Book Descriptions
for Digging for Bird-Dinosaurs by Nic Bishop
From Cooperative Children's Book Center (CCBC)
Dinosaurs have fascinated Cathy Forster since she was a three-year-old girl in West Saint Paul, Minnesota. Her lifelong passion led to a doctorate in paleontology and her current position on the faculty of the State University of New York, where she studies the Archaeopteryx , an ancient creature with characteristics of both birds and dinosaurs. Because paleontologists disagree about whether birds are directly descended from dinosaurs, Dr. Forster seeks further evidence in the fossil record. Nic Bishop’s photo-essay follows her on an expedition to Madagascar, where she and her team gather fossil clues to send back to her lab at the university. A single claw from a primitive bird provides the sort of evidence she wants and advances the hypothesis that birds and dinosaurs were indeed related. Color photographs of the scientists at work accompany a clear narrative that both explains the specifics of Dr. Forster’s research and describes how scientists work as part of a team that includes research assistants, guides, cooks, artists, and laborers. As an interesting side note, Bishop also includes the local children in his account when the research team becomes involved in village efforts to build a school. (Age 7 and older)
CCBC Choices 2001. © Cooperative Children's Book Center, Univ. of Wisconsin - Madison, 2001. Used with permission.
From the Publisher
The extinction of dinosaurs some sixty-five million years ago is one of the greatest biological catastrophes in the history of our planet. Yet in recent years, paleontologists have turned up increasing evidence that ancestors of one group of dinosaurs still fly among us: birds. Join Cathy Forster, one of the few female paleontologists working today, on an expedition to Madagascar in search of clues to the mystery of bird evolution.
Publisher description retrieved from Google Books.