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"T. rex" and the Crater of Doom (Princeton Science Library)

T. rex and the Crater of Doom (Princeton Science Library)
Author: Walter Alvarez
Creator: Carl Zimmer
Publisher: Princeton University Press
Category: Book

List Price: $16.95
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New (30) Used (9) from $8.99

Avg. Customer Rating: 4.0 out of 5 stars 36 reviews
Sales Rank: 401259

Media: Paperback
Number Of Items: 1
Pages: 216
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.8
Dimensions (in): 9.1 x 6.1 x 0.6

ISBN: 0691131031
Dewey Decimal Number: 576.84
EAN: 9780691131030
ASIN: 0691131031

Publication Date: July 21, 2008
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Shipping: International shipping available
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Also Available In:

  • School & Library Binding - T. Rex and the Crater of Doom
  • Hardcover - T. rex and the Crater of Doom
  • Paperback - T.Rex and the Crater of Doom (Penguin Press Science)
  • Paperback - T. Rex and the Crater of Doom
  • Turtleback - T. Rex and the Crater of Doom
  • Hardcover - T. rex and the Crater of Doom
  • Audio Cassette - T. Rex And The Crater Of Doom (unabridged)
  • Audio Cassette - T. Rex and the Crater of Doom
  • Paperback - T. Rex and the Crater of Doom (Vintage)

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Editorial Reviews:

Amazon.com Review
One of the great mysteries is what happened to the dinosaurs, and it has taken great detective work to give us an answer. In T. Rex and the Crater of Doom, some brilliant, not to mention determined, scientists roam the world and seek out the clues. What they conclude is that the earth withstood a colossal impact with a meteor (or perhaps a comet) 65 million years ago. The resulting cataclysm destroyed half the life on the planet.

Walter Alvarez, a geologist at the University of California at Berkeley, and one of the four scientists who present this theory on the mystery, tells the story in a clear narrative that contains a wealth of scientific material. The book does require an investment of attention, but the presentation is quite readable, and the story itself is fascinating.

Product Description

Sixty-five million years ago, a comet or asteroid larger than Mt. Everest slammed into the Earth, causing an explosion equivalent to the detonation of a hundred million hydrogen bombs. Vaporized impactor and debris from the impact site were blasted out through the atmosphere, falling back to Earth all around the globe. Terrible environmental disasters ensued, including a giant tsunami, continent-scale wildfires, darkness, and cold, followed by sweltering greenhouse heat. When conditions returned to normal, half the genera of plants and animals on Earth had perished.

This horrific story is now widely accepted as the solution to a great scientific murder mystery what caused the extinction of the dinosaurs? In T. rex and the Crater of Doom, the story of the scientific detective work that went into solving the mystery is told by geologist Walter Alvarez, one of the four Berkeley scientists who discovered the first evidence for the giant impact. It is a saga of high adventure in remote parts of the world, of patient data collection, of lonely intellectual struggle, of long periods of frustration ended by sudden breakthroughs, of intense public debate, of friendships made or lost, of the exhilaration of discovery, and of delight as a fascinating story unfolded.

Controversial and widely attacked during the 1980s, the impact theory received confirmation from the discovery of the giant impact crater it predicted, buried deep beneath younger strata at the north coast of the Yucatan Peninsula. The Chicxulub Crater was found by Mexican geologists in 1950 but remained almost unknown to scientists elsewhere until 1991, when it was recognized as the largest impact crater on this planet, dating precisely from the time of the great extinction sixty-five million years ago. Geology and paleontology, sciences that long held that all changes in Earth history have been calm and gradual, have now been forced to recognize the critical role played by rare but devastating catastrophes like the impact that killed the dinosaurs.




Customer Reviews:   Read 31 more reviews...

5 out of 5 stars Yucatan   December 3, 2007
 1 out of 1 found this review helpful

This book started off a little slow, because it covered a number of elementary topics, but then it got really exciting and delivered everything I was hoping for: a sense of the excitement of discovery, and a blow by blow account of the asteroid/dinosaur extinction hypothesis. The high point was undoubtedly the discovery of the outcrop in Mexico with the spherules and petrified wood.


5 out of 5 stars Fabulous   May 3, 2007
Don't know what else to say. If you like geology, science, natural history, dinosaurs,... any of the above? Read it!


5 out of 5 stars Fascinating   August 25, 2006
 2 out of 3 found this review helpful

Great account of the evolution of the meteor impact theory of mass extinction. He provides a detailed account of the scientific processes involved in the discovery of the Chixulub crater and its relation to the end of the Cretaceous period. As a scientist in another field, I found it to be very informative for the lay reader (non-paleontologist/geologist, etc.).


5 out of 5 stars This subject isn't written in stone - yet   April 25, 2006
I started reading Vincent Courtillot's Evolutionary Catastrophes (volcanism) first in order to gain a handle on the mass extinction argument and found that this book challenges Walter Alvarez's book T. Rex And The Crater of Doom (comet or asteroid bombardment). Therefore, I started reading that at the same time; which got me to pull out and start skimming David Levy's Impact Jupiter (comet expert). In the meantime, I thought it prudent to start reading The Behavior of the Earth by Claude Allegre (plate tectonics), and picked up Steven Stanley's book Extinction (global climate change). Recently I saw via a Google search that Linda Elkins-Tanton now thinks that perhaps meteorite bombardment could have allowed hot magma to vent thus causing global climate change and hence the mass extinctions. This is fun!


4 out of 5 stars This is the one that started it all...   December 1, 2005
 4 out of 4 found this review helpful

This is the book that started it all: Dinosaur extinction by bolide from outer space. Catastrophic tsunamis. Intercontinental ejecta layer. Geologic evidence everywhere you look once you know where to look. And the laughingstock of serious geologists everywhere until the evidence started mounting up to where it couldn't be ignored.

This is the story of Walter Alvarez and his colleagues and their careful science that yielded ideas, insights, and then, whammo! the Big Idea that there might be an external component to the extinction of dinosaurs 65 million years ago. It is a forensic mystery worthy of "CSI" except this is the real deal, and the slog work of doing research took this band of scientists all over the world in search of enlightenment. Leveraging new developments in dating techniques and the best minds in the field and out of it (did I mention that Walter Alvarez is the son of Luis Alvarez, the Nobel Award winner for physics?), the adventure is somewhat stalled until the discovery of oil company drilling cores from the Chixulub region of Mexico that confirm evidence of an impact in that region. It is an eleventh-hour discovery just as interest is waning and funding is running out - a development worthy of the "Nova" episode that it eventually became.

As much fun as it is to read mysteries, it is equally fun to read about the real-life trials and tribulations of a band of intrepid individuals who have a hypothesis and then are able to methodically test it, with startling results. One of the joys of this book is Alvarez's generosity toward those whose work supported him and propelled him forward, as well as his occasional head-scratching humility. This really isn't a vanity piece but it is a definite good read.


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