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Lister, Adrian

WORK TITLE: Darwin’s Fossils
WORK NOTES:
PSEUDONYM(S):
BIRTHDATE: 1955?
WEBSITE:
CITY:
STATE:
COUNTRY: England
NATIONALITY: British

+44 207 942 5398 5398

RESEARCHER NOTES:

PERSONAL

Born c. 1955.

EDUCATION:

University of Cambridge, B.A., 1976, Ph.D., 1981.

ADDRESS

  • Home - England.

CAREER

University College, London, England, research assistant, 1986-91, lecturer, 1992-97, reader, 1997-2002, professor in paleobiology, 2002-07, honorary professor, 2007–, BBSRC Advanced Research Fellow, 1992-96; Natural History Museum, London, England, research leader in paleontology, 2007–. Royal Society European Exchange Fellow, University of Aix-Marseille, France, and Senckenberg Institute, Frankfurt, France and Germany, 1981-82; research fellow, Girton College, Cambridge, England, 1982-85; research assistant, University College London, 1986-91.

WRITINGS

  • (With Paul Bahn) Mammoths, foreword by Jean M. Auel, Macmillan (New York, NY), , revised edition published as Mammoths: Giants of the Ice Age, University of California Press (Berkeley, CA), .
  • (Editor, with Lynn J. Rothschild) Evolution on Planet Earth: The Impact of the Physical Environment, Academic Press (Boston, MA), 2003
  • (With Martin Ursell) The Ice Age Tracker's Guide, Frances Lincoln Children's Books (London, England), 2010
  • Mammoths & Mastodons of the Ice Age, Firefly Books (Buffalo, NY), 2014
  • Darwin's Fossils: Discoveries That Shaped the Theory of Evolution, Natural History Museum (London, England), , published as Darwin's Fossils: The Collection That Shaped the Theory of Evolution, Smithsonian Books (Washington, DC), .

Contributor to books, including Christen M. Wemmer, editor, Biology and Management of the Cervidae, Smithsonian Institution (Washington, DC), 1987; D.H. Keen, editor, The Pleistocene of the West Midlands: Field Guide, Quaternary Research Association (Cambridge, England), 1989; N. Barton, A.J. Roberts, and Derek A. Roe, editors, The Late Glacial in North-West Europe: Human Adaptation and Environmental Change at the End of the Pleistocene, Council for British Archaeology (London, England), 1991; Patricia Smith and E. Tchernov, editors, Structure, Function and Evolution of Teeth, Freund (Jerusalem, Israel), 1992; Ronald Singer, Bruce G. Gladfelter, John J. Wymer; et al., The Lower Paleolithic Site at Hoxne, England, Chicago University Press (Chicago, IL) 1993; Larry D. Agenbroad and Jim I. Mead, editors, The Hot Springs Mammoth Site: A Decade of Field and Laboratory Research in Paleontology, Geology and Paleoecology, Hot Springs Mammoth Site (Hot Springs, SD), 1994; The Early Middle Pleistocene of Europe, Balkema (Rotterdam, Netherlands), 1996; J. Shoshani and P. Tassy, editors, The Proboscidea: Trends in Evolution and Paleoecology, Oxford University Press (Oxford, England), 1996; J.A. Milne et al., editors, Recent Developments in Deer Biology, Macaulay Institute (Aberdeen, Scotland), 1997; R.C. Preece and David R. Bridgland, editors, Late Quaternary Environmental Change in North-West Europe: Excavations at Holywell Coombe, South-East England, Chapman & Hall (London, England), 1998; Reidar Andersen, Patrick Duncan, and John D.C. Linnell, editors, The European Roe Deer: The Biology of Success, Scandinavian University Press (Oslo, Norway), 1998; G. Cavarretta et al., editors, La terra degli elefanti: atti del 1° congresso internazionale, Roma, 16-20 Ottobre 2001 = The World of Elephants: Proceedings of the 1st International Congress, Consiglio nazionale delle ricerche (Rome, Italy), 2001; Naama Goren-Inbar and John D. Speth, editors, Human Paleoecology in the Levantine Corridor, Oxbow (Oxford, England) 2004; Grzimek’s Animal Life Encyclopedia, Thomson-Gale (Detroit, MI), 2004; Bart Demarsin et al., editors, Neanderthals in Europe: Proceedings of the International Conference, Held in the Gallo-Roman Museum in Tongeren (September 17-19th 2004), Gallo-Romeins Museum (Tongeren, Belgium), 2006; Michael Chazan and Liora Kolska Horwitz, editors, Holon: A Lower Paleolithic Site in Israel, Peabody Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology, Harvard University, (Cambridge, MA), 2007; Ralf-Dietrich Kahlke, editor, Late Neogene and Quaternary Biodiversity and Evolution: Regional Developments and Interregional Correlations; Proceedings of the 18th International Senckenberg Conference (VI. International Palaeontological Colloquium in Weimar) Vol. 2, Schweizerbart, (Stuttgart, Germany) 2007; William A. Boismier, Clive Gamble and Fiona Coward, editors, Neanderthals among Mammoths: Excavations at Lynford Quarry, Norfolk, English Heritage Archaeological Reports (Swindon, England), 2012; Scott A. Elias and Cary J. Mock, editors, Encyclopaedia of Quaternary Science, 2nd edition, Elsevier (Edinburgh, Scotland), 2013; Erik Trinkaus, Silviu Constantin, and Joao Zilhao, editors, Life and Death at the Peştera cu Oase: A Setting for Modern Human Emergence in Europe, Oxford University Press (Oxford, England), 2013.

