A helpful glossary,
a list of suggested further readings, the URLs of supportive Web
sites, and a useful index are included.
About the
authors:
Lowell Dingus, Luis M. Chiappe, and Rodolfo Coria led the expedition
that discovered the dinosaur nesting ground in Argentina. Dr. Dingus,
a research associate at the American Museum of Natural History and
the Natural History Museum of Los Angeles, was the head geologist
on the team. Dr. Chiappe, who is chairman of the Department of Vertebrate
Paleontology at the Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County,
researches fossil vertebrates and is an expert on the evolution
of early birds. Dr. Coria is director of the Carmen Funes Museum
in Plaza Huincul, Argentina. He has studied the largest dinosaurs
discovered--Giganotosaurus and Argentinosaurus.
Dingus and Chiappe, aided by Coria, became curators of a milti-city
traveling expedition called "The Tiniest Giants." The
exhibition was presented by the Natural History Museum of Los Angeles
County and the Carmen Funes Museum of Argentina.
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