An illustrated guide to the marvelously diverse bird life of the dinosaur age Birds are today's most diverse tetrapod group, but they have a rich and complex evolutionary history that extends far beyond their modern radiation. Appearing during the Jurassic more than 160 million years ago, they took to the skies and evolved into myriad forms. This comprehensive and up-to-date illustrated field guide covers the staggering diversity of avialans--modern birds and their closest fossil relatives--that lived from the origin of the group until the mass extinction that ended the reign of the nonavian dinosaurs 66 million years ago. With a foreword by eminent paleontologist Luis Chiappe, Birds of the Mesozoic is a must-have book for bird lovers and anyone interested in paleontology. Features more than 250 stunning full-color illustrations Covers more than 200 kinds of Mesozoic birds Detailed fact files provide information about each species, including its name, location, size, period, habitat, and general characteristics Traces the evolution of the group from other feathered dinosaurs to the emergence of modern birds in the Late Cretaceous Describes all facets of phylogenetic, morphological, and ecological diversity Introduces readers to bird skeletal anatomy and the cutting-edge methods that paleontologists use to reconstruct fossil bird color, diet, and biology Formatted like a field guide for birdwatching in the Mesozoic.
Birds of the Mesozoic