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      Avis sur Infinite Life Format Broché  - Livre Beaux arts

      Note : 0 0 avis sur Infinite Life Format Broché  - Livre Beaux arts

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      Présentation Infinite Life Format Broché

       - Livre Beaux arts

      Livre Beaux arts - 01/05/2024 - Broché - Langue : Anglais

      . .

    • Editeur : Elliot & Thompson Limited
    • Langue : Anglais
    • Parution : 01/05/2024
    • Format : Moyen, de 350g à 1kg
    • Nombre de pages : 288
    • Dimensions : 23.4 x 15.5 x 2.2
    • ISBN : 1783968273



    • Résumé :

      Every animal on the planet owes its existence to one crucial piece of evolutionary engineering: the egg.

      ?

      It's time to tell a new story of life on Earth.


      'Jules Howard's egg's-eye view of evolution is dripping with fascinating insights' ALICE ROBERTS

      'So much passion and poetic prose' BBC Radio 4, Inside Science

      If you think of an egg, what do you see in your mind's eye? A chicken egg, hard-boiled? A slimy mass of frogspawn? Perhaps you see a human egg cell, prepared on a microscope slide in a laboratory? Or the majestic marble-blue eggs of the blackbird?

      ?

      Every egg there has ever been, is an emblem of survival. Yet the evolution of the animal egg is the dramatic subplot missing in many accounts of how life on Earth came to be. Quite simply, without this universal biological phenomenon, animals as we know them, including us, could not have evolved and flourished.

      In?Infinite Life, zoology correspondent Jules Howard takes the reader on a mind-bending journey from the churning coastlines of the Cambrian Period and Carboniferous coal forests, where insects were stirring, to the end of the age of dinosaurs when live-birthing mammals began their modern rise to power. Eggs would evolve from out of the sea...

      Biographie:

      Jules Howard is a zoological?correspondent, science writer and broadcaster, whose recent book, Wonderdog, won the 2022 Barker Book Prize for non-fiction.?He writes on a host of topics relating to zoology, ecology and wildlife conservation and appears regularly in BBC Science Focus magazine and on radio and TV, including?BBC Breakfast and Radio 4's?Nature Table?and The Ultimate Choice. He lives in Northamptonshire with his wife and two children.

      ...

      Sommaire:

      Every animal on the planet owes its existence to one crucial piece of evolutionary engineering: the egg.

      ?

      It's time to tell a new story of life on Earth.


      'Jules Howard's egg's-eye view of evolution is dripping with fascinating insights' ALICE ROBERTS

      'So much passion and poetic prose' BBC Radio 4, Inside Science

      If you think of an egg, what do you see in your mind's eye? A chicken egg, hard-boiled? A slimy mass of frogspawn? Perhaps you see a human egg cell, prepared on a microscope slide in a laboratory? Or the majestic marble-blue eggs of the blackbird?

      ?

      Every egg there has ever been, is an emblem of survival. Yet the evolution of the animal egg is the dramatic subplot missing in many accounts of how life on Earth came to be. Quite simply, without this universal biological phenomenon, animals as we know them, including us, could not have evolved and flourished.

      In?Infinite Life, zoology correspondent Jules Howard takes the reader on a mind-bending journey from the churning coastlines of the Cambrian Period and Carboniferous coal forests, where insects were stirring, to the end of the age of dinosaurs when live-birthing mammals began their modern rise to power. Eggs would evolve from out of the sea...

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