• Twitter
  • Facebook
Theme
Currency
Log-in | Register | My Basket : arrow

Your shopping basket is currently empty.

0 items - 0.00
Our Publications

The Pemberley Bookshop

Our Shop

Why not come and peruse our comprehensive range of natural history titles at our well stocked bookshop, where you can also receive our expert advice. Click here for details of our shop.

Acrocanthosaurus Inside and Out

by Carpenter, K.

Out of Print
  • Hardback Out of Print
  • New Book Availability : Currently unavailable
  • Catalogue No : 49388
  • ISBN : 9780806153933
  • Published : 2016
  • Cover : Hardback
  • Pages : 152
  • Paperback £18.95
  • New Book Availability : Usually available within 5 day(s)
  • Add to wishlist
  • Catalogue No : 49387
  • ISBN : 9780806191546
  • Published : JULY 2022
  • Cover : Paperback
  • Pages : 152

Our customers have not yet submitted a review for this title - click here to be the first to write a review

Description:

How can paleontologists know what a living dinosaur was like more than a hundred million years ago, particularly when only partial skeletons remain? Focusing on one large carnivorous dinosaur, Acrocanthosaurus ('high-spined lizard'), paleontologist Kenneth Carpenter explains the process, pairing scholarly findings with more than 75 color illustrations to reconstruct 'Acro' before readers’ eyes. In Acrocanthosaurus Inside and Out, he offers the most complete portrait possible of this fascinating dinosaur’s appearance, biology, and behavior.

Acrocanthosaurus – similar in size to its later cousin Tyrannosaurus rex, but studded with large spines – roamed what is now the south-central United States 110 to 115 million years ago, during the Early Cretaceous. Carpenter worked on the most complete of the Acrocanthosaurus skeletons (nicknamed 'Fran') that has been found. Here he describes the techniques that tell us about Acro’s biological makeup, movements, and habits. Studies of joints reveal the range of possible motion, while bumps, ridges, and scars on the bones show where muscles, ligaments, and tendons attached. CT scans allow us to peer into the braincase, while microscopes afford a cross-sectional view of bones. These findings in turn offer an idea of how Acro stalked and ate its prey.

Scientific evidence beyond the fossils provides avenues for further inquiry: What does the sedimentary rock encasing Fran’s bones tell us about Acro’s environment? What does our knowledge of Acro’s distant relatives, such as crocodilians and birds, imply about its heart and other soft tissues? Can our understanding of other animals explain Acro’s huge spines?

Carpenter distills all this information into a clear, accessible, engaging account that will appeal to general readers and scholars alike. As the first book-length work on Acrocanthosaurus, this volume introduces a prehistoric giant that once stalked Texas and Oklahoma and offers a rare, firsthand glimpse into the trials and triumphs of paleontology.

You may also like...

Geology of India

Geology of India

Wadia, D.N.

Price £10.00

Index of Palaeozoic Coral Genera

Index of Palaeozoic Coral Genera

Lang, W.D.; Smith, S.; Thomas, H.D.

Price £20.00

The Cambrian-Ordovician Boundary: Sections, Fossil Distributions, and Correlations

The Cambrian-Ordovician Boundary: Sections, Fossil Distributions, and

Bassett, M.G.; Dean, W.T. (Eds)

Price £25.00

Subscribe to our mailing list More details about our mailing list arrow