Life Sculpted: Tales of the Animals, Plants, and Fungi That Drill, Break, and Scrape to Shape the Earth

Tales of the Animals, Plants, and Fungi That Drill, Break, and Scrape to Shape the Earth

Hardcover, 360 pages

English language

Published May 24, 2023 by University of Chicago Press.

ISBN:
978-0-226-81047-8
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5 stars (1 review)

Meet the menagerie of lifeforms that dig, crunch, bore, and otherwise reshape our planet.

Did you know elephants dig ballroom-sized caves alongside volcanoes? Or that parrotfish chew coral reefs and poop sandy beaches? Or that our planet once hosted a five-ton dinosaur-crunching alligator cousin? In fact, almost since its fascinating start, life was boring. Billions of years ago bacteria, algae, and fungi began breaking down rocks in oceans, a role they still perform today. About a half-billion years ago, animal ancestors began drilling, scraping, gnawing, or breaking rocky seascapes. In turn, their descendants crunched through the materials of life itself—shells, wood, and bones. Today, such “bioeroders” continue to shape our planet—from the bacteria that devour our teeth to the mighty moon snail, always hunting for food, as evidenced by tiny snail-made boreholes in clams and other moon snails.

There is no better guide to these lifeforms than Anthony J. Martin, …

1 edition

Educational and fun to read

5 stars

One of the joys of being a geoscientist that is hardest to convey to the general public is how cool little and seemingly inconsequential things can be. Just as geology is much more than erupting volcanoes, paleontology is more than dinosaurs. In Life Sculpted, Anthony Martin masterfully introduces to readers the science of ichnology (trace fossils) and the stories they tell, from tiny holes chewed into bone and wood, to caves created by generations of elephants. Martin's enthusiasm for paleontology is clear by his writing style which is full of puns and jokes that are as good (and delightfully bad) as the best introductory geology professor, and at times reminds me of Terry Pratchett or Scott Adams.

If you are interested in fossils and paleontology I highly recommend this book.