Sunday, June 26, 2022

Ultimate Dino Dad Reviews

More Dino Dad Reviews links. This blog post is only "ultimate" in the same way that Jurassic World: The Ultimate Pop-Up Book is: by which I mean I'm sure there will be more installments after this one. Seriously, though, the JW pop-up book is pretty great, despite lacking any scenes from Dominion. It's produced by Matthew Reinhart, the master craftsman of pop-up books. He already did a trilogy of prehistoric themed pop-ups known as the "Encyclopedia Prehistorica" series. I've reviewed the books on Dinosaurs and Sharks, and will be reviewing Mega Beasts pretty soon.

If, like many paleo nerds, you're tired of the Jurassic Park franchise hogging all the spotlight that pop culture reserves for dinosaurs, then please watch Prehistoric Planet on AppleTV! This fantastic series does better by dinos and their contemporaries than perhaps any other mass media (whether documentary or otherwise) since Walking With Dinosaurs. It is just gorgeous. 

I've got a whole slew of timeline books now to choose from, each with their own strengths and weaknesses. A Brief History of Life on Earth is the most impressive, the Usborne Timeline books are the most compact, and the "What On Earth?" timeline books are the most detailed. Within this series, The Nature Timeline Wallbook gives an overall view of life on earth, while four subsequent books take a more narrow focus on the history of specific groups of organisms in the Explorer! subseries: Plants, Bugs, Mammals, and Dinosaurs, the latter of which is ironically the only entry not yet covered at DDR.

Some other recent discoveries: 

My First 100 Dinosaur Words is one of the best baby board books out there for the particularly tiny dinosaur lover. Written as part of a series of semi-joking, semi-serious "STEM for babies" books, it introduces some surprisingly advanced paleontology concepts in a surprisingly child-friendly way.

Kaleidoscope of Dinosaurs and Other Prehistoric Life is a simply phenomenal book, utterly sweeping away one of the perceived truisms found in children's dinosaur books of yesteryear: the idea that we would never know what color prehistoric lifeforms were. It demonstrates how we in fact have startlingly detailed evidence that allows author/illustrator Greer Stothers to portray ancient life in absolutely vivid palettes.

If you're looking for unplugged activities to entertain your kids with, mine have enjoyed the Melissa & Doug Prehistoric Reusable Sticker Pad set. It's good, easy-to-contain fun, and the stickers are both enjoyably stylized and reasonably accurate for a product of this type!


Thursday, June 24, 2021

Jurassic World The Exhibition

 Check out Dino Dad Review's visit to Jurassic World: The Exhibition at the Grandscape - The Colony near Dallas, Texas! This is one dinosaur attraction that's sure to get a lot of buzz, so don't miss out! 

Jurassic World: The Exhibition 



Saturday, August 1, 2020

Dino Dino Dino (Dad Reviews)

Time for more self-promotion! I guess it's been a while; there's quite a few more books featured at Dino Dad Reviews than the last time I did this!

I've managed to find multiple books over the past year celebrating the often overlooked contributions of women in paleontology. Daring to Dig has proved the most popular of these so far, which tells the stories of several women important to the history of American paleontology. She Found Fossils is pretty similar, though it expands its focus worldwide, and covers many more individuals (including scicomm celeb Ashley Hall, who just released her own book, Fossils For Kids). The Dinosaur Expert is a storybook about a girl embarrassed by her interest in dinosaurs that demonstrates the value of representation in the field, and an information page at the back mentions many of the paleontologists mentioned in the previous two books. Fossil Huntress tells the story of famous paleoanthropologist, Mary Leakey.

Additionally, I've reviewed multiple books about Mary Anning, the matriarch of paleontology, over the past year or so. Stone Girl, Bone Girl and The Dog That Dug For Dinosaurs are somewhat meh, while Mary Anning's Curiosity and Dinosaur Lady are excellent (even if the latter perpetuates the erroneous association of Anning with dinosaurs).

I've published a few more reviews on museums and other attractions, including Dinosaur Valley State Park, the creationist ICR Discovery Center, the socially-distant drive-thru version of Jurassic Quest, and the Texas Through Time museum.

