ABSTRACT

This book presents perspectives on the past and present state of the understanding of snake origins. It reviews and critiques data and ideas from paleontology and neontology (herpetology), as well as ideas from morphological and molecular phylogenetics. The author reviews the anatomy and morphology of extant snakes. Methods are also critiqued, including those empirical and theoretical methods employed to hypothesize ancestral ecologies for snakes. The modern debate on squamate phylogeny and snake ingroup phylogeny using molecules and morphology is examined critically to provide insights on origins and evolution.

Key Features

  • Important major evolutionary transformation in vertebrate evolution
  • Continuing historical debate in vertebrate paleontology
  • Of wide interest to a core audience of paleontologists, herpetologists, and morphologists
  • Author acknowledged as prominent contributor to debate over snake origins
  • Based on remarkable well preserved fossil specimens

chapter Chapter One|34 pages

Ancient Snakes, Modern Snakes

“What is a snake?”

chapter Chapter Two|31 pages

Ancient Snake Lizards

The Fossil Record

chapter Chapter Three|98 pages

The Anatomy of Ancient Snake Lizards

chapter Chapter Four|27 pages

Ancient Snake Lizard Paleoecology

Reading the Rocks for Habits and Habitats

chapter Chapter Five|25 pages

Origin Myths as Opposed to Scientific Hypotheses

chapter Chapter Six|39 pages

Ancient Snake Lizard Phylogeny

Where Do Modern Snake Lizards Belong?

chapter Chapter Seven|7 pages

Beginnings

Where Do We Go from Here?