The Best Dinosaur And Paleontology Books (Nonfiction & Fiction)
“What are the best books about Dinosaurs and Paleontology?” We looked at 365 of the top Dino and Paleontology books (fiction and nonfiction), aggregating and ranking them so we could answer that very question!
With enugh books to read one a day for an entire year, there is bound to be something below for any age or interest level relating to Dinosaurs and Paleontology. The top 22 titles, all appearing on 3 or more seperate “Best Dinosaur” book lists, are ranked below with images, descriptions, and links. The remaingin 300+ books, as well as the articles we used, are listed alphabetically at the bottom of the page.
Happy Scrolling!
Top 22 Paleontology & Dinosaur Books
22 .) Digging Dinosaurs: The Search That Unraveled the Mystery of Baby Dinosaurs by John R. Horner
Lists It Appears On:
- Nation Geographic
- Goodreads
- Goodreads 2
21 .) Dinosaur Art: The World’s Greatest Paleoart by Steve White
Lists It Appears On:
- Nation Geographic
- Goodreads
- Waterstones
“A paleoartist is an illustrator who specialises in the science and art of reconstructing ancient animals and their world.
In Dinosaur Art, ten of the top contemporary paleoartists reveal a selection of their work and exclusively discuss their working methods and distinct styles.
Filled with breathtaking artwork – some never before seen – and cutting edge paleontology, this is a treasure trove for dinosaur enthusiasts, art lovers and budding illustrators.”
20 .) Flying Dinosaurs: How Fearsome Reptiles Became Birds by John Pickrell
Lists It Appears On:
- Waterstones
- Goodreads
- Goodreads 2
“The discovery of stunning, feathered dinosaur fossils coming out of China since 2006 suggest that these creatures were much more bird-like than paleontologists previously imagined. Further evidence―bones, genetics, eggs, behavior, and more―has shown a seamless transition from fleet-footed carnivores to the ancestors of modern birds.
Mixing colorful portraits with news on the latest fossil findings and interviews with leading paleontologists in the United States, China, Europe, and Australia, John Pickrell explains and details dinosaurs’ development of flight. This special capacity introduced a whole new range of abilities for the animals and helped them survive a mass extinction, when thousands of other dinosaur species that once populated the Earth did not. Pickrell also turns his journalistic eye toward the stories behind the latest discoveries, investigating the role of the Chinese black market in trading fossils, the controversies among various dinosaur hunters, the interference of national governments intent on protecting scientific information, and the race to publish findings first that make this research such a dynamic area of science.”
19 .) How to Build a Dinosaur: Extinction Doesn’t Have to Be Forever by Jack Horner
Lists It Appears On:
- Barnes & Noble
- Goodreads
- Goodreads 2
In movies, in novels, in comic strips, and on television, we’ve all seen dinosaurs-or at least somebody’s educated guess of what they would look like. But what if it were possible to build, or grow, a real dinosaur without finding ancient DNA? Jack Horner, the scientist who advised Steven Spielberg on the blockbuster film Jurassic Park and a pioneer in bringing paleontology into the twenty-first century, teams up with the editor of the New York Times’s Science Times section to reveal exactly what’s in store. In the 1980s, Horner began using CAT scans to look inside fossilized dinosaur eggs, and he and his colleagues have been delving deeper ever since. At North Carolina State University, Mary Schweitzer has extracted fossil molecules-proteins that survived 68 million years-from a Tyrannosaurus rex fossil excavated by Horner. These proteins show that T. rex and the modern chicken are kissing cousins. At McGill University, Hans Larsson is manipulating a chicken embryo to awaken the dinosaur within-starting by getting it to grow a tail and eventually prompting it to grow the forelimbs of a dinosaur. All of this is happening without changing a single gene. This incredible research is leading to discoveries and applications so profound they’re scary in the power they confer on humanity. How to Build a Dinosaur is a tour of the hot rocky deserts and air-conditioned laboratories at the forefront of this scientific revolution.
18 .) Raptor Red by Robert T. Bakker
Lists It Appears On:
- I Know Dino
- Prehistoric Pulp
- Goodreads 2
“A pair of fierce but beautiful eyes look out from the undergrowth of conifers. She is an intelligent killer…
So begins one of the most extraordinary novels you will ever read. The time is 120 million years ago, the place is the plains of prehistoric Utah, and the eyes belong to an unforgettable heroine. Her name is Raptor Red, and she is a female Raptor dinosaur.
Painting a rich and colorful picture of a lush prehistoric world, leading paleontologist Robert T. Bakker tells his story from within Raptor Red’s extraordinary mind, dramatizing his revolutionary theories in this exciting tale. From a tragic loss to the fierce struggle for survival to a daring migration to the Pacific Ocean to escape a deadly new predator, Raptor Red combines fact an fiction to capture for the first time the thoughts, emotions, and behaviors of the most magnificent, enigmatic creatures ever to walk the face of the earth.”
17 .) The Bonehunters’ Revenge: Dinosaurs, Greed, and the Greatest Scientific Feud of the Gilded Age by David Rains Wallace
Lists It Appears On:
- Goodreads
- Goodreads 2
- Nation Geographic
When dinosaur fossils were first discovered in the Wild West, they sparked one of the greatest scientific battles in American history. Over the past century it’s been known by many names — the Bone War, the Fossil Feud — but the tragic story of the conflict between two leading paleontologists of the Gilded Age remains a prophetic tale of the conquest of the West, as well as a watershed event in science. Edward Drinker Cope was a Philadelphia Quaker from a wealthy family, an old-fashioned naturalist in the Jeffersonian tradition. Othniel Charles Marsh, a farm boy who had risen to a Yale professorship, was the model of a modern scientific entrepreneur. Opposites in personality and background as well as in political orientation and scientific beliefs, they fought over fossils as bitterly as other men fought over gold. With Indian wars swirling around them, they conducted their own personal warfare, staking out territories, employing scouts, troops, and spies. When James Gordon Bennett, the sociopathic publisher of the New York Herald, got wind of their feud, he stirred up an inferno that destroyed the lives of both men and scarred the reputations of many others, including John Wesley Powell, the director of the U.S. Geological Survey. In the aftermath, Powell’s environmentally progressive ideas for limiting settlement of the West lost out to his opponents’ laissez-faire boosterism, and the repercussions of the Bone War linger in many of the conflicts that rend the country today.
16 .) The Dinosauria by David B. Weishampel
Lists It Appears On:
- Goodreads
- Waterstones
- Nation Geographic
“When the The Dinosauria was first published more than a decade ago, it was hailed as “”the best scholarly reference work available on dinosaurs”” and “”an historically unparalleled compendium of information.”” This second, fully revised edition continues in the same vein as the first but encompasses the recent spectacular discoveries that have continued to revolutionize the field. A state-of-the-science view of current world research, the volume includes comprehensive coverage of dinosaur systematics, reproduction, and life history strategies, biogeography, taphonomy, paleoecology, thermoregulation, and extinction. Its internationally renowned authors—forty-four specialists on the various members of the Dinosauria—contribute definitive descriptions and illustrations of these magnificent Mesozoic beasts.
The first section of The Dinosauria begins with the origin of the great clade of these fascinating reptiles, followed by separate coverage of each major dinosaur taxon, including the Mesozoic radiation of birds. The second part of the volume navigates through broad areas of interest. Here we find comprehensive documentation of dinosaur distribution through time and space, discussion of the interface between geology and biology, and the paleoecological inferences that can be made through this link. This new edition will be the benchmark reference for everyone who needs authoritative information on dinosaurs.”
