Friday 1 May 2015

Book review: “Dinosaurs of the British Isles” by Dean R Lomax and Nobumichi Tamura






“Dinosaurs of the British Isles” by Dean R Lomax and Nobumichi Tamura

ISBN: 978-0-9574530-5-0
Published by Siri Scientific Press, 2014
414 pages, paperback
http://www.deanrlomax.co.uk/Books.html


I cannot recommend this book highly enough. I've read a few dinosaur books in my time, but I feel now that they suffer from being a little too glossy, a little too removed from reality. This book, however, will take you from a person who likes dinosaurs, and has maybe seen fossils in museums, and turn you into someone who really gets it. I mean, I knew some dinosaurs are only known from a few skeletons, but I don't think I had any idea that many of them are known from just one or two bone fragments. And the teeth! The photos of fossil teeth are amazing. Anyway, let me tell you about the book.

The book starts with some excellent brief sections covering (and I paraphrase):


  • what a dinosaur actually is

  • what all the bone structure stuff is about

  • how the world has changed and all the timeline stuff

  • the history of naming dinosaurs

  • dinosaur classification

  • the people behind early dinosaur discovery

  • modern palaeontology

  • other creatures around at the same time

  • British geology relevant to dinosaurs


These were very well laid out, and give a serious scientific grounding to grasping what dinosaurs and palaeontology is actually about, without being overly complex (I thought). I was really excited about these chapters and learned a lot. Given that the dinosaur was really 'invented' in the British Isles, this book could be considered a fantastic resource to anyone keen on dinosaur science or history.

I also thought that the sections on the timelines and world maps were the best I've ever seen. Everyone's seen an illustration of Pangaea etc., but to see detailed outlines of how the changing land relates precisely to the British Isles was fabulous, I've not seen that before. The book was great at explaining different trackways as well.

The book then goes on to outline the dinosaurs known from the British Isles laid out from oldest to newest, under the headings of the time periods.

At this point I should mention what the authors mention in their introductions, that to write this book they basically trawled the length and breadth of the Isles (mostly Dean, I think. Nobumichi did a lot of the illustrations), seeing what various collections had, and trying to make the book as comprehensive as possible.

Not long after I finished reading this book, Dean Lomax hit the news because it had been announced that he had discovered a new ichthyosaur, merely by being at his local museum and realising that the 'cast' they had was actually a genuine fossil, and by studying it, they had categorised a new species. (Not a dinosaur, I know, but still exciting!)
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-31521719

I think this is the excitement of this book. It demonstrates that the study of dinosaurs is not as dusty as the bones they dig up in some desert half way across the globe. There are still new and exciting things to be discovered just by fishing around in old boxes down your local museum :p

The chapters on the dinosaurs themselves are peppered with photos of actual fossils in museum collections, as well as the usual illustrations of imagined skeletons and lifelike representations. This is where you really grasp that many dinosaurs are known from just one femur, or a tiny bit of jaw. It's really good to see it laid out in this way. The fossils are mostly ugly as hell, with ancient museum stickers on them, glued together in 1880, or barely recognisable as a bit of vertebra, but that's the point. These are the actual lumps that led us (or rather greats like Owen) to imagine stegosaurus or polacanthus. And I think this section is where the genius lies. Other books say 'here's a dinosaur, and this is what the skeleton and the creature would have looked like'. This book says 'here's a dinosaur, and this is the crumbling bit of rock in a basement in Dorset that it's based on, and this is what the creature would have looked like'. I perhaps paraphrase, but the truth and honesty and scientific nature of the book is refreshing. It's hard to explain, but the book was a genuine revelation for me.

But the dinosaurs aren't all from the 1880s. You read about dinosaurs that have just been discovered in the last few years, and that's exciting too.

I'm not sure why it took me reading this book to understand the significance of those connections between the museum cases and what you might call Jurassic Park, but there we go. It's just a clear, comprehensive, unsanitised documentation, doing exactly what it says on the tin.

The book is rounded off by a word about museums and collections, and fossil hot spots to visit and how to do that. There's a glossary and index.

This is a proper scientific publication, but its perfect for the serious dinosaur fan, wherever you live.

It has over 250 pages of dinosaurs to pick from if you are looking for something new :D Why not use Nuthetes destructor, from page 232? Named in 1854, based on part of a left jawbone about 5cm long that's now housed in Dorset County Museum, by the father of British dinosaurs himself, Richard Owen. It was like a scary chicken, and was only classified properly as a dromaeosaur in 2002.

I read every page of this book, and it never seemed too dry. It's hard to believe that Dean is only 25. His enthusiasm for all things palaeontology is very infectious. Here he is on my local BBC channel *g*



and an interview with the museums association. 

http://www.museumsassociation.org/museums-journal/q-a/04032015-q-a-dean-lomax

Why not request it from your local library or ask your local bookshop to get it? Or you can get a signed copy from the author's website :) It's also available from Amazon, of course.

Thanks for reading!

