Milton Public Library

Resurrecting the shark, a scientific obsession and the mavericks who solved the mystery of a 270-million-year-old fossil, Susan Ewing

Label
Resurrecting the shark, a scientific obsession and the mavericks who solved the mystery of a 270-million-year-old fossil, Susan Ewing
Language
eng
Index
no index present
Literary Form
non fiction
Main title
Resurrecting the shark
Medium
electronic resource
Nature of contents
dictionaries
Responsibility statement
Susan Ewing
Sub title
a scientific obsession and the mavericks who solved the mystery of a 270-million-year-old fossil
Summary
In 1993, Alaskan artist and paleo-fish freak Ray Troll stumbled upon the weirdest fossil he had ever seen-a platter-sized spiral of tightly wound shark teeth. This chance encounter in the basement of the Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County sparked Troll's obsession with Helicoprion, a mysterious monster shark from deep time. In 2010, tattooed amateur strongman and returning Iraq War veteran Jesse Pruitt was also severely smitten by a Helicoprion fossil in a museum basement in Idaho. These two bizarre-shark disciples found each other, and an unconventional band of collaborators grew serendipitously around them, determined to solve the puzzle of the tooth whorl once and for all. Helicoprion was a bizarre Paleozoic chondrichthyan about the size of a modern great white shark, with a circular saw of teeth centered in its lower jaw-a feature unseen in the shark world before or since. For a span of some eight million years during the Permian period, long before the Age of Dinosaurs, Helicoprion species patrolled shallow seas around the supercontinent Gondwana. Imagination, passion, scientific process, and state-of-the-art technology merged into an unstoppable force, and the ancient predator ripped into the spotlight of the modern world, dazzling and awe-inspiring
Target audience
adult
Classification
Contributor
Content

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