🎁 Final Month Special: 15% OFF + Free Shipping on Most Items! Don't Miss Out - Shop Now! ✨

Shopping Cart

Sub Total: $0.00
Total: $0.00
Checkout

Search Products

A Fish Caught in Time: The Search for the Coelacanth Image 1
View Media Gallery
A Fish Caught in Time: The Search for the Coelacanth Image 2
View Media Gallery
A Fish Caught in Time: The Search for the Coelacanth Nav Image 1
A Fish Caught in Time: The Search for the Coelacanth Nav Image 2

A Fish Caught in Time: The Search for the Coelacanth

$12.99 $15.00


Tags:

author-samantha-weinberg company-hcuk customername-UK imprint-Fourth Estate isbnbc-9781857029079 l1-Books l2-Biography and True Stories l2-Fourth Estate l2-Literature and literary studies l2-Mathematics and Science l2-Non Fiction productcode-DNBT productcode-DNXH productcode-PDX productcode-PDZ productcode-PSAJ productcode-PSPM productcode-PSVC productcode-RBX productpubdategroup-published source-feed South;Africa;marine;biology;evolution;scientific;discovery;prehistoric;missing;link;museum;curator;professor;rare;species;natural;history;research;exploration;fossil;ancient;ocean;sea;creatures;evolutionary;breakthrough;expedition;zoologica subtype-normal version-4.0 wk-a-fish-caught-in-time-the-search-for-the-coelacanth-samantha-weinberg
Estimated Delivery:
0 people are viewing this right now
Guaranteed Safe Checkout
Trust
Trust
  • Description

A gripping story of obsession, adventure and the search for our oldest surviving ancestor – 400 million years old – a four-limbed dinofish!

In 1938, Marjorie Courtenay-Latimer, a young South African museum curator, caught sight of a specimen among a fisherman’s trawl that she knew was special. With limb-like protuberances culminating in fins the strange fish was unlike anything she had ever seen. The museum board members dismissed it as a common lungfish, but when Marjorie eventually contacted Professor JLB Smith, he immediately identified her fish as a coelacanth – a species known to have lived 400 million years ago, and believed by many scientists to be the evolutionary missing link – the first creature to crawl out of the sea. Marjorie Courtenay-Latimer had thus made the century’s greatest zoological discovery. But Smith needed a live or frozen specimen to verify the discovery, so began his search for another coelacanth, to which he devoted his life.