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Women's Fiction
Time Traveler: In Search of Dinosaurs and Other Fossils from Montana to Mongolia

Time Traveler: In Search of Dinosaurs and Other Fossils from Montana to Mongolia

List Price: $26.00
Your Price: $17.68
Product Info Reviews

<< 1 2 >>

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: The Making of a Paleontologist!
Review: Michael Novacek's wonderfully honest book about his life as a palentologist held me in a grip for four days. Exotic, grueling trips peopled with with bizarre foreigners propell this succint biography. Always the focus is bone. The search for the magic stuff that will open the time window on the past and, incidentally, fuel the not always well-funded careers of those who pursue. I've been to exotic places and had similar adventures but not in the pursuit of bone. Now, I want to go for bone. It's a great excuse for getting out into the middle of some beautiful nowhere. I've got the hammer, chisel and field guides. Now I just need maps. Thanks, Michael. See you out there.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: I bought a hammer.
Review: Michael Novacek's wonderfully honest book about his life as a palentologist held me in a grip for four days. Exotic, grueling trips peopled with with bizarre foreigners propell this succint biography. Always the focus is bone. The search for the magic stuff that will open the time window on the past and, incidentally, fuel the not always well-funded careers of those who pursue. I've been to exotic places and had similar adventures but not in the pursuit of bone. Now, I want to go for bone. It's a great excuse for getting out into the middle of some beautiful nowhere. I've got the hammer, chisel and field guides. Now I just need maps. Thanks, Michael. See you out there.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: fascinating and well written
Review: My freshman year in college, I decided to indulge my interest in dinosaurs and earth history by taking a *rocks for jocks* geology class. It was fascinating. I learned (and sadly haven't really retained) all kinds of info on rock formations, evolution, and paleontology. When I read the excerpts of this book a few months ago, I noted the author and bought the book when it came out. Novacek is a world famous paleontologist who takes us on a journey of his past field work and interweaves that with info on the animals whose bones he uncovers along with the geology of the sites he's worked. He also throws in some hilarious stories of adventures in fossil hunting that make me quite happy to stay home and leave the actual travels to him.


"Time Traveler illuminates some of the most exciting issues in current paleontology-- dinosaur and mammal evolution, continental drift, mass extinctions, and new methods for understanding ancient environments and the geologic time scale. By revisiting our planet's past and his own, Novacek teaches us how to understand the prospects for the future not only of paleontology but of our global ecosystem."

I will say that if you only have a glancing interest in this type of material, this book would probably bore you to tears but if it's something that intrigues you, you might find it as fascinating as I did.



Rating: 5 stars
Summary: "A personal attachment to rocks and bones"
Review: Novacek's "attachment" for lithics and fossil evidence has led him to remote places. Raised in the urban sprawl of Los Angeles, he was introduced to the wild, quickly finding excuses to return. Paleontology is easily the best excuse available for travel and exploration. He invites us to join him as he tours the North American West - into mountains, canyons and plateaus where fossils have emerged before. From this familiar territory he goes on to more exotic sites. His explorations reach from Andean highlands through Arabia deserts to the mysterious Mongolian plateaus. It was the latter that gave Novacek the greatest rewards and kept him occupied for more than a decade. This autobiography of a professional paleontologist provides interesting insights into the researchers depicting the prehistoric realm.

Before the rewards came the trials. The first was the decision to take up paleontology when a music career dangled enticing rewards. His father was a competent guitarist. A chance to learn field work offered new opportunities and challenges. Fresh creek water proved polluted leading to "highly volatile" digestive tracts. In the Andes, Novecek's horse bolted with one boot caught in a stirrup. Walking was impossible and riding little better. Desert scorpions and rattlesnakes were added threats. In Yemen, it was overzealous military staff. The hazards of scrambling over cliff faces seeking fossil or fording rain-swollen rivers recede as serious threats and become part of daily expedition fare.

All these mishaps failed to quell his desire to travel. The travel wasn't entertainment, but his quest for fossils. The search wasn't always rewarding, but the promise or the need kept him going. His misadventure in the Andes was off-set by a string of rewarding finds. Glorious to behold and thrilling to experience, the Andes are now considered the fastest rising mountains in the world. Fossils that had no business being at the altitudes Novacek's team encountered show how rapidly the mountains have been constructed by plate tectonics.

