Big Meg
The Story of the Largest and Most Mysterious Predator that Ever Lived
-
- $16.99
-
- $16.99
Publisher Description
When Tim Flannery was a boy he found a fossilised tooth of the giant shark megalodon at a Port Philip Bay beach near his home. This remarkable find—the tooth was large enough to cover his palm—sparked an interest in palaeontology that was to inform his life’s work and a lifelong quest to uncover the secrets of the world’s largest ever predator, the great shark Otodus megalodon.
Tim passed on his love of the natural world and interest in the fossil record to his daughter, Emma, a scientist and writer. And now, together, they have written a fascinating account of this ancient marine creature.
Big Meg charts the evolution of megalodon, its super-predator status for about fifteen million years and its decline and extinction. It delves into the fossil record to answer questions about its behaviour and role in shaping marine ecosystems as well as its impact on the human psyche. It contains stories of the scientist and amateur fossil hunters who have scoured the seas, and land, for fossil remains, drawn to the beauty and mystique of the great shark, sometimes meeting their death in the process.
Like the fossil record itself, this enthralling story is a piece of the great natural history of our planet.
Tim Flannery is a palaentologist, an explorer, a conservationist and a leading writer on climate change. He has held various academic positions including visiting Professor in Evolutionary and Organismic Biology at Harvard University, Director of the South Australian Museum, Principal Research Scientist at the Australian Museum, Professorial Fellow at the Melbourne Sustainable Society Institute, University of Melbourne, and Panasonic Professor of Environmental Sustainability, Macquarie University. His books include the award-winning international bestseller The Weather Makers, Here on Earth, Atmosphere of Hope and Europe: The First 100 Million Years.
Emma Flannery is a scientist and writer. She has explored caves, forests and oceans across most of the globe’s continents in search of elusive fossils, animals and plants. Her research and writing on geology, chemistry and palaeontology has been published in scientific journals, children’s books and a number of museum-based adult education tours.
‘Flannery is not merely a scientist, he is also an entertainer…He deploys fantastic imagery and eye-popping factoids with aplomb, while condensing great volumes of hard science into his text…He brings to the most arcane topics an infectious enthusiasm coupled with a real talent for narrative and explanation.’ Weekend Australian on Here on Earth
‘A masterclass in science writing.’ New Zealand Listener on Europe
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Paleontologist Tim Flannery (The Eternal Frontier) teams up with his scientist daughter Emma (Weirdest Creatures in Time) for this intermittently stimulating examination of the megalodon, an extinct shark species that lived from 20 to five million years ago. Admitting that the megalodon "remains largely a mystery," with the only known remnants consisting of "fossilised teeth and a few vertebrae," the authors gamely cover what scientists have speculated on the basis of this evidence. Because megalodon teeth are usually found "as isolated specimens," it's believed the megalodon, like most sharks, produced and lost teeth continuously, with each individual "capable of producing tens of thousands of teeth over its century-long life." A study of growth bands in a megalodon vertebra found in Belgium suggested the animal was more than two meters long when it was born. Among extant sharks, the authors observe, such "large pups are indicative of both live birth and an unsavoury behaviour known as intrauterine cannibalism." The impressive science highlights how much researchers have been able to learn from a limited fossil record. Unfortunately, there's still a fair bit of filler about contemporary shark attacks on humans, the decimation of shark populations due to overfishing, and the evolution of sharks generally. Still, this is worth diving into.