CHAPTER SIX
Dubrow, Terry J., Phillip Ashley Wackym, and M. A. Lesavoy “Detailing the Human Tail.”
Annals of Plastic Surgery
20, no. 4 (1988): 340-44.
Larsson, Hans C. E., and Günter P. Wagner. “Pentadactyl Ground State of the Avian Wing.”
Journal of Experimental Zoology
(Mol Dev Evol) 294 (2002): 146-51.
Nikbaht, Neda, and John C. McLachlan. “Restoring Avian Wing Digits.”
Proceedings of the Royal Society
B 266 (1999): 1101-04.
CHAPTER SEVEN
Resko, John A., Anne Perkins, Charles E. Roselli, James A. Fitzgerald, Jerome V. A. Choate, Fredrick Stormshak. “Endocrine Correlates of Partner Preference Behavior in Rams.”
Biology of Reproduction
55 (1996): 120 -26.
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
This book would not have been possible without the hard work and dedication of a great many people, foremost among them my former graduate student Dr. Mary Schweitzer, my colleague Dr. Hans Larsson, and former graduate student Chris Organ. A special thanks to each. Other paleontology colleagues whom I’ve been doing a lot of work with these past few years include Mark Goodwin and Kevin Padian, both of Berkeley, and I owe a debt of gratitude to each. I also thank my staff, including Pat Leiggi, Bob Harmon, Carrie Ancell, Ellen Lamm, Jamie Jette, and Linda Roberts; my former and current graduate students; and the many volunteers who gave up their summers to help excavate dinosaur specimens such as “B. rex.” Thanks to Nathan Myhrvold, who provided the major funding for the excavation of B. rex, and some of the funding for our new mobile molecular field station. I also thank all my other funders, especially Tom and Stacey Seibel, Klein and Karen Gilhousen, Gerry Ohrstrom, Bea Taylor, the Paul Prager family, Catherine Reynolds, George Lucas, and the Sands families. A very special thanks to Jim Gorman who so eloquently transformed my scientific lingo into literature. Finally, I want to thank my friend Carlye Cook for reminding me that science, especially of the sort discussed in this book, has an obligation to explain itself, in layman’s terms, to the general public.
Both Jim and I also want to thank our agent, Kris Dahl, and our editor, Stephen Morrow, for their great work on the book; Oceana Gottlieb for a fantastic book jacket; Craig Schneider, the copy editor; and Julia Gilroy, production editor, for their care and attention in moving the manuscript to book form.
—Jack Horner
First and foremost, I want to thank my wife, Kate, who had the most difficult job I can imagine: living in the same house with me as I tried to steal every available minute and some that were not available to work on the book. Her support was invaluable, as was my son Daniel’s patience with his father’s day job and night and weekend job. My daughters, Madeleine and Celia, did not have to live in the same house, but they encouraged me from a distance. And my parents, as always, cheered me on.
I’m also grateful to friends and coworkers who encouraged me to push on and finish the book, or at least stop complaining about it.
And finally, to Jack, for all your intriguing research, for your open and inventive mind, for thinking of this book and of me to write it, thank you.
—Jim Gorman
INDEX
A
Abelson, Philip
Acanthostega
addictions
adenine
Adventure Thru Inner Space
(attraction)
Africa
AIDS
alanine
Alberta, Canada
albumin
allergic reactions
Allosaurus
Alvarez, Luis
Alvarez, Walter
Alvarezsaurids
Ambrose, Stephen E.
American Association for the Advancement of Science
American Museum of Natural History
American West
amino acids
and collagen
and DNA
in fossils
and immune-system response
and osteocalcin
amphibians
anatomy
ancestral traits
animal research
anlagen
Antarctica
antennapedia
antibodies
Anzick site
Apatosaurus
Archaeopteryx
archosaurian reptiles
archosaurs
Aristotle
Asara, John M.
Asaro, Frank
Asia
Asilomar Conference on Recombinant DNA
asteroids.
See also
meteors/ meteorites
atavisms
atomic force microscopy
Australia
autopodial field
avian dinosaurs
axial patterning
B
B. rex specimen
and blood vessels
and bone collagen
and the Cretaceous era
discovery of
and fossil bone tissue
and the Hell Creek Formation
bacteria
badlands.
See also
Hell Creek Formation; Montana
Baird, Don
Baptistina family of asteroids
bears
beavers
behavior
Bering Strait
Billings, Montana
biochemistry
biofilms
biogenic hydroxyapatite
biogeochemistry
biological molecules
biomolecules
biophysics
bipedalism
birds
after K / T boundary
as avian dinosaurs
bones compared with dinosaurs
categorization of
and
Chickenosaurus
and collagen
and digestive systems
and evolutionary change
and extinctions
and feathered dinosaurs
and fossil hunting
and the fossil record
and gene sequencing
and medullary bone
and tail evolution
birth defects
bison
Bithorax gene
Blackfeet Indians
blood vessels
body plan.