I completed my trifecta of Abby Howard comics with Mammal Takeover!, and reviewed another Ted Rechlin comic, this time about the famous Sue the T. rex! I also reviewed another of Hannah Bonner's cartoon prehistory books, When Bugs Were Big, Plants Were Strange, and Tetrapods Stalked the Earth.

I've reviewed a fair number of different forms of media recently as well. Continuing my Primeval Playlist series, I was super excited to cover the geologically themed music of The Amoeba People, and also wrote a separate post about miscellaneous prehistory-themed music. The creator of THE BIG DIE produced a new humorous paleo game called Lemme Splash!, which mocks the crackpot Brian J. Ford and his idea of dinosaur "sex lakes". I've begun reviewing documentaries as well, starting with the Ark Encounter expose We Believe In Dinosaurs, and most recently Emily Graslie's Prehistoric Road Trip. Perhaps most significantly, I covered the inaugural Dino Nerds for Black Lives livestream, an online event which saw all sorts of paleo nerds doing various live presentations to raise money for BLM charities.

Just for fun, I engaged in some coloring activities, including The Coloring Book of (Scientifically Accurate) Paleofauna. I also reviewed several dinosaur toys: the Battat Dinosaurs 5-Pack and the Wild Past Protoceratops.

I suppose that's good enough for now. I'll keep coming back her to make more of these posts in the future. I hope you enjoy my reviews!



Tuesday, August 20, 2019

More Dino Dad Reviews

And I'm dusting off this old blog once again to post more links to my new site, Dino Dad Reviews! I'm not expecting anybody to read this, I'm just trying to game the algorithm.

I'll start off with a few graphic novels I've reviewed. First is Ted Rechlin's Jurassic, a day-in-the-life story of a young Brontosaurus, much in the vein of Delgado's "Age of Reptiles" series. I've also reviewed the first two entries in Abby Howard's "Earth Before Us" series, Dinosaur Empire! and Ocean Renegades! I'll be reviewing book #3 soon.

I've made a yearly habit of reviewing prehistoric shark material during shark week, with my reviews of Paleo Sharks & Safari's Prehistoric Sharks Toob last year, and Discovering Sharks & a pop-up book about Sharks & Other Sea Monsters this year.

While books are the bread and butter for Dino Dad Reviews, I do expand my focus to other media now and then. The Big Die is a runner game based on the End-Permian mass extinction, inspired by a paleontology meme group on Facebook. Sharp Teeth is a fantastic short film that plays on audience assumptions about carnivores. I also like to share favorites from my "Primeval Playlist": fun prehistoric themed songs I enjoy listening to. I've covered the music of Ray Troll & The Ratfish Wranglers as well as Professor Flynn so far. I've also recently published my first ever museum review, looking at The Whiteside Museum of Natural History in Seymour, TX.

Speaking of branching out, I've begun reviewing children's books on evolution as well, starting with Grandmother Fish and When the Whales Walked.

Here's some other miscellaneous reviews. The Adventures of Padma and a Blue Dinosaur is a combination storybook and encyclopedia that brings some much-deserved attention to the dinosaurs of India. I've reviewed a couple of fossil themed activities: the Build Your Own Dinosaurs Sticker Book, and Mike Tharme's DIY Fossil Magnets. I think Small and Tall Tales of Extinct Animals deserves more attention, as it's a charmingly illustrated book on the somber topic of animals made extinct by human hands. Similarly, the excellent Cat-in-the-Hat tie-in Once Upon a Mastodon deserves to be better known than its rather lackluster counterpart, Oh Say Can You Say Di-no-saur?

That's all for now. I'll post more links as I review more books in the future.

Thursday, November 8, 2018

Dino Dad Reviews

So I have a new blog called Dino Dad Reviews! This Stuckasaurus blog never did attract many visitors, so I'm mostly using this post to link to a bunch of my new posts to try to boost their standings in The Algorithm.

I was super excited to get my signed copy of Cruisin' the Fossil Coastline, a sequel to Kirk Johnson and Ray Troll's classic Cruisin' the Fossil Freeway. I love Ray Troll's art, and have a bit of a personal connection to it.