15 .) The First Fossil Hunters: Paleontology In Greek And Roman Times by Adrienne Mayor
Lists It Appears On:
- Nation Geographic
- Goodreads
- Goodreads 2
“Griffins, Cyclopes, Monsters, and Giants–these fabulous creatures of classical mythology continue to live in the modern imagination through the vivid accounts that have come down to us from the ancient Greeks and Romans. But what if these beings were more than merely fictions? What if monstrous creatures once roamed the earth in the very places where their legends first arose? This is the arresting and original thesis that Adrienne Mayor explores in The First Fossil Hunters. Through careful research and meticulous documentation, she convincingly shows that many of the giants and monsters of myth did have a basis in fact–in the enormous bones of long-extinct species that were once abundant in the lands of the Greeks and Romans.
As Mayor shows, the Greeks and Romans were well aware that a different breed of creatures once inhabited their lands. They frequently encountered the fossilized bones of these primeval beings, and they developed sophisticated concepts to explain the fossil evidence, concepts that were expressed in mythological stories. The legend of the gold-guarding griffin, for example, sprang from tales first told by Scythian gold-miners, who, passing through the Gobi Desert at the foot of the Altai Mountains, encountered the skeletons of Protoceratops and other dinosaurs that littered the ground.”
14 .) The Great Dinosaur Debate: New Theories Unlocking the Mystery of the Dinosaurs and Their Extinction by Robert T. Bakker
Lists It Appears On:
- Waterstones
- Goodreads
- Goodreads 2
13 .) The Lost Dinosaurs of Egypt by William Nothdurft
Lists It Appears On:
- Goodreads
- Goodreads 2
- Waterstones
“The date is January 11, 1911. A young German paleontologist, accompanied only by a guide, a cook, four camels, and a couple of camel drivers, reaches the lip of the vast Bahariya Depression after a long trek across the bleak plateau of the western desert of Egypt. The scientist, Ernst Freiherr Stromer von Reichenbach, hopes to find fossil evidence of early mammals. In this, he will be disappointed, for the rocks here will prove to be much older than he thinks. They are nearly a hundred million years old. Stromer is about to learn that he has walked into the age of the dinosaurs.
At the bottom of the Bahariya Depression, Stromer will find the remains of four immense and entirely new dinosaurs, along with dozens of other unique specimens. But there will be reversals—shipments delayed for years by war, fossils shattered in transit, stunning personal and professional setbacks. Then, in a single cataclysmic night, all of his work will be destroyed and Ernst Stromer will slip into history and be forgotten.
The date is January 11, 2000—eighty-nine years to the day after Stromer descended into Bahariya. Another young paleontologist, Ameri-can graduate student Josh Smith, has brought a team of fellow scientists to Egypt to find Stromer’s dinosaur graveyard and resurrect the German pioneer’s legacy. After weeks of digging, often under appalling conditions, they fail utterly at rediscovering any of Stromer’s dinosaur species.
Then, just when they are about to declare defeat, Smith’s team discovers a dinosaur of such staggering immensity that it will stun the world of paleontology and make headlines around the globe.
Masterfully weaving together history, science, and human drama, The Lost Dinosaurs of Egypt is the gripping account of not one but two of the twentieth century’s great expeditions of discovery.”
12 .) The Lost World by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle
Lists It Appears On:
- Prehistoric Pulp
- Tor
- The Guardian
The Lost World is a novel released in 1912 by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle concerning an expedition to a plateau in the Amazon basin of South America where prehistoric animals (dinosaurs and other extinct creatures) still survive. The explorers nd themselves in a horrifying predicament when they are isolated on the plateau with seemingly no means of escape. On the plateau they nd dinosaur life in abundance. Strangely enough, they also nd both ape-like and homo-sapien-like men who are coexisting with the dinosaurs. It is the depiction of prehistoric life that is fascinating and brings the book to like.
11 .) The Tyrannosaur Chronicles: The Biology of the Tyrant Dinosaurs by David Hone
Lists It Appears On:
- Waterstones
- Goodreads
- Goodreads 2
“In the mid-nineteenth century, many dinosaur fossils were found in the United States, especially during the 1870s and 1880s “”Bone Wars.”” Paleontologists Edward Drinker Cope and Othniel Charles Marsh discovered dozens of skeletons, but in 1905, fossil hunter Barnum Brown named the first tyrannosaur known to science–Tyrannosaurus rex.
Tyrannosaurus was an impressive beast; it topped five tons, was more than thirty-five feet (twelve meters) long, and had the largest head and most powerful bite of any land animal, ever. Tyrannosaurs started small, just a couple of yards long, and over the course of 100 million years, evolved into giant meat-slicing bone crushers.
As of 2015, there were nearly 30 described species of tyrannosaur, but during the last decade at least one new species has been identified and named every year, greatly improving what we know about how they lived, fed, bred, and died. THE TYRANNOSAUR CHRONICLES tracks the rise of these dinosaurs, and presents the latest research into their biology, showing off more than just their impressive statistics–tyrannosaurs had feathers, and fought and even ate one another. Indeed, David Hone tells the evolutionary story of the group through their anatomy, ecology, and behavior, exploring how they came to be the dominant terrestrial predators of the Mesozoic–and more recently, one of the great icons of biology.”
10 .) Tyrannosaurus Rex, the Tyrant King by Peter Larson
Lists It Appears On:
- Goodreads
- Thought Co
- Ebay
With its massive head, enormous jaws, and formidable teeth, Tyrannosaurus rex has long been the young person’s favorite creepy carnivore in the Mesozoic zoo. Nor has T. rex been ignored by the scientific community, as this new collection amply demonstrates. Scientists explore such questions as why T. rex had such small forelimbs; how the dinosaur moved; what bone pathologies tell us about life in the Cretaceous; and whether T. rex was a predator, a scavenger, or both. There are reports on newly discovered skeletons, on variation and sexual dimorphism, and how the big beasts chewed. The methods used by the contributors to unlock the mysteries of T. rex range from “old fashioned” stratigraphy to contemporary computer modeling. Together they yield a wealth of new information about one of the dinosaur world’s most famous carnivores.
9 .) Dinosaur Odyssey: Fossil Threads in the Web of Life by Scott D. Sampson
Lists It Appears On:
- Nation Geographic
- Waterstones
- Goodreads
- Goodreads 2
This captivating book, laced with evocative anecdotes from the field, gives the first holistic, up-to-date overview of dinosaurs and their world for a wide audience of readers. Situating these fascinating animals in a broad ecological and evolutionary context, leading dinosaur expert Scott D. Sampson fills us in on the exhilarating discoveries of the past twenty-five years, the most active period in the history of dinosaur paleontology, during which more “new” species were named than in all prior history. With these discoveries—and the most recent controversies—in mind, Sampson reconstructs the odyssey of the dinosaurs from their humble origins on the supercontinent Pangaea, to their reign as the largest animals the planet has ever known, and finally to their abrupt demise. Much more than the story of who ate whom way back when, Dinosaur Odyssey places dinosaurs in an expansive web of relationships with other organisms and demonstrates how they provide a powerful lens through which to observe the entire natural world. Addressing topics such as extinction, global warming, and energy flow, Dinosaur Odyssey finds that the dinosaurs’ story is, in fact, a major chapter in our own story.
