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Extinctions review: A fast-paced story of going extinct on Earth

Days of mass death on Earth are dramatically captured by Michael Benton in his book, Extinctions. It's well-told and gripping, but real palaeontology afficionados may crave newer stories

By Michael Marshall

6 September 2023

2H2KWF7 Flowers and trees during the Cretaceous period, illustration

The Cretaceous imagined, complete with flowers and a pterosaur

MARK GARLICK/SCIENCE PHOTO LIBRARY/alamy


Michael J. Benton (Thames & Hudson)

“DO YOU guys ever think about dying?” blurts out Stereotypical Barbie, horrifying her friends and kicking off Greta Gerwig’s Barbie movie. Maybe she had just read Extinctions: How life survives, adapts and evolves, an account of the worst calamities to have befallen life during the past billion or so years.

For a book that is essentially a catalogue of mass death, it is a remarkably breezy read. This isn’t surprising, given Benton has written a string of books…

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