Speaking of personal connections, reading Jason Chin's Grand Canyon got me really nostalgic for the Disneyland Railroad. The Grand Canyon/Primeval World diorama is partially responsible for my dino obsession.

I'm pretty pleased with my review of The Dinosaurs of Waterhouse Hawkins, and it's proved to be a bit of a hit on my blog.

Speaking of hits, it's got nothing on the Ultimate Dinopedia (authored by the great Dino Don!), which has twice the hits of any other review on my blog!

Mammoth Is Mopey (by David Orr of Love in the Time of Chasmosaurs) is perhaps my favorite book I've reviewed so far, and I'd really like to see it in the hands of more kids everywhere!

ROAR: A Dinosaur Tour has a similar art style to Mammoth Is Mopey, though it doesn't have quite the same concern for fidelity to its subjects.

Pinnochio Rex is my most recent review, and is a great primer on the diversity of the tyrannosaur family.

That's all for now. I'm probably just going to use this blog to promote Dino Dad Reviews from now on, so if anybody stumbles upon this page, be sure to go check out that website instead!

Sunday, June 4, 2017

"God's Word or Human Reason?" book review

     I've been meaning to write this book review for some time now, but having a second baby around the house means a lot of my time has been eaten up lately! I've been waiting for this book ever since I first heard about the project a couple years ago, and I must say it's been worth the wait! God's Word or Human Reason is one of the better books I've ever read on the subject of creationism. It tackles the case from the perspective of five former young earth creationists; a rather unique take amongst the numerous books published on the matter. The title references a display in Ken Ham's creation museum, and sets up the book's theme that such a statement reflects an insidious false dichotomy.


     This book is actually rather personal for me, but while I will go into that in some detail below, I had best describe the book itself first. How does it stack up? Each author tackles a different subject, going through a list of common creationist arguments on the topic, answering them one by one. The authors follow each of their chapters with a personal story about their experiences as young earth creationists, and their journey away from that viewpoint. The technical rigor of the scientific sections handily accomplish their goals throughout the book, and I strongly recommend this book to anyone wrestling with the evidence. The principal subjects covered include geology, radiometric dating, bird evolution, human evolution, and Biblical interpretation. The topics within these subjects range for too widely and delve far too deeply for me to recount in a single blog post; the authors do it far better than I ever could anyway! Suffice it to say I really enjoyed the read. I particularly appreciated the chapters on geology and bird evolution, though my own interests may bias me here. The bird evolution chapter also includes a dozen wonderful illustrations by Emily Willoughby of various feathered dinosaurs, beautifully presenting them as natural-looking, real animals.



     Glenn Morton represents a real catch for this book. As a former full-fledged creation scientist, Morton brings a particularly poignant perspective to the table. Both his data and his personal story cut deep into the heart of the young earther narrative. I found it particularly enlightening when he examined the various competing ideas about flood geology among "mainstream" creationists. Each handily refutes each other's ideas about which rock layers record correspond to what parts of the flood process, and so one could say the flood geology has been defeated by flood geology (indeed, that is the title of a paper by Phil Senter which Morton cites that critiques the same creationists). This peek behind the curtain demonstrates that no matter how much Ken Ham insists that "the Bible says it, that settles it", the people who actually write about creationism in fact cannot settle on any kind of detailed shared narrative.
     I appreciated that the final chapter of the book examined the issue from a Biblical perspective. Christian Bible scholar James Comer demonstrates the inconsistencies that arise from a so-called "plain reading" of Scripture, and demonstrates the unconscious biases that in fact determine what one consider a "plain reading" to be. I still shudder at Comer's description of the disturbing circular logic of the Cataclysm Chronology Research Group, formed with the stated goal of reinterpreting the accepted grammatical character of Hebrew (specifically the sequential nature of wayyiqtols) in order to make it conform to their presuppositions about the Noah's Flood narrative. I also found Comer's discussion of the ways in which creationism actually harms Christianity particularly enlightening.
     I only have a few critiques of the book, mostly minor quibbles. Several of Willoughby's illustrations appear to come from earlier in her career. The contrast between them and her newer pieces seems quite noticeable to me, and I personally would have enjoyed seeing newer artwork. However, I can appreciate the competing priorities going into the making of a book that apparently took as long to put together as this one,  and as even her earlier illustrations beat the pants off most popular dinosaur depictions, I suppose I can't truly complain.
     I thought Jonathan Kane perhaps over-emphasized certain confirmed predictions made about bird evolution, particularly in the case of "Tetrapteryx" vs. Microraptor. I felt Kane could have said more about the competing ideas about bird evolution that existed in William Beebe's time, a discussion of which would have given the reader a stronger background to work with. Also, a sidebar in his chapter directs the reader to supplementary material at the Panda's Thumb blog, in a post titled Creationist Classification of Theropods (also authored by Kane). I found this information really helpful, and I wish Kane had included it in the chapter proper. However, that's mostly the nerdy, fact-consuming part of my brain talking, and this cartoon (which DOES appear in the book) more or less sums up the gist of the article.


