Just Finished Reading :
The History of Life – A Very Short Introduction by Michael J Benton
Even I’m thinking that I should be reading science based
books other than from the, actually excellent, VSI Series. Anyway we are were
we are [grin].
As the book covers the last 4 billion years of life on Earth
in 166 pages you would be correct if you referred to it as a bit of a romp.
Rather sensibly the author decided to hit the highlights, or rather the turning
points, in evolution starting naturally with the origin of life itself. Of
course we know very little about this – or at least there is little confirmed
knowledge of the event (or more likely series of events) – so he’s forced to
speculate. After that he moves onto the more understood origin of that most important
aspect of life – sex. The sharing of genes and the subsequent explosion in
variation greatly increased the speed of evolution and the diversification of
all types of life. The next highlight was the origin of skeletons. An internal
support structure allowed larger creatures to appear and laid the ground work
(pun intended) for the next leap forward – the invasion of the land. The author
then moved onto flight before exploring several of the mass extinctions that
seem to periodically almost wipe the slate clean. They are deeply fascinating
events and, if the figures hold up, we may in fact be living through another
mass extinction event right now. The last two chapters covered the rise of
modern ecosystems – in the form that most of us would recognise and, rather
inevitably, ended with the origin of humans.
2 comments:
Natural history is always a fun subject for me. Have you read Dawkins' "The Ancestor's Tale"? I had it, but I think someone disposed of it when I was living at university..
I do have a copy of The Ancestors Tale (and a few other of Dawkin's books) in my 'To Read' pile. My reading is actually taking a bit of a hit at the moment so it might be a while longer till I get around to any of them.
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