8 .) Dinosaurs by Steve Brusatte and Michael Benton
Lists It Appears On:
- Five Books
- Goodreads
- Waterstones
- Barnes & Noble
Take a journey through the prehistoric world and trace the evolution of the most astonishing creatures ever to have walked the earth. Over 170 superbly detailed computer-generated illustrations provide a stunning visual catalogue of dinosaurs, bringing the prehistoric world to life like never before. The expert text identifies each species – what they looked like, what they ate, how they lived and died. Packed with the latest research and discoveries, this spectacular title is as unique and impressive as the dinosaurs themselves.
7 .) Dinosaurs Without Bones: Dinosaur Lives Revealed by their Trace Fossils by Anthony J. Martin
Lists It Appears On:
- Nation Geographic
- Goodreads
- I Know Dino 2
- Goodreads 2
“What if we woke up one morning all of the dinosaur bones in the world were gone? How would we know these iconic animals had a165-million year history on earth, and had adapted to all land-based environments from pole to pole? What clues would be left to discern not only their presence, but also to learn about their sex lives, raising of young, social lives, combat, and who ate who? What would it take for us to know how fast dinosaurs moved, whether they lived underground, climbed trees, or went for a swim?
Welcome to the world of ichnology, the study of traces and trace fossils―such as tracks, trails, burrows, nests, toothmarks, and other vestiges of behavior―and how through these remarkable clues, we can explore and intuit the rich and complicated lives of dinosaurs. With a unique, detective-like approach, interpreting the forensic clues of these long-extinct animals that leave a much richer legacy than bones, Martin brings the wild world of the Mesozoic to life for the twenty-first century reader.”
6 .) My Beloved Brontosaurus: On the Road with Old Bones, New Science, and Our Favorite Dinosaurs by Brian Switek
Lists It Appears On:
- Waterstones
- Barnes & Noble
- Goodreads
- Goodreads 2
“Dinosaurs, with their awe-inspiring size, terrifying claws and teeth, and otherworldly abilities, occupy a sacred place in our childhoods. They loom over museum halls, thunder through movies, and are a fundamental part of our collective imagination. In My Beloved Brontosaurus, the dinosaur fanatic Brian Switek enriches the childlike sense of wonder these amazing creatures instill in us. Investigating the latest discoveries in paleontology, he breathes new life into old bones.
Switek reunites us with these mysterious creatures as he visits desolate excavation sites and hallowed museum vaults, exploring everything from the sex life of Apatosaurus and T. rex’s feather-laden body to just why dinosaurs vanished. (And of course, on his journey, he celebrates the book’s titular hero, “”Brontosaurus””―who suffered a second extinction when we learned he never existed at all―as a symbol of scientific progress.)
With infectious enthusiasm, Switek questions what we’ve long held to be true about these beasts, weaving in stories from his obsession with dinosaurs, which started when he was just knee-high to a Stegosaurus. Endearing, surprising, and essential to our understanding of our own evolution and our place on Earth, My Beloved Brontosaurus is a book that dinosaur fans and anyone interested in scientific progress will cherish for years to come.”
5 .) Prehistoric Life: The Definitive Visual History of Life on Earth by DK
Lists It Appears On:
- Thought Co
- Ebay
- Goodreads
- Goodreads 2
With an extensive catalog at its heart, Prehistoric Life profiles hundreds of fascinating species in incredible detail. The story starts in earnest 3.8 billion years ago, with the earliest-known form of life on Earth, a bacteria that still exists today, and journeys through action-packed millennia, charting the appearance of new life forms as well as devastating extinction events. Of course, the ever-popular and endlessly intriguing dinosaurs feature large, but Prehistoric Life gives you the whole picture, and the plants, invertebrates, amphibians, birds, reptiles, and mammals that are the ancestors of today’s species also populate its pages, making this book unprecedented in its coverage of prehistory. Specially commissioned artworks use cutting-edge technology to render species in breathtakingly realistic fashion, with astonishing images of prehistoric remains, such as skeletons and fossils, to complete the story. To put all the evidence in context, the concept of geological time is explored, as is the classification of species and how the evidence for their evolution is preserved and can be deciphered.
4 .) The Fossil Hunter: Dinosaurs, Evolution, and the Woman Whose Discoveries Changed the World by Shelley Emling
Lists It Appears On:
- Nation Geographic
- Waterstones
- Goodreads
- Goodreads 2
Mary Anning was only twelve years old when, in 1811, she discovered the first dinosaur skeleton–of an ichthyosaur–while fossil hunting on the cliffs of Lyme Regis, England. Until Mary’s incredible discovery, it was widely believed that animals did not become extinct. The child of a poor family, Mary became a fossil hunter, inspiring the tongue-twister, “She Sells Sea Shells by the Seashore.” She attracted the attention of fossil collectors and eventually the scientific world. Once news of the fossils reached the halls of academia, it became impossible to ignore the truth. Mary’s peculiar finds helped lay the groundwork for Charles Darwin’s theory of evolution, laid out in his On the Origin of Species. Darwin drew on Mary’s fossilized creatures as irrefutable evidence that life in the past was nothing like life in the present.
3 .) The Princeton Field Guide to Dinosaurs by Gregory S. Paul
Lists It Appears On:
- Thought Co
- Ebay
- Goodreads
- Goodreads 2
“The best-selling Princeton Field Guide to Dinosaurs remains the must-have book for anyone who loves dinosaurs, from amateur enthusiasts to professional paleontologists. Now extensively revised and expanded, this dazzlingly illustrated large-format edition features some 100 new dinosaur species and 200 new and updated illustrations, bringing readers up to the minute on the latest discoveries and research that are radically transforming what we know about dinosaurs and their world.
Written and illustrated by acclaimed dinosaur expert Gregory Paul, this stunningly beautiful book includes detailed species accounts of all the major dinosaur groups as well as nearly 700 color and black-and-white images–skeletal drawings, “”life”” studies, scenic views, and other illustrations that depict the full range of dinosaurs, from small feathered creatures to whale-sized supersauropods. Paul’s extensively revised introduction delves into dinosaur history and biology, the extinction of nonavian dinosaurs, the origin of birds, and the history of dinosaur paleontology, as well as giving a taste of what it might be like to travel back in time to the era when dinosaurs roamed the earth.”
2 .) Jurassic Park by Michael Crichton
Lists It Appears On:
- Prehistoric Pulp
- Barnes & Noble
- Ebay
- Tor
- Goodreads 2
“An astonishing technique for recovering and cloning dinosaur DNA has been discovered. Now humankind’s most thrilling fantasies have come true. Creatures extinct for eons roam Jurassic Park with their awesome presence and profound mystery, and all the world can visit them—for a price.
Until something goes wrong. . . .”
1 .) Wonderful Life: The Burgess Shale and the Nature of History by Stephen Jay Gould
Lists It Appears On:
- Five Books
- Waterstones
- Bioteaching
- Goodreads
- Goodreads 2
High in the Canadian Rockies is a small limestone quarry formed 530 million years ago called the Burgess Shale. It hold the remains of an ancient sea where dozens of strange creatures lived―a forgotten corner of evolution preserved in awesome detail. In this book Stephen Jay Gould explores what the Burgess Shale tells us about evolution and the nature of history.