     I thought perhaps Comer's chapter on the Biblical case against young earth creationism felt perhaps a little over-complicated at times. As this issue represents the major stumbling for most American Christians, I appreciate the desire to exhaustively make one's case, but pitching it a little more towards the lay audience might give this perspective more traction. I enjoyed the chapter myself, but I also don't necessarily represent the average reader, either. If the reader would enjoy both more extensive and perhaps more approachable supplemental discussion on the topic, I recommend the blog Resurrecting Orthodoxy, by Joel Edmund Anderson. He posts on many topics, including the culture wars, but he has proven himself quite adept in particular at tackling young earthers from a Biblical perspective.
     I personally would've also liked to see a chapter on whale evolution (another common creationist standby), though again, with the amount of time it took to create this book, I don't begrudge them that. Besides, whale paleontologist Hans Thewissen has already written another entire book entitled "The Walking Whales" (which I also heartily recommend) that I suppose one could consider essentially a stand-in for this hypothetical sixth topic. (As a non-believer himself, though, I suppose he wouldn't really fit with the larger character of this book.)

     The authors handily anticipate most creationist arguments; however, this would normally only make for a mostly better than average entry into a very crowded marketplace. The authors' recollections of their experiences both with and as young earth creationists set this book apart, and give it an emotional impact most of the books on this subject lack. It's one thing to confront the manipulation of facts by creationist organizations, but it is quite another to see the manipulation of emotions and people on the individual level. My heart breaks for the five authors, three of whom were driven away from Christianity entirely due to their experiences. I felt rather furious on Glenn Morton's behalf at the treatment he received from his fellow young earth creationists when he attempted to enlist their help in fixing flaws he found in creationist theory. Not only did they ignore his attempts to better their own field, he fell on the receiving end of truly vitriolic personal attacks regarding his faith. The inability and unwillingness to wrestle with the hard questions ultimately did more to drive him away from the young earth camp than the ad hominem attacks, however. I'm glad he didn't lose his overall faith as a result, an outcome I would have totally understood had it come to pass.
     This aspect of the book really struck a chord with me. While I don't think my history quite matches the injustice many of the authors suffered, I can nevertheless commiserate. Based on the literature presented to me throughout my life, I internalized creationism as the one true light standing against the darkness of atheism in our modern era. Consequently, though I have loved paleontology ever since I can remember, I wasted far more time on romantic fantasies about joining Ken Ham or ICR to go hunt for the Mokele Mbembe in the Congo than I ever did on actually thinking about how I might actually pursue an actual, workable career in the field.
     By the time I entered college I had already begun to grow wary of troubling trends I perceived in the major creationist organizations, but a chance discovery partway through really got the wheels in my head turning. As both a Jurassic Park fanboy and a creationist who believed the assertion that reports of feathered dinosaurs were all lies, I naturally rejected any such notion as inherently ridiculous. The utterly garbage "tarred and feathered" raptors that some artists grudgingly illustrated to depict the emerging scientific consensus did nothing to quell my aesthetic revulsion to the idea. However, while searching for dinosaur images one day to turn into desktop wallpapers, I chanced upon Emily Willoughby's DeviantArt account, finding two images in particular that immediately gave me pause.


