It’s been said that the present is a Golden Age for cryptozoology books, cryptozoology being the ostensible study of creatures known from legend, account or anecdote but not accepted as valid by science...
Meeting Lake Zacapu’s Garter Snake
Do Lizards Really Have ‘Mite Pockets’?
The Third Edition of Naish and Barrett's Dinosaurs: How They Lived and Evolved
Among the proudest of my achievements is the publication of Dinosaurs: How They Lived and Evolved, DHTLE for short, co-authored with Professor Paul Barrett and published by the Natural History Museum, London. I think it’s fair to say that it’s the flagship ‘dinosaur book’ of the museum. It’s also one of only a handful of dinosaur-themed books written at ‘adult level’. “Finally, a modern, intelligent, trade book on dinosaurs for thoughtful readers”, to quote a reviewer at Quarterly Journal of Biology.
Live Spawnwatch Action From Pond 2 at Tet Zoo Towers
Megalochelys, Truly a Giant Tortoise
Tetrapod Zoology Reaches 18 Years of Age
Once again, it’s late January, meaning that Tetrapod Zoology the blog – initiated one dark night in the long-ago age of 2006 – has reached another birthday. It’s 18th, no less. And thus it’s once more time to look back at the previous year from the very biased, wholly whimsical and personal perspective of Tet Zoo- themed events…