Saturday 12 July 2014

Tour De France 2014 - Le Grand Depart, Yorkshire :)

I just thought I would share my pics from when we went to see the Tour de France kick off in Yorkshire last weekend.

mr fifi had known about it ages ago, but even when he tried to book our preferred campsite as soon as this year's bookings came online, we missed out! So we knew it was going to be busy. We got into the campsite next door on a farm :) So all was planned and well. Several people I know told me they were going for the weekend, too, so I think we knew it was going to be A Big Thing. They reckon 2 million people came out to see the first stage, And we were 4 of them :D

We drove over to Leyburn on the Friday night. There was signage and decorations as soon as you hit the A66. Yellow ribbons, yellow bike mock-ups, polka dots everywhere! There was a real party atmosphere in the towns once we got to Yorkshire. Leyburn itself was festooned in Tour de France this and that. We could hear live music coming from the town as we settled down for the night. A big stage in the town was hosting a bit of a shindig.

In the morning we walked into town, there was an air of excitement, we were in a stream of people. Gorgeous weather. (After seemingly endless rain in the night!) There was a field full of campers on the other side of the road, and fields of cars around the town. Lots of flags and loads of cyclists.

102 field

Around the corner and into town, every house seemed to have some sort of welcoming decoration! Yellow bunting, and lots of knitted TdF jerseys! So cute!!
 101 shirts

One shop in town had a bike wrapped in knitting in the window! Brilliant. And this pub had some Shaun the Sheep cyclists *g* (Also, I think that's the only policeman I saw all day, and I didn't even notice them at the time. There were quite a lot of crowd organisers, but it was all very organised and low key.)

103 town

It was a lovely little town. Hours before the race was due to come through, and it was mobbed. There was a big screen in the square to watch the ITV coverage. We had an ice cream, got our lunch, and wandered about deciding where we would stand to see the race. We settled on a space on the same side of the road as the public toilets, that had a bit of pavement to sit on, and relatively close to a corner so the riders would be going at slightly less than break neck speed *g* Then it was just a waiting game!

104 spot

The place was busy and there's still an hour or two before anything would happen *g* We had fun just chatting, eating our sandwiches, and talking to the folk around us. People were cycling up and down the road, they let them do that until just before the race, we cheered any little kids on bikes :) Some kids across the road were chanting 'oggy oggy oggy' and the people on the other side of the road were shouting back 'oy oy oy' so that was amusing. Then there was the wee girl over the road who must have decided that this was clearly an occasion where you could shout and cheer and wouldn't get into trouble, so she proceeded to shout random things like 'I like hang-gliding!' and 'Candy floss! Candy floss!' That was pretty hilarious. Then the circus arrived! Sponsor trucks, chucking free stuff! UK police motorbikes, hi-5-ing the crowd, parping their horns and enjoying themselves entirely too much. Gendarmes on motorbikes, scowling. :D

105 fruit shoot
Crowds were bigger now. Loudest cheer went to the McCain Chip vehicles. I got one of their freebies - herb seed sticks, ready to plant! Heck, wonder where I put it!
106 carrefour
Carrefour, chucking polka dot hats! Would have loved one of them. Then the team cars came through. Crowd was oddly silent for BMC cars, everyone else got huge cheers. We waved at everyone. There are people sitting on the roof of the toilets now *g* OPQS car!!

107 opqs
Sky!! (BIG cheers.)

107 sky

Then, finally, the cyclists whizzed by! We'd heard Jens Voigt was leading. To be honest, it really was impossible to see anything as they were cycling fast so quickly, but my god it was fun! Everyone was yelling and cheering and they just zipped past. I decided to concentrate on cheering the main group, then try and take pics of the stragglers *g* It worked! This is Nelson Oliveira, Portuguese Road Race and Time Trial champion, hence white shirt with rainbow stripes. Of course he's just having a swig of water. Never mind the bend coming up.
 108 nelson oliveira

Then I got this shot of a few more guys, the one in front is another rider I've heard of, another Portuguese cyclist, José Costa Mendes. So I was pretty pleased with my cyclist shots! It was totally random!
 109 costa mendes

And that, pretty much, was that! Some of the team cars with the bikes etc followed behind, then some more police, then that was it!! But you can really see just how packed it was.
 110 tdf

Then the road re-opened to cyclists, and it was all over :D We walked back to the camper, chilled out, and that night we could hear the music again *g* Party time down town. Everyone seemed to have a great time. It was an excellent day, I'm glad we went. We saw a little hegdehog snuffling around the campsite in the evening, so that was cute. All round good trip! I hope you enjoyed seeing my pics!

 ~

Sunday 4 March 2012

Fresh start

Refreshed my Blogger page in case 140 characters is ever too little.
Plus, I like olives now.
That is all, carry on.

Wednesday 23 May 2007

Gives in to memes...

Maybe I could use this blog... somewhere for blethers only :D

Plus, I was tagged by Alison, who pointed out we have known each other longer than some of our friends have been alive, LOL!

So, Seven Random Things About Me...

1. I've got an advanced driving qualification

2. All my wisdom teeth have been taken out. I've still got two of them in a pot somewhere...

3. I know how to pan for gold.

4. I've been to a sci-fi convention and I've got my ticket for one in January

5. I am still in touch with my first ever best friend! And I'm pretty sure I still have shoe boxes full of your letters in the attic, Alison ;)

6. I like making model airplanes :D

7. I don't like olives :(

I'm not sure I'll be able to keep this blog free of sci-fi, hahaha!