This mix of life experiences and scientific endeavour is richly enhanced by the graphics sprinkled through the text. Some of the most interesting are diagrams of fossil assemblages as found in situ. These provide a good indication of the complexities of retrieval and reassembly. His maps are a bit spare, but give the general location of campsites and fossil finds. Security, an issue of increasing concern in Mongolia, demands no more detail than necessary. Some photos of the campsites themselves might have personalised the account. His bibliography verges on the bizarre, being a mix of scholastic papers and general accounts. Some of these are worth pursuing. The knowledgeable will applaud his inclusion of John McPhee [although one volume is inexplicably omitted]. Novacek is forthright in his account of the tribulations of this career, but depicts as vividly the many rewards paleontology has to offer. As he concludes in this fine account: "there's still so much to know". [stephen a. haines - Ottawa, Canada]

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: "A personal attachment to rocks and bones"
Review: Novacek's "attachment" for lithics and fossil evidence has led him to remote places. Raised in the urban sprawl of Los Angeles, he was introduced to the wild, quickly finding excuses to return. Paleontology is easily the best excuse available for travel and exploration. He invites us to join him as he tours the North American West - into mountains, canyons and plateaus where fossils have emerged before. From this familiar territory he goes on to more exotic sites. His explorations reach from Andean highlands through Arabia deserts to the mysterious Mongolian plateaus. It was the latter that gave Novacek the greatest rewards and kept him occupied for more than a decade. This autobiography of a professional paleontologist provides interesting insights into the researchers depicting the prehistoric realm.

Before the rewards came the trials. The first was the decision to take up paleontology when a music career dangled enticing rewards. His father was a competent guitarist. A chance to learn field work offered new opportunities and challenges. Fresh creek water proved polluted leading to "highly volatile" digestive tracts. In the Andes, Novecek's horse bolted with one boot caught in a stirrup. Walking was impossible and riding little better. Desert scorpions and rattlesnakes were added threats. In Yemen, it was overzealous military staff. The hazards of scrambling over cliff faces seeking fossil or fording rain-swollen rivers recede as serious threats and become part of daily expedition fare.

All these mishaps failed to quell his desire to travel. The travel wasn't entertainment, but his quest for fossils. The search wasn't always rewarding, but the promise or the need kept him going. His misadventure in the Andes was off-set by a string of rewarding finds. Glorious to behold and thrilling to experience, the Andes are now considered the fastest rising mountains in the world. Fossils that had no business being at the altitudes Novacek's team encountered show how rapidly the mountains have been constructed by plate tectonics.

This mix of life experiences and scientific endeavour is richly enhanced by the graphics sprinkled through the text. Some of the most interesting are diagrams of fossil assemblages as found in situ. These provide a good indication of the complexities of retrieval and reassembly. His maps are a bit spare, but give the general location of campsites and fossil finds. Security, an issue of increasing concern in Mongolia, demands no more detail than necessary. Some photos of the campsites themselves might have personalised the account. His bibliography verges on the bizarre, being a mix of scholastic papers and general accounts. Some of these are worth pursuing. The knowledgeable will applaud his inclusion of John McPhee [although one volume is inexplicably omitted]. Novacek is forthright in his account of the tribulations of this career, but depicts as vividly the many rewards paleontology has to offer. As he concludes in this fine account: "there's still so much to know". [stephen a. haines - Ottawa, Canada]

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A magnificent memoir from a revered scientist.
Review: This book is a must-read for any aspiring paleontologist. Novacek's clarity is unparalled in science narrative. He tells his stories in the same lively manner that you would expect to hear from an old friend around a camp fire. You feel as if you are on expedition with Novacek himself.

Unlike many accomplished scientists who are not professors (Novacek is with the American Museum of Natural History, not a university), he is able to pontificate in a relevant manner for the scientist and the lay-person alike.

This book is less about dinosaurs and more about being a dinosaur hunter. If this perspective interests you, you can't beat this book.

Most shocking, is the fluid and crisp prose with which you are engaged. Career writers and authors should envy Novacek's writing abilities. I recently finished _Prey_, a novel by Michael Crichton, and its writing was inferior to Novacek's. This alone should earn him a nomination for one of the yearly science-writing awards.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A magnificent memoir from a revered scientist.
Review: This book is a must-read for any aspiring paleontologist. Novacek's clarity is unparalled in science narrative. He tells his stories in the same lively manner that you would expect to hear from an old friend around a camp fire. You feel as if you are on expedition with Novacek himself.