The Additional Best Dinosaur Books
# | Book | Author | Lists |
(Books Appear On 2 Lists Each) | |||
23 | Dinosaur Provincial Park: A Spectacular Ancient Ecosystem Revealed | Philip J. Currie | Waterstones |
Goodreads | |||
24 | All Yesterdays | John Conway, Memo Kosemen, and Darren Naish | Nation Geographic |
Goodreads | |||
25 | Ask DG | Mark Miller | Goodreads |
Goodreads | |||
26 | Bully for Brontosaurus | Stephen Jay Gould | The Guardian |
Goodreads 2 | |||
27 | Dinosaur Data Book | David Lambert | Goodreads |
Waterstones | |||
28 | Dinosaur in a Haystack: Reflections in Natural History | Stephen Jay Gould | Goodreads |
Goodreads 2 | |||
29 | Dinosaur Summer | Greg Bear | Prehistoric Pulp |
Tor | |||
30 | Dinosaur Tales | Ray Bradbury | Tor |
The Guardian | |||
31 | Dinosaurs and Other Prehistoric Animals on Stamps – A Worldwide Catalogue | Karl P. N Shuker | Waterstones |
Goodreads | |||
32 | Dinosaurs Of Utah | Frank De Courten | Goodreads |
Waterstones | |||
33 | Dinosaurs: A Concise Natural History | Thought Co | |
Ebay | |||
34 | Dinosaurs: The Most Complete, Up-to-Date Encyclopedia for Dinosaur Lovers of All Ages | Thomas R. Holtz, Jr. | Nation Geographic |
Goodreads | |||
35 | End of an Era | Robert J. Sawyer | Prehistoric Pulp |
Tor | |||
36 | Evolution: What the Fossils Say and Why It Matters | Donald R. Prothero | Bioteaching |
Goodreads 2 | |||
37 | Extinction | Douglas H Erwin | Five Books |
Bioteaching | |||
38 | Feathered Dinosaurs | John L. Long, Peter Schouten | Waterstones |
Thought Co | |||
39 | If Dinosaurs Were Alive Today | Dougal Dixon | Goodreads |
Waterstones | |||
40 | Journey to the Center of the Earth | Jules Verne | Tor |
The Guardian | |||
41 | Life on a Young Planet | Andrew H Knoll | Five Books |
Goodreads 2 | |||
42 | Rereading the Fossil Record | D. Sepkoski | Patzkowsky Paleocology Lab |
Bioteaching | |||
43 | Rex Appeal | Peter L. Larson, Kristin Donnan, Robert Bakker | Waterstones |
I Know Dino 2 | |||
44 | Systematics and the Fossil Record | A. B. Smith | Patzkowsky Paleocology Lab |
Bioteaching | |||
45 | T. Rex and the Crater of Doom | Walter Alvarez | Goodreads |
Goodreads 2 | |||
46 | The Armored Dinosaurs | Kenneth Carpenter | Goodreads |
Waterstones | |||
47 | The Complete Book Of Dinosaurs | Dougal Dixon | Goodreads |
Waterstones | |||
48 | The Complete Dinosaur (2nd ed.) edited | Michael Brett-Surman, Thomas Holtz, and James Farlow | Nation Geographic |
Thought Co | |||
49 | The Complete Illustrated Encyclopedia of Dinosaurs & Prehistoric Creatures | Dougal Dixon | Waterstones |
Goodreads | |||
50 | The Dinosaur Heresies | Robert T. Bakker | Barnes & Noble |
I Know Dino 2 | |||
51 | The Dinosaur Hunters | Deborah Cadbury | Goodreads 2 |
Waterstones | |||
52 | The Encyclopedia of Dinosaurs | David Lambert, The Diagram Group | Waterstones |
Goodreads | |||
53 | The Gilded Dinosaur, | Mark Jaffe | Barnes & Noble |
Goodreads | |||
54 | The Illustrated Encyclopaedia of Dinosaurs | David Norman | Waterstones |
Goodreads | |||
55 | The Scientific American Book of Dinosaurs | Gregory Paul | Goodreads |
Goodreads 2 | |||
56 | The World Encyclopedia of Dinosaurs & Prehistoric Creatures | Dougal Dixon | Thought Co |
Goodreads | |||
57 | Tyrannosaurus Sue: The Extraordinary Saga of the Largest, Most Fought Over T-Rex Ever Found | Steve Fiffer | Goodreads |
Goodreads 2 | |||
58 | Vertebrate Palaeontology | Michael J. Benton | Goodreads 2 |
Nation Geographic | |||
59 | Walking with Dinosaurs | Tim Haines | Waterstones |
Goodreads | |||
60 | When Life Nearly Died: The Greatest Mass Extinction of All Time | Michael J. Benton | Goodreads |
Goodreads 2 | |||
61 | Written in Stone: Evolution, the Fossil Record, and Our Place in Nature | Brian Switek | Goodreads |
Goodreads 2 | |||
(Books Appear On 1 List Each) | |||
62 | 101 Questions About Dinosaurs | Philip J. Currie, Eva B. Koppelhus | Waterstones |
63 | A Field Guide to Mesozoic Birds and other Winged Dinosaurs | Matthew P. Martyniuk | Goodreads |
64 | A Field Guide to the Dinosaurs of North America | Bob Strauss | Waterstones |
65 | A Guide to Dinosaurs | Waterstones | |
66 | A History of Paleontology Illustration (Life of the Past) | Jane P. Davidson | Bioteaching |
67 | A Lovely Love Story | Edward Monkton | I Know Dino |
68 | A Survival Guide: Living with Dinosaurs in the Jurassic Period (Survival in the Age of Dinosaurs) | Dougal Dixon | Goodreads |
69 | A Thing of the Past | John Russell Fearn | Waterstones |
70 | All about Dinosaurs | Roy Chapman Andrews | Goodreads |
71 | All My Friends Are Dead | Jory Jon and Avery Monsen | I Know Dino |
72 | Amazing Dinosaurs (second edition): More Feathers, More Claws, Big Horns, Wide Jaws! | Dougal Dixon | Goodreads |
73 | Ancient Creatures | Spencer Lucas | Waterstones |
74 | Animals of a Bygone Era | Maja Safstrom | Waterstones |
75 | Archaeologica | Aedeen Cremin | Waterstones |
76 | Archetypes and Ancestors: Palaeontology in Victorian London, 1850-1875 | Adrian Desmond | Bioteaching |
77 | Archosauria: A New Look at the Old Dinosaur | John C. McLoughlin | Goodreads |
78 | Arthropod Fossils and Phylogeny | Gregory D. Edgecombe | Bioteaching |
79 | Auf Den Spuren Der Dinosaurier | Lockley | Waterstones |
80 | Barnum Brown | Lowell Dingus, Mark Norell | Waterstones |
81 | Big Bird! | Ken Gerhard, Jonathan Downes, William M. Rebsamen | Waterstones |
82 | Big Bone Lick | Stanley Hedeen, John Mack Faragher | Waterstones |
83 | Bones of the Earth | Michael Swanwick | Prehistoric Pulp |
84 | Boy, Were We Wrong About Dinosaurs | Kathleen Kudlinski | Nation Geographic |
85 | British Polacanthid Dinosaurs | William T. Blows, David Penney | Waterstones |
86 | Bumper Book of Dinosaurs | Keiron Pim | Waterstones |
87 | Captain Raptor series | Kevin O’Malley | Barnes & Noble |
88 | Carnosaur | Harry Adam Knight | Prehistoric Pulp |
89 | Cartoon History of the Universe I, Vol. 1-7: From the Big Bang to Alexander the Great | Larry Gonick | Goodreads |