     There on my computer screen were two depictions of a feathered Deinonychus, the first such illustrations I had ever seen that approached something that immediately looked plausibly naturalistic to me. I do not hyperbolize when I say this moment turned my life around. With the sudden realization that feathered dinosaurs did not have to look inherently stupid, I began to rethink the whole notion, and returned to the evidence with a newly open mind. I then saw that the fossils (and the scientists) hadn't lied; the evidence was plain to see.
     Thus began the snowball effect as I began re-evaluating everything I'd ever absorbed from creationist literature, finding it wanting every time. The mainstream explanations proved consistently superior. I spent the next couple years in a state of cognitive dissonance, attempting to remain an "origins agnostic" as my former position became increasingly indefensible. A particularly strong blow came when I realized that several of my old creationist books had flat out lied to me regarding what evolution claimed about the origin of birds, as I describe in more detail in this older book review (see the image with the ostrich). The final straw came from reading Michael Behe's "Edge of Evolution". In the midst of attempting to poke wholes in the naturalistic explanations for the history of life, he nevertheless made it clear that he did not dispute that life had in fact evolved.
     At this point I abandoned all pretense at agnosticism, and embraced my newfound identity as a Christian evolutionist. This led to a flowering of renewed interest and some of the first genuine effort to deepen my understanding of prehistoric life, leading me to many different books and websites that I had somehow never thought to even search for before, despite being relatively easy to find. I eventually rediscovered the art of Emily Willoughby, who had truly come into her own by this time. Upon hearing that she was collaborating with the other authors of this book, I knew I had to buy it. It gave me immense joy to know that the woman who originally shook me out of my previous creationist mindset was now author on a book formally tackling the subject, especially when I realized she and the other authors had come from backgrounds similar to mine.
     Well, seeing as I ended up talking at least as much about myself compared to the book, I suppose I better wrap up. I hope God's Word or Human Reason helps change the tenor of the creation/evolution debate, exposing the false dichotomy of theism versus atheism that many assume go along with it. I wish I had had this book a decade ago. The rigid monopoly young earth creationism has among American evangelicals went a long way towards my inclination to devalue my own interests. God's Word or Human Reason has helped bolster my confidence in all that I've learned in years of study, and I hope to similarly help anyone I know going through similar experiences in the future.
     In closing, go buy it now! You can find it at Amazon here: God's Word or Human Reason?

Tuesday, April 11, 2017

Sixteen Trials (a 16 Tons parody)


     In anticipation of the upcoming March for Science, I've come up with a little ditty to be sung to the tune of "Sixteen Tons", by Tennessee Ernie Ford. If you unfamiliar with the melody, see the video embedded at the bottom of the page. (My apologies if the meter is a little awkward in places.)


Sixteen Trials
(To the tune of "Sixteen Tons")

I'm a toxicologist studyin'
Human health
My enemies are lobbyists 
Aflush with wealth
Insisting that we all can drink
Industrial waste
Pesticide and Cyanide
And enjoy the taste

Chorus:  
You run sixteen trials,
And what do you get?
A hostile Congress that's 
Screamin' 'bout debt
Senator don't call me
'Cause I can't go
I'm tryin' to discover facts
We all should know

I'm an ecologist searchin'
For animals and plants
Understanding their 
Harmonious dance
But they've no monetary value
To a CEO
I'm in the way of business
They want me to go

Chorus

 I'm a fossil hunter siftin'
Thru scrap from a mine
Creationists don't like
The things that I find
I've brought evidence to courtrooms
By the metric ton
Yet still they think they've got
Me on the run

Chorus

I'm a scientist creating
Vaccines for disease
Hopin' that no-one
Has to cough or wheeze
But hippies like to hound me
Like harpies so shrill
What the Right Wing doesn't ruin
The Left Wing will

Chorus

I'm a climatologist
Just doin' my thing
The GOP thinks I'm an
Illuminati king
They'll block me from findin'
A single fact
Then claim there's no info
On which to act

Chorus


     Hope you liked it! Feel free to use and share as you wish. As promised, I've embedded a video of the original song below so you can get a sense of the tune. I'm a bit of a traditionalist, so I definitely recommend listening to the song as originally sung by Tennessee Ernie Ford; however, nobody can musically convey the feeling of the slog of unrewarding work quite like a choir full of former Communists.