Unlike many accomplished scientists who are not professors (Novacek is with the American Museum of Natural History, not a university), he is able to pontificate in a relevant manner for the scientist and the lay-person alike.

This book is less about dinosaurs and more about being a dinosaur hunter. If this perspective interests you, you can't beat this book.

Most shocking, is the fluid and crisp prose with which you are engaged. Career writers and authors should envy Novacek's writing abilities. I recently finished _Prey_, a novel by Michael Crichton, and its writing was inferior to Novacek's. This alone should earn him a nomination for one of the yearly science-writing awards.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: An exciting story of scientific discovery.
Review: Time Traveler blends autobiography with adventure travel and science as it tells of the paleontologist's discoveries of dinosaur fossils and his enthusiasm for his profession. Novacek began his lifetime career at an early age unearthing fossils in his own Los Angeles back yard: eventually he traveled the world from Yemen to Chile in search of fossils. An exciting story of scientific discovery.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Time Traveler
Review: Time Traveler: In Search of Dinosaurs and Ancient Mammals from Montana to Mongolia writter by Michael Novacek is a book very much like an autobiography in nature. But, the nature we're talking about here is past history... that of dinosaurs and early mammals... those of the fossil record.

The author has a very easy going writting style that grips you and you are engaged till the end. This story is very much like a travel log of a dedicated paleontologist discovering fossils where ever he seems to travel. The author started early out in life looking for fossils in Los Angeles, not too far from the La Brea Tar Pits, when just a child. But the dinosaur fever never left his veins as he is now a world-renowned paleontologist and has found fossils on every continent.

This book is a study in the Natural History of fossil hunting, having illustrations where needed gives the reader a sense of perspective as to what the author is talking about. In fact the illustrations pop-up right when you need them, reinforcing the reader. Some of the most current and exciting issues in paleontology today are dinosaur and mammal evolution, continent drift, and mass extinctions. This book helps in the clarification of these questions making the reader understand the ancient enviornments and the geological times scale.

From the past to our future this book ties the two together. Making the reader understand the past and how it can be applied to the future so we do not make the same mistakes, that is a global ecosystem. This book is a fast and easy read as the narrative flows freely keeping your interest. If you like adventure, with some travel to different locations throughout the world, this is your book. From California, to Baja Mexico, high up in the Andes Mountains in Chile, to the volcanic mountains of Yemem, to the Gobi Desert in Mongolia you are taken on a travel log of a very special nature... one of a fossil hunting paleontologist.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Time Traveler
Review: Time Traveler: In Search of Dinosaurs and Ancient Mammals from Montana to Mongolia writter by Michael Novacek is a book very much like an autobiography in nature. But, the nature we're talking about here is past history... that of dinosaurs and early mammals... those of the fossil record.

The author has a very easy going writting style that grips you and you are engaged till the end. This story is very much like a travel log of a dedicated paleontologist discovering fossils where ever he seems to travel. The author started early out in life looking for fossils in Los Angeles, not too far from the La Brea Tar Pits, when just a child. But the dinosaur fever never left his veins as he is now a world-renowned paleontologist and has found fossils on every continent.

This book is a study in the Natural History of fossil hunting, having illustrations where needed gives the reader a sense of perspective as to what the author is talking about. In fact the illustrations pop-up right when you need them, reinforcing the reader. Some of the most current and exciting issues in paleontology today are dinosaur and mammal evolution, continent drift, and mass extinctions. This book helps in the clarification of these questions making the reader understand the ancient enviornments and the geological times scale.

From the past to our future this book ties the two together. Making the reader understand the past and how it can be applied to the future so we do not make the same mistakes, that is a global ecosystem. This book is a fast and easy read as the narrative flows freely keeping your interest. If you like adventure, with some travel to different locations throughout the world, this is your book. From California, to Baja Mexico, high up in the Andes Mountains in Chile, to the volcanic mountains of Yemem, to the Gobi Desert in Mongolia you are taken on a travel log of a very special nature... one of a fossil hunting paleontologist.


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