90 | Ceratopsia | Peter Dodson | Waterstones |
91 | Changing of the Guard | Ted Rechlin | Waterstones |
92 | Charles R. Knight: The Artist Who Saw Through Time | Richard Milner | Nation Geographic |
93 | Circle It, Apatosaurus Facts, Word Search, Puzzle Book | Lowry Global Media LLC, Maria Schumacher | Waterstones |
94 | Circle It, Tyrannosaurus Rex Facts, Word Search, Puzzle Book | Lowry Global Media LLC, Mark Schumacher, Maria Schumacher | Waterstones |
95 | Complete Illustrated Guide to Dinosaur Skeletons | Paul | Waterstones |
96 | Cretaceous Dawn | Lisa M. Graziano and Michael S.A. Graziano | I Know Dino |
97 | Dawn of the Dinosaurs: Life in the Triassic | Nicholas Fraser | Goodreads |
98 | Dawn Of The Dinosaurs: The Triassic In Petrified Forest | Robert A. Long | Goodreads |
99 | Day of the Dinosaurs | Steve Brusatte, Daniel Chester | Waterstones |
100 | Digging into Dinosaurs | Judy Braus | Waterstones |
101 | Dino Gangs | Josh Young, Philip J. Currie | Waterstones |
102 | Dino Might | Michael Burgan, Wenzel Bernard, Bernard Adnet | Waterstones |
103 | Dino-Gami | Joost Langeveld | Waterstones |
104 | Dinosaur | David Norman | Goodreads |
105 | Dinosaur Destinations | Jon Kramer, Julie Martinez, Vernon Morris | Waterstones |
106 | Dinosaur Digs | Dinosaur Digs | Waterstones |
107 | Dinosaur Explorer | Dougal Dixon | Goodreads |
108 | Dinosaur Highway | Laurie E. Jasinski | Waterstones |
109 | Dinosaur Imagery | Michael Tropea, John J. Lazendorf, Philip J. Currie | Waterstones |
110 | Dinosaur Lives | John R. Horner | Goodreads 2 |
111 | Dinosaur Memories | Allen Debus | Waterstones |
112 | Dinosaur National Monument | Treasure Chest Books | Waterstones |
113 | Dinosaur Paleobiology | Stephen Brusatte | Nation Geographic |
114 | Dinosaur Planet | Anne McCaffrey | Tor |
115 | Dinosaur Sculpting | Allen A. Debus, Bob Morales, Diane E. Debus | Waterstones |
116 | Dinosaur Sex | Michael Brookfield | Waterstones |
117 | Dinosaur! | David Norman, John Sebbick, John Sibbick | Waterstones |
118 | Dinosaurios De Aqui, De Alla, De Verdad y De Mentira | Claudia Tambussi, Guillermo Lopez | Waterstones |
119 | Dinosaurs | Christopher A.. Brochu | Goodreads |
120 | Dinosaurs | Steve Parker, Belinda Gallagher | Waterstones |
121 | Dinosaurs | Spencer G. Lucas | Waterstones |
122 | Dinosaurs | OM Books | Waterstones |
123 | Dinosaurs | John H. Ostrom | Waterstones |
124 | Dinosaurs | James Kavanagh, Dr. Raymond Leung | Waterstones |
125 | Dinosaurs | Gregory S. Paul | Waterstones |
126 | Dinosaurs | Gerrie McCall | Waterstones |
127 | Dinosaurs | G. McCall | Waterstones |
128 | Dinosaurs | Douglas Palmer | Waterstones |
129 | Dinosaurs | Donald F. Glut, Vertebrate Paleontology | Waterstones |
130 | Dinosaurs | Dimond | Waterstones |
131 | Dinosaurs | David Norman, Bob Hersey | Waterstones |
132 | Dinosaurs | David Norman | Waterstones |
133 | Dinosaurs – The Grand Tour: Everything Worth Knowing About Dinosaurs from Aardonyx to Zuniceratops | Keiron Pim | Goodreads |
134 | Dinosaurs -Prehistoric Zoobook | John Bonnett Wexo | Waterstones |
135 | Dinosaurs (Encyclopedia Prehistorica) | Robert Sabuda and Matthew Reinhart | Barnes & Noble |
136 | Dinosaurs (Magic Tree House Research Guide, #1) | Will Osborne | Goodreads |
137 | Dinosaurs and Prehistoric Life | Hazel Richardson | Goodreads |
138 | Dinosaurs Ever Evolving | Allen A. Debus | Waterstones |
139 | Dinosaurs in the Attic: An Excursion into the American Museum of Natural History | Douglas Preston | Goodreads |
140 | Dinosaurs in the Sea | Dougal Dixon | Goodreads |
141 | Dinosaurs of Distinction | Matt Phillips, Heather Austin | Waterstones |
142 | Dinosaurs of Eastern Iberia | Angel Galobart, Maite Suner, Begona Poza | Waterstones |
143 | Dinosaurs of North America Flat | National Geographic Maps | Waterstones |
144 | Dinosaurs of the Air: The Evolution and Loss of Flight in Dinosaurs and Birds | Gregory S. Paul | Goodreads |
145 | Dinosaurs of the Isle of Wight | David Martill, Darren Naish | Waterstones |
146 | Dinosaurs On-line | R. L. Jones, Kathryn Gabriel | Waterstones |
147 | Dinosaurs Past and Present: v. 1 | Sylvia J. Czerkas, Everett C. Olson | Waterstones |
148 | Dinosaurs Past and Present: v. 2 | Sylvia J. Czerkas, Everett C. Olson | Waterstones |
149 | Dinosaurs Versus Aliens | Grant Morrison | Barnes & Noble |
150 | Dinosaurs: a Global View | Sylvia J. | Goodreads |
151 | Dinosaurs: A Spotter’s Guide | Weldon Owen Limited | Waterstones |
152 | Dinosaurs: A Very Short Introduction | David Norman | Waterstones |
153 | Dinosaurs: How They Lived and Evolved 2016 | Darren Naish, Paul Barrett | Waterstones |
154 | Dinosaurs: The Encyclopedia (Dinosaurs the Encyclopedia) (Dinosaurs the Encyclopedia) | Donald F. Glut | Goodreads |
155 | Dinosaurs! | Jack Dann and Gardner Dozois | Prehistoric Pulp |
156 | Dinostars and the Cackling Cave Creature | Ben Mantle | Waterstones |
157 | Dinosuars | Stephen Wattleworth, Chris Firmin | Waterstones |
158 | Dinotopia Series | James Gurney | Barnes & Noble |
159 | Dippy | Paul Barrett, Polly Parry, Sandra Chapman | Waterstones |
160 | Discover Texas Dinosaurs | Charles E. Finsley, Wann Langston, Doris Tischler | Waterstones |
161 | Discovering Dinosaurs: Evolution, Extinction, and the Lessons of Prehistory, Expanded and Updated | Mark Norell | Goodreads |
162 | Discovering the Mammoth | John J. McKay | Waterstones |
163 | Dougal Dixon’s Dinosaurs: 12 New Dinosaur Discoveries and More Feathers Than Ever | Dougal Dixon | Goodreads |
164 | Dragon Hunter: Roy Chapman Andrews & the Central Asiatic Expeditions | Charles Gallenkamp | Goodreads 2 |
165 | Drums Along the Congo | Rory Nugent | Waterstones |
166 | Dynamics of Dinosaurs and Other Extinct Giants | R. McNeill Alexander | Goodreads |
167 | Easy Field Guide to Dinosaurs of Arizona | B.J. Tegowski | Waterstones |
168 | Egypt’s Prehistoric Fauna | Dominique Navarro, Assistant Curator of Vertebrate Paleontology Matthew Lamanna | Waterstones |
