A Fish Caught in Time: The Search for the CoelacanthA gripping story of obsession, adventure and the search for our oldest surviving ancestor - 400 million years old - a four-limbed dinofish In 1938, Marjorie Courtenay-Latimer, a young South African museum curator, caught sight of a specimen among a fisherman's trawl that she knew was special. With limb-like protuberances culminating in fins the strange fish was unlike anything she had ever seen. The museum board members dismissed it as a common lungfish, but when Marjorie eventually contacted Professor JLB Smith, he immediately identified her fish as a coelacanth - a species known to have lived 400 million years ago, and believed by many scientists to be the evolutionary missing link - the first creature to crawl out of the sea. Marjorie Courtenay-Latimer had thus made the century's greatest zoological discovery. But Smith needed a live or frozen specimen to verify the discovery, so began his search for another coelacanth, to which he devoted his life. |
Contents
LATIMERIA CHALUMNAE | 1 |
EX AFRICA SEMPER ALIQUID NOVI | 25 |
INTER PISCES | 42 |
Copyright | |
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Other editions - View all
A Fish Caught in Time: The Search for the Coelacanth Samantha Weinberg,Fourth Estate Limited preview - 2001 |
A Fish Out of Time: The Search for the Coelacanth Samantha Weinberg,Fourth Estate No preview available - 2000 |