Thomas Halliday

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Thomas Halliday

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January 2022


Average rating: 4.12 · 5,120 ratings · 788 reviews · 3 distinct worksSimilar authors
Otherlands: A Journey Throu...

4.12 avg rating — 5,119 ratings — published 2022 — 37 editions
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Numerical games;: Consistin...

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The Doctrine of Regeneratio...

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Quotes by Thomas Halliday  (?)
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“As far as extinction is concerned, the absolute climate is not to blame, nor is the direction of change. It is the rapidity of change that is important. Communities of organisms need time to adapt – if too much change is thrust upon them at once, devastation and loss is the common response. This is true of the end-Cretaceous, when the impact of an extraterrestrial rock caused near-immediate global winter, and of the end-Permian, when skyrocketing greenhouse gases from unprecedented volcanic eruptions sparked global warming.”
Thomas Halliday, Otherlands: Journeys in Earth's Extinct Ecosystems

“Traces of historical associations can long outlast actual contact. In the dense, subtropical forests from India across to the South China Sea, venomous snakes are common, and there is always an advantage in pretending to be something dangerous. The slow loris, a weird, nocturnal primate, has a number of unusual features that, taken together, seem to be mimicking spectacled cobras. They move in a sinuous, serpentine way through the branches, always smooth and slow. When threatened, they raise their arms up behind their head, shiver and hiss, their wide, round eyes closely resembling the markings on the inside of the spectacled cobra’s hood. Even more remarkably, when in this position, the loris has access to glands in its armpit which, when combined with saliva, can produce a venom capable of causing anaphylactic shock in humans. In behaviour, colour and even bite, the primate has come to resemble the snake, a sheep in wolf’s clothing. Today, the ranges of the loris and cobras do not overlap, but climate reconstructions reaching back tens of thousands of years suggest that once they would have been similar. It is possible that the loris is an outdated imitation artist, stuck in an evolutionary rut, compelled by instinct to act out an impression of something neither it nor its audience has ever seen.”
Thomas Halliday, Otherlands: Journeys in Earth's Extinct Ecosystems

“Basilosaurids can listen to the music of the oceans, but they have not yet learned to sing.”
Thomas Halliday, Otherlands: Journeys in Earth's Extinct Ecosystems

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