169 | Eliza and the Dragonfly | Susie Caldwell Rinehart, Anisa Claire Hovemann | Waterstones |
170 | Embryos in Deep Time: The Rock Record of Biological Development | Marcelo R. Sánchez | Bioteaching |
171 | Encyclopedia of Dinosaurs | Philip Currie | Goodreads |
172 | Encyclopedia of Dinosaurs | Brooks Britt | Goodreads |
173 | Encyclopedia of Dinosaurs | Publishing House My Ebook | Waterstones |
174 | Encyclopedia of Dinosaurs | Carl Mehling | Waterstones |
175 | Encyclopedia Prehistorica Dinosaurs: The Definitive Pop-Up | Robert Sabuda and Matthew Reinhart | I Know Dino 2 |
176 | Eternal Ephemera: Adaptation and the Origin of Species from the Nineteenth Century Through Punctuated Equilibria and Beyond | Niles Eldredge | Bioteaching |
177 | Evolution and Escalation: An Ecological History of Life | G. Vermeij | Patzkowsky Paleocology Lab |
178 | Evolution in Action: Natural History Through Spectacular Skeletons. Jean-Baptiste de Panafieu and Patrick Gries | Jean-Baptiste De Panafieu | Bioteaching |
179 | Evolution of Fossil Ecosystems, Second Edition | Paul Selden | Bioteaching |
180 | Evolution of the Insects (Cambridge Evolution Series) | David Grimaldi | Bioteaching |
181 | Evolutionary Paleoecology | Warren Allmon | Bioteaching |
182 | Evolutionary Paleoecology of the Marine Biosphere | J. W. Valentine | Patzkowsky Paleocology Lab |
183 | Extinct Animals: Species That Have Disappeared During Human History | Thought Co | |
184 | Extinction: Bad Genes or Bad Luck? | D. M. Raup | Patzkowsky Paleocology Lab |
185 | Family Reference Guide Dinosaurs | Waterstones | |
186 | Forerunners of Mammals: Radiation • Histology • Biology (Life of the Past) | Anusuya Chinsamy-Turan | Bioteaching |
187 | Fossil Behavior Compendium | Arthur J. Boucot | Bioteaching |
188 | Fossil Hunter | Thomas B. Goodhue | Waterstones |
189 | Fossil Invertebrates | Richard S. Boardman | Goodreads |
190 | Fossil Spiders: The Evolutionary History of a Mega-diverse Order (Monograph Series) | David Penney | Bioteaching |
191 | Fossiling in Florida | Mark Renz | Goodreads |
192 | Fossils: A Very Short Introduction | Keith S. Thomson | Goodreads 2 |
193 | Fossils: The Key to the Past | Richard Fortey | Bioteaching |
194 | From Clone to Bone: The Synergy of Morphological and Molecular Tools in Palaeobiology (Cambridge Studies in Morphology and Molecules: New Paradigms in Evolutionary Bio) | Robert J. Asher | Bioteaching |
195 | Genetics, Paleontology, and Macroevolution | Jeffrey S. Levinton | Bioteaching |
196 | George Gaylord Simpson | Leo F. Laporte | Bioteaching |
197 | Giant Sloths and Sabertooth Cats | Donald K Grayson, Donald K. Grayson | Waterstones |
198 | Giants of the Lost World | Donald R. Prothero | Waterstones |
199 | Gorgon: The Monsters That Ruled the Planet Before Dinosaurs and How They Died in the Greatest Catastrophe in Earth’s History | Peter D. Ward | Goodreads 2 |
200 | Grave Secrets of Dinosaurs | Phillip Manning | Waterstones |
201 | Great Dinosaur Discoveries | Darren Naish | Waterstones |
202 | Grzimek’s Animal Life Encyclopedia: Lower Metazoans and Lesser Deuterostomes Vol 1 | Michael Hutchins | Waterstones |
203 | Hadrosaurs | David A. Eberth, David C. Evans | Waterstones |
204 | History of Insects | A.P. Rasnitsyn | Bioteaching |
205 | Horseshoe Crabs and Velvet Worms: The Story of the Animals and Plants That Time Has Left Behind | Richard Fortey | Goodreads 2 |
206 | Horsham’s Dinosaur Hunter: George Bax Holmes | John A. Cooper | Waterstones |
207 | How Dinosaurs Came to be | Patricia Lauber, Doug Henderson | Waterstones |
208 | How Do Dinosaurs Fit Into the Bible? | Daniel a Biddle | Waterstones |
209 | Hunting Dinosaurs | Louie Psihoyos | Goodreads |
210 | Illustrated Directory of Dinosaurs | Ingrid Cranfeild | Waterstones |
211 | In Quest of Great Lakes Ice Age Vertebrates | J.Alan Holman | Waterstones |
212 | In Search of Deep Time: Beyond the Fossil Record to a New History of Life (Comstock Books) | Henry Gee | Bioteaching |
213 | In the Presence of Dinosaurs | John Colagrande | Goodreads |
214 | Introduction to Paleobiology and the Fossil Record | Michael Benton | Bioteaching |
215 | Jack and Boo’s Dinosaur Island | Philip Bell, Eleanor Bell | Waterstones |
216 | Journey to the Ice Age | Rien Poortvliet | Waterstones |
217 | Jurassic Classics | Donald F. Glut | Waterstones |
218 | Jurassic West: The Dinosaurs of the Morrison Formation and Their World | John Foster | Goodreads |
219 | King of the Crocodylians | David R. Schwimmer, David Schwimmer | Waterstones |
220 | Kings of Creation: How a New Breed of Scientists is Revolutionizing Our Understanding of Dinosaurs | Dino Don Lessem | Goodreads |
221 | Last Great Dinosaurs | Monty Reid, Jan Sovak | Waterstones |
222 | Learn about… Texas Dinosaurs | Georg Zappler | Waterstones |
223 | Life Through the Ages | Charles R. Knight, Philip J. Currie, Stephen Jay Gould | Waterstones |
224 | Life: A Natural History of the First Four Billion Years of Life on Earth | Richard Fortey | Goodreads 2 |
225 | Lone Star Dinosaurs | Louis Jacobs, Karen Carr | Waterstones |
226 | Lough Hyne -from Prehistory to the Present | Terri Kearney | Waterstones |
227 | Love in the Time of Dinosaurs | Kirsten Alene | I Know Dino |
228 | MacMillan Illustrated Encyclopedia of Dinosaurs and Prehistoric Animals: A Visual Who’s Who of Prehistoric Life | Dougal Dixon | Goodreads |
229 | Macroecology | J. H. Brown | Patzkowsky Paleocology Lab |
230 | Macroevolution: Pattern and Process | S. M. Stanley | Patzkowsky Paleocology Lab |
231 | Major Features of Evolution | G. G. Simpson | Patzkowsky Paleocology Lab |
232 | Making Prehistory: Historical Science and the Scientific Realism Debate (Cambridge Studies in Philosophy and Biology) | Derek Turner | Bioteaching |
233 | Mammoths | Errol Fuller | Waterstones |
234 | Mammoths | Adrian Lister | Waterstones |
