Animals of the Past
Frederic Lucas
Gelesen von Jeffery





Prior to the emergence of paleontology and comparative anatomy as scientific disciplines at the end of the 18th century, it was generally known that there were species of animals that had disappeared completely. The term "extinction" originally applied to the extinguishing of fires or erasing of one's debt. It was not until 1784 that the term extinction was used to denote the complete eradication of a species of living being. In 1901, Frederic A. Lucas penned an overview of vertebrate animals whose only evidence of being remained in fossil records. The book focuses primarily on vertebrate animals, from fish to mammals. - Summary by Jeffery Smith (5 hr 54 min)
Kapitel
Introductory and Explanatory | 8:25 | Gelesen von Jeffery |
Chapter 1 Fossils, and How They Are Formed | 25:44 | Gelesen von Jeffery |
Chapter 2 The Earliest Known Vertebrates | 21:05 | Gelesen von Jeffery |
Chapter 3 Impressions of the Past | 21:35 | Gelesen von Jeffery |
Chapter 4 Rulers of the Ancient Seas | 30:35 | Gelesen von Jeffery |
Chapter 5 Birds of Old | 28:15 | Gelesen von Jeffery |
Chapter 6 The Dinosaurs | 28:36 | Gelesen von Jeffery |
Chapter 7 Reading the Riddles of the Rocks | 40:18 | Gelesen von Jeffery |
Chapter 8 Feathered Giants | 32:01 | Gelesen von Jeffery |
Chapter 9 Ancestry of the Horse | 23:29 | Gelesen von Jeffery |
Chapter 10 The Mammoth | 31:21 | Gelesen von Jeffery |
Chapter 11 The Mastodon | 32:28 | Gelesen von Jeffery |
Chapter 12 Why Do Animals Become Extinct? | 31:04 | Gelesen von Jeffery |
Bewertungen





A LibriVox Listener
Interesting and entertaining book. Of course, due to its age, all of the "facts" must be taken with a boatload of salt. But it's still fascinating to learn about what was known back then, and a fun inspiration for looking up the animals mentioned on Wikipedia to see what we know today. Reader is very good, with a pleasant, calm and clear voice.
Good Background Listening





Chris R.
interesting enough to not be boring but slow enough that you can tune out for a wHile without missing much.