SELECTED BIBLIOGRAPHY
Alroy,  John.   “A  Multispecies    Overkill    Simulation  of  the End-Pleistocene Megafaunal  Mass
Extinction.”    Science 292 (2001): 1893–96.
Alvarez,    Luis    W.  “Experimental   Evidence    That    an  Asteroid    Impact  Led to  the Extinction  of
Many    Species 65  Million Years   Ago.”   Proceedings  of  the     National    Academy     of  Sciences   80  (1983):
627–42.
Alvarez,    Luis    W., W.  Alvarez,    F.  Asaro,  and H.  V.  Michel. “Extraterrestrial   Cause   for the
Cretaceous-Tertiary Extinction.”    Science 208 (1980): 1095–108.
Alvarez,     Walter.    T.   rex     and     the     Crater  of  Doom.  Princeton,  N.J.:   Princeton   University  Press,
1997.
__. “Earth  History in  the Broadest    Possible    Context.”   Ninety-Seventh  Annual  Faculty
Research    Lecture.    University  of  California, Berkeley,   International   House,  delivered   Apr.    29,
2010.
Appel,   Toby    A. The  Cuvier-Geoffroy     Debate:     French  Biology     in  the     Decades     Before  Darwin.    New
York:   Oxford  University  Press,  1987.
Barnosky,   Anthony D.  “Megafauna  Biomass Tradeoff    as  a   Driver  of  Quaternary  and Future
Extinctions.”   Proceedings of  the National    Academy of  Sciences    105 (2008): 11543–48.
__.  Heatstroke:     Nature  in  an  Age     of  Global  Warming.    Washington,     D.C.:   Island
Press/Shearwater    Books,  2009.
Benton, Michael J.  When    Life    Nearly  Died:   The Greatest    Mass    Extinction  of  All Time.   New York:
Thames  and Hudson, 2003.
Bierregaard,     Richard     O.,     et  al.    Lessons  from    Amazonia:   The     Ecology     and     Conservation    of  a
Fragmented  Forest. New Haven,  Conn.:  Yale    University  Press,  2001.
Birkhead,   Tim.    “How    Collectors  Killed  the Great   Auk.”   New Scientist   142 (1994): 24–27.
Blundell,   Derek   J., and Andrew  C.  Scott,  eds.    Lyell:  The Past    Is  the Key to  the Present.    London:
Geological  Society,    1998.
Bohor,  B.  F., et  al. “Mineralogic    Evidence    for an  Impact  Event   at  the Cretaceous-Tertiary
Boundary.”  Science 224 (1984): 867–69.
Boule,   Marcellin. Fossil   Men:    Elements    of  Human   Palaeontology. Translated  by  Jessie  J.  Elliot
Ritchie and James   Ritchie.    Edinburgh:  Oliver  and Boyd,   1923.
Bowen,   James,  and     Margarita   Bowen. The  Great   Barrier     Reef:   History,    Science,    Heritage.
Cambridge:  Cambridge   University  Press,  2002.
Brown,  James   H.  Macroecology.   Chicago:    University  of  Chicago Press,  1995.
Browne, Janet.  Charles Darwin: Voyaging.   New York:   Knopf,  1995.