235 | Megalodon: Hunting The Hunter | Mark Renz | Goodreads |
236 | Morphodynamics | Adolf Seilacher | Bioteaching |
237 | National Geographic Dinosaurs | Paul Barrett | Goodreads |
238 | Night Comes to the Cretaceous: Comets, Craters, Controversy, and the Last Days of the Dinosaurs | James Lawrence Powell | Goodreads |
239 | Notebook | Theo Von Taane | Waterstones |
240 | Oceans of Kansas: A Natural History of the Western Interior Sea | Thought Co | |
241 | On the Wing | Dr. David E. Alexander, Dr David E. Alexander | Waterstones |
242 | Once & Future Giants: What Ice Age Extinctions Tell Us about the Fate of Earth’s Largest Animals | Sharon Levy | Goodreads 2 |
243 | Ontogeny and Phylogeny | S. J. Gould | Patzkowsky Paleocology Lab |
244 | Origins | Frank H. T. Rhodes | Waterstones |
245 | Out of Thin Air: Dinosaurs, Birds, and Earth’s Ancient Atmosphere | Peter D. Ward | Goodreads |
246 | Palaeobiology II | Derek E. G. Briggs | Bioteaching |
247 | Palaeontology, or a Systematic Summary of Extinct Animals and Their Geological Relations (Classic Reprint) | Richard Owen | Bioteaching |
248 | Paleoimagery | Allen A. Debus, Diane E. Debus | Waterstones |
249 | Paleontological Data Analysis | yvind Hammer | Bioteaching |
250 | Paleontology: A Brief History of Life | Ian Tattersall | Goodreads 2 |
251 | Pictures of Time Beneath: Science, Heritage and the Uses of the Deep Past | Kirsty Douglas | Bioteaching |
252 | Planet Dinosaur | Waterstones | |
253 | Predator Deathmatch | Nick Molloy, Karl Shuker | Waterstones |
254 | Predatory Dinosaurs of the World: A Complete Illustrated Guide | Gregory S. Paul | Goodreads |
255 | Prehistoric | DK | Waterstones |
256 | Prehistoric Life: Evolution and the Fossil Record | Thought Co | |
257 | Prehistoric Past Revealed | Douglas Palmer | Waterstones |
258 | Primary Dinosaur Investigations | Craig A. Munsart, Karen Alonzi-Van Gundy | Waterstones |
259 | Princeton Field Guide to Dinosaurs | Gregory S. Paul | Waterstones |
260 | Principles of Paleontology | Michael Foote | Bioteaching |
261 | Punctuated Equilibrium | Stephen Jay Gould | Bioteaching |
262 | Quintaglio Ascension Trilogy | Robert J. Sawyer | Tor |
263 | Raptor Island – Dinosaur George and the Paleonauts | Mark Miller | Goodreads |
264 | Recreating and Age of Reptiles | Mark P. Witton | Waterstones |
265 | Remarkable Creatures | Tracy Chevalier | Goodreads 2 |
266 | Riddle of the Dinosaur | John Noble Wilford | Goodreads |
267 | Ripley’s Believe it or Not! Dinosaurs and Wild Animals | Robert Ripley | Waterstones |
268 | Rivers of Time | L. Sprague de Camp | Prehistoric Pulp |
269 | Rocky Mountain Guide to Tracking Dinosaurs | William Panczner | Waterstones |
270 | Sea Dragons | Richard Ellis | Waterstones |
271 | Searching for Ropens | Jonathan Whitcomb | Waterstones |
272 | Starring T. Rex!: Dinosaur Mythology and Popular Culture | José Luis Sanz | Bioteaching |
273 | Story of the Dinosaurs. Dougal Dixon | Dougal Dixon | Goodreads |
274 | Stumbling Blocks of Evolution | Chris Nitardy | Waterstones |
275 | Taking Wing: Archaeopteryx and the Evolution of Bird Flight | Pat Shipman | Goodreads 2 |
276 | Telling the Evolutionary Time: Molecular Clocks and the Fossil Record (Systematics Association Special Volumes) | Philip C J Donoghue | Bioteaching |
277 | Tempo and Mode in Evolution (The Columbia Classics in Evolution) | George Gaylord Simpson | Bioteaching |
278 | The Adventures of Yogasaurus, Trees | Kenneth Duncan, Susan Betsy Light, John Gurney | Waterstones |
279 | The Age of Dinosaurs in South America | Fernando E. Novas | Waterstones |
280 | The Age of Reptiles | Rosemary Volpe | Waterstones |
281 | The Amazing World of Dinosaurs | James Kuether | Waterstones |
282 | The Artist and the Scientists: Bringing Prehistory to Life | Peter Trusler | Bioteaching |
283 | The Bone Hunters: The Heroic Age of Paleontology in the American West | Url Lanham | Goodreads |
284 | The Bumper Book of Dinosaurs | Keiron Pim | I Know Dino 2 |
285 | The Call of Distant Mammoths: Why the Ice Age Mammals Disappeared | Peter D. Ward | Goodreads 2 |
286 | The Cambrian Explosion: The Construction of Animal Biodiversity | Douglas Erwin | Bioteaching |
287 | The Cambrian Fossils of Chengjiang, China: The Flowering of Early Animal Life | Xian-guag Hou | Bioteaching |
288 | The Ceratopsia: Based On Preliminary Studies By Othniel C. Marsh | John Bell Hatcher | Goodreads |
289 | The Complete Guide to Prehistoric Life | Tim Haines, Paul Chambers | Waterstones |
290 | The Complete T. Rex: How Stunning New Discoveries Are Changing Our Understanding of the World’s… | John R. Horner | Goodreads |
291 | The Dawn of Animal Life: A Biohistorical Study (Cambridge Earth Science Series) | Martin F. Glaessner | Bioteaching |
292 | The Dinosaur Coast Pocket Edition | Roger Osborne | Waterstones |
293 | The Dinosaur Dealers | John Long | Waterstones |
294 | The Dinosaur Films of Ray Harryhausen | Roy P. Webber | Waterstones |
295 | The Dinosaur Handbook | Thomas E. Svarney, Patricia L. Barnes-Svarney | Waterstones |
296 | The Dinosaur Papers, 1676-1906 | David B. Weishampel, Nadine M. White | Waterstones |
297 | The Dragon Seekers: How An Extraordinary Circle Of Fossilists Discovered The Dinosaurs And Paved The Way For Darwin | Christopher McGowan | Goodreads |
298 | The Early Evolution of Metazoa and the Significance of Problematic Taxa | Alberto M. Simonetta | Bioteaching |
299 | The Ecology of the Cambrian Radiation | Andrey Zhuravlev | Bioteaching |
300 | The Emerald Planet: How Plants Changed Earth’s History | David Beerling | Bioteaching |
301 | The Emergence of Animals | Mark A. S. McMenamin | Bioteaching |
302 | The Evolution Underground | Anthony J. Martin | Waterstones |
303 | The Fossil Chronicles: How Two Controversial Discoveries Changed Our View of Human Evolution | Dean Falk | Bioteaching |
304 | The Garden of Ediacara | Mark A. S. McMenamin | Bioteaching |
305 | The Genial Dinosaur | John Russell Fearn | Waterstones |