See also
tetrapods
and body axis
and evolution
and genetics
and limb development
and tail development
and vertebrates
bone morphogenetic proteins
bones and skeletal structures.
See also
collagen
and bird evolution
bone histology
bone matrix
and chicken development
Chickenosaurus
and demineralization
difficulties working with
dinosaurs and birds compared
Saurornitholestes
and Schweitzer’s research
vertebrae
Bozeman, Montana
Brachylophosaurus
Branch Davidians
Bridger, Jim
Bridger Wilderness
British Museum of Natural History
brontosaurs
Brown, Barnum
Brush, Alan H.
Buck, Frank
Buckley, Mike
Buckner, Billy
buds (anlagen)
buffalo
Bureau of Land Management
Burgess Shale
C
C. elegans
calcium
Cambrian period
Campephilus
genus
Canada
cancers
carbon-nitrogen ratios
Carlin, George
Carnegie Institution
Carroll, Sean
cattle
Caudipteryx
cellular biology
central nervous system
Charbonneau, Toussaint
Charles M. Russell National Wildlife Refuge
chemistry
Chen, Pei-Ji
Chiappe, Luis
chickens
and bone tissue
Chickenosaurus
and comparison of genes
and embryonic development
and genetics research
and tail development research
Chicxulub meteorite
chimpanzees
Chin, Karen
China
chordates
Choteau, Montana
Christian Identity
Christianity
chromatography
cladistics
Clark, William
Clark ranch
classification systems
clavicles
Clemens, Bill
climate change
cloning
Cloverly Formation
Clovis people
Cody, Buffalo Bill
coelurosaurs
cold-blooded animals
collagen
and bird evolution
described
in fossils
imaging techniques used on
and immunoassays
and osteocalcin
and structural proteins
collar structures
common ancestry
Compsognathus
computer imaging
connective tissue.
See also
collagen
conservation
continental drift
contingency
Cope, Edwin Drinker
coprolites
Coronado, Francisco Vasquez de
cranial kinesis
creationism
Cretaceous era
and the B. rex specimen
and bird evolution
and the Cloverly Formation
and coprolite fossils
and fossil DNA
and the Hell Creek Formation
and the Judith River Formation
and mass extinctions
and theropods
Crichton, Michael
Crick, Francis
crocodilians
Crow Indians
Crystal Palace
CT scans
Cuppy, Will
Currie, Philip J.
Cuvier, Georges
cytosine
D
Dal Sasso, Cristiano
Darwin, Charles
decomposition
deep time
degradation of fossils
Deinonychus
demineralization
Department of Terrestrial Magnetism
deposition
derived characteristics
developmental evolution (devo-evo) .
See also
embryonic development
diet
digestive systems
Digging Dinosaurs
(Horner)
digital modeling
digits.
See also
limbs
Dingus, Lowell
dire wolves
disease
diving birds
DNA (deoxyribonucleic acid).
See also
genetics
and body plan
and cloning
and comparison of genes
component chemicals
discovery of
double-helix structure
and embryology
and evolution
in fossils
and gene sequencing
and genetic manipulation
and homeobox genes
junk DNA
and
Jurassic Park
and limb-to-wing transition
and master genes
and modern bison herds
and polymerase chain reaction (PCR)
Dodson, Peter
dogs
Dolly (cloned sheep)
domestication
Dong, Shi-ming
Donoghue, Philip C.
Draco rex
dromaeosaurid dinosaurs
Drosophila melanogaster
(fruit fly)
drug resistance
duckbilled dinosaurs
E
ear infections
echidna
ecological approach to paleontology
economic issues
economy
Edmontosaurus
education
eggs
electron microscopes
elemental analysis
embryonic development
and atavisms
background of
and chickens
and evolution
and experimental embryology
and feathers
Hamburger-Hamilton stages
and limb growth
and macroevolution
and master genes
and teeth
and tetrapods
value of research
and wing development
emus
energy management
environmental issues
enzymes
epigenesis
Equus scotti
erosion
etching
The Eternal Frontier
(Flannery)
ethical issues
and animal research
and genetic engineering
and prenatal genetic selection
and proposed research
and social responsibility
and value of research
eugenics
Europe
evolution.
See also
evolutionary developmental biology (evo-devo)
and basic structures
evolution
calculating rate of
and the Cambrian period
and the Chicxulub meteorite
and cladistics
and collagen
and comparison of genes
and contingency
continuum view of
and drug resistance
and embryonic development
and experimental atavisms
and fossils
macroevolution
mammals and dinosaurs contrasted
and master genes
mechanisms of
microevolution
and modern birds
molecular basis of
and proposed research
and public opinion
rates of change
and Schweitzer’s education