306 | The Gravity Theory of Mass Extinction | John Stojanowski | Waterstones |
307 | The Great Dinosaur Controversy | Keith Parsons | Waterstones |
308 | The Great Fossil Enigma: The Search for the Conodont Animal (Life of the Past) | Simon J. Knell | Bioteaching |
309 | The Hidden Hand of Gravity | Colin Beckley | Waterstones |
310 | The Homecoming | Barry B. Longyear | Tor |
311 | The Horned Dinosaurs: A Natural History | Peter Dodson | Goodreads |
312 | The Last Dinosaur Book | W.J.T. Mitchell | Barnes & Noble |
313 | The Life of a Fossil Hunter | Charles H. Sternberg | Nation Geographic |
314 | The Link: Uncovering Our Earliest Ancestor | Colin Tudge | Goodreads 2 |
315 | The Little Dinosaurs Of Ghost Ranch | Edwin Harris Colbert | Goodreads |
316 | The Lying Stones of Marrakech: Penultimate Reflections in Natural History | Stephen Jay Gould | Goodreads 2 |
317 | The Mammoth Hunt | Heather Amery, Colin King | Waterstones |
318 | The Meaning of Fossils: Episodes in the History of Palaeontology | Martin J. S. Rudwick | Bioteaching |
319 | The Monster Who Ate the State | Chris Browne | Waterstones |
320 | The Nature of the Stratigraphical Record | D. V. Ager | Patzkowsky Paleocology Lab |
321 | The New Dinosaurs | William Stout | Goodreads |
322 | The New Dinosaurs | Dougal Dixon | Goodreads |
323 | The Paleoart of Julius Csotonyi | Julius Csotonyi | Goodreads |
324 | The Paleobiological Revolution: Essays on the Growth of Modern Paleontology | David Sepkoski | Bioteaching |
325 | The Panda’s Thumb: More Reflections in Natural History | Stephen Jay Gould | Goodreads 2 |
326 | The Plot | Wellington Aguiar | Waterstones |
327 | The Pterosaurs | Rob Scrimger, David Unwin | Waterstones |
328 | The Reign of the Dinosaurs | Jean Guy-Michard, I.Mark Paris | Waterstones |
329 | The Riddle of the Dinosaur | John Noble Wilford | Goodreads 2 |
330 | The Rise and Progress of Palaeontology | Thomas Henry Huxley | Bioteaching |
331 | The Sauropod Dinosaurs | Mark Hallett, Mathew J. Wedel | Waterstones |
332 | The Search for the Pink-Headed Duck | Rory Nugent | Waterstones |
333 | The Second Jurassic Dinosaur Rush | Paul Brinkman | Nation Geographic |
334 | The Simon & Schuster Encyclopedia of Dinosaurs and Prehistoric Creatures: A Visual Who’s Who of Prehistoric Life | Barry Cox | Goodreads |
335 | The Sixth Extinction: An Unnatural History | Elizabeth Kolbert | Goodreads 2 |
336 | The Story of Life in 25 Fossils: Tales of Intrepid Fossil Hunters and the Wonders of Evolution | Donald R. Prothero | Goodreads 2 |
337 | The Structure of Evolutionary Theory | Stephen Jay Gould | Bioteaching |
338 | The Three Little Dinosaurs | David L Leighton, Karen L Strickland | Waterstones |
339 | The Top 256 Rules of Paleontology: …Practical Advice for Fossil Technicians | Walter W. Stein | Goodreads |
340 | The Trilobite Book: A Visual Journey | Riccardo Levi-Setti | Bioteaching |
341 | The Ultimate Dinosaur | Robert Silverberg | Goodreads |
342 | The Walking Whales: From Land to Water in Eight Million Years | Johannes G M Thewissen | Goodreads 2 |
343 | Theropoda vol. 1: Tyrannosauroidea | Andrea Cau | Goodreads |
344 | Theropoda vol. 2: Deinonychosauria | Andrea Cau | Goodreads |
345 | Thunder Series | James F. David | Tor |
346 | Time Traveler: In Search of Dinosaurs and Other Fossils from Montana to Mongolia | Michael Novacek | Goodreads 2 |
347 | Tracks in Deep Time | Jerald D. Harris, Jerald D Harris, Andrew R. C. Milner, Andrew R.C. Milner, Milner R C Andrew, Andrew R. Milner, Andrew R C Milner | Waterstones |
348 | Transylvanian Dinosaurs | David B. Weishampel, Coralia-Maria Jianu | Waterstones |
349 | Trilobite: Eyewitness to Evolution | Richard Fortey | Goodreads 2 |
350 | Trilobites | H B Whittington | Five Books |
351 | Tyrannosaur Canyon | Douglas Preston | Goodreads 2 |
352 | Tyrannosaurid Paleobiology | J. Michael Parrish | Goodreads |
353 | Tyrannosaurus and Other Dinosaurs of North America | Dougal Dixon | Goodreads |
354 | Tyrannosaurus Drip | Julia Donaldson and David Roberts | The Guardian |
355 | Unearthing the Dragon | Mark Norell and Mick Ellison | Nation Geographic |
356 | Unfinished Synthesis: Biological Hierarchies and Modern Evolutionary Thought | Niles Eldredge | Bioteaching |
357 | Visions of a Vanished World: The Extraordinary Fossils of the Hunsrück Slate | Gabriele Kühl | Bioteaching |
358 | Visual Encyclopedia of Dinosaurs | Dougal Dixon | Goodreads |
359 | Weird Dinosaurs | John Pickrell, Philip Currie | Waterstones |
360 | Weldon Owen Limited | UK) | Waterstones |
361 | West of Eden | Harry Harrison | Prehistoric Pulp |
362 | Why Dinosaurs Matter | Ken Lacovara | Waterstones |
363 | William Stout Prehistoric Life Murals | William Stout | Goodreads |
364 | World Encyclopedia of Dinosaurs and Prehistoric Creatures | Dougal Dixon | Waterstones |
365 | Your Inner Fish: A Journey into the 3.5-Billion-Year History of the Human Body | Neil Shubin | Goodreads 2 |
15 Best Dinosaur and Paleontology Book Sources/Lists
Source | Article |
Barnes & Noble | The Best Books About Dinosaurs |
Bioteaching | My Top Palaeontology Books of all Time (as of 2016) |
Ebay | Top 5 Books About Dinosaurs |
Five Books | Richard Fortey recommends the best books on Palaeontology |
Goodreads | The Best Non-fiction Dinosaur Books |
Goodreads 2 | Popular Paleontology Books |
I Know Dino | The 5 Best Dinosaur Books (And They’re For Adults!) |
I Know Dino 2 | 5 Non-Fiction Dinosaur Books That All Dino Enthusiasts Should Read |
Nation Geographic | A Dinosaur Reading List for Everyone |
Patzkowsky Paleocology Lab | Ten Must Read Books For Paleontology Graduate Students |
Prehistoric Pulp | Ten books to read after Jurassic World (and five to avoid) |
The Guardian | Five of the best dinosaur books |
Thought Co | The 10 Best Dinosaur Books |
Tor | 10 Essential Books Featuring Dinosaurs in Science Fiction |
Waterstones | Books on Dinosaurs & The Prehistoric World |