Contributor to professional journals, including American School of Prehistoric Research Bulletin, Ancient Biomolecules, Ancient TL, Annales Zoologici Fennici, Anthropological Papers of the University of Kansas, Antiquity, Biological Journal of the Linnean Society, BioScience, BMC Evolutionary Biology, Bollettino della Societa Paleontologica Italiana, Bulletin du Musee d’Anthropologie prehistorique de Monaco, Bulletin of Zoological Nomenclature, Clinical Medicine, Comptes Rendus de l’Académie des Sciences – Series IIA – Earth and Planetary Science, Comptes Rendus Geoscience, Courier Forschungsinstitut Senckenberg, Cranium, Current Biology, Deinsea: Annual of the Natural History Museum Rotterdam, Deposits Magazine, Elephant, Forest Ecology and Management, Geological Journal, Geological Magazine, International Conference on Ruminant Phylogenetics, International Journal of Osteoarchaeology, Journal of Anthropological Archaeology, Journal of Archaeological Science, Journal of Biogeography, Journal of Morphology, Journal of Paleontology, Journal of Quaternary Science, Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology, Journal of Virology, Journal of Zoology, Molecular Ecology, Nature, Netherlands Journal of Geosciences, Oecologia, Open Quaternary, Pachyderm, Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology, Palaeontologia Electronica, Paléorient, PLoS ONE, Proceedings of the Geologists’ Association, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences, Proceedings of the Royal Society of Edinburgh, Quaternaire, Quaternary International, Quaternary Newsletter, Quaternary Research, Quaternary Science Reviews, Royal Society Open Science, Science Reviews, Science, Scientific Reports, Senckenbergiana Lethaea, Symposia of the Zoological Society of London, Transactions and Proceedings of the Torquay Natural History Society, Trends in Ecology & Evolution, Vertebrata PalAsiatica, World of Elephants, and Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society. Board member, Russian Journal of Theriology; associate editor, Journal of Systematic Palaeontology; assistant editor, Scientific Reports.

SIDELIGHTS

Adrian Lister is a researcher at London’s Natural History Museum and an honorary professor of paleobiology at the University of London. “I am a palaeobiologist interested in patterns and processes of species-level evolution, adaptation and extinction,” he explained in an autobiographical blurb appearing on the Natural History Museum website. “My research focusses mainly on Quaternary to recent large mammals, with special expertise in deer and elephants (including mammoths). The main ongoing projects in my group are: (1) the origin and dwarfing of endemic mammal species (especially elephants and deer) on Mediterranean islands in the Quaternary; (2) the timing and causes of extinction of large mammals (‘megafauna’) in the Late Quaternary, by mapping the shifting ranges of mammal species in relation to vegetation and people; (3) patterns of speciation and adaptation in fossil … mammals.”

Many of Lister’s works concentrate on educating the public about the evolution and extinction of large mammals in the past two and a half million years: Mammoths: Giants of the Ice Age and Mammoths & Mastodons of the Ice Age discuss the lives and extinction of elephant-like species. In the former volume “the authors,” declared Booklist reviewer Denise Perry Donavin, “sort out myths from archaeological findings.” “You only have got to look at the mammoth to see it’s a kind of elephant. That’s obvious and so you make the link to modern elephants. It also shows the value in studying the recent past, so studying fossils is not just purely an intellectual exercise but it does actually inform us, by analogy, of things that are going on, mind mapping for the future,” the paleontologist explained in an interview with Theodora Clarke appearing in Russian Art + Culture. “We’re looking at the world that almost immediately precedes today. So it is relevant to today’s world when we have all these sorts of climate changes in the Ice Age.”

The discovery of a nearly complete freeze-dried baby mammoth in the Siberian permafrost in 2007—and its exhibition at the Natural History Museum—gave Lister and his fellow paleontologists an unprecedented opportunity to educate the public about the extinction of Ice Age species. “Loss of habitat and natural climate warming at the end of the last Ice Age … drove a replacement of their grassland habitat by forest and so they were squeezed down to what we call ‘refugia’—small areas where they had probably survived in the past in those cycles,” Lister explained in his interview with Clarke. “This time we’re talking about 10,000 years ago, there was a new factor and that was people—advanced stone age hunters—which had never before actually spread into northern Siberia. Human culture had reached a point whereby about 12,000 years ago people were naturally moving into those kinds of areas.”

The Ice Age Tracker's Guide

In The Ice Age Tracker’s Guide Lister and coauthor Martin Ursell broaden the scope of mammals covered to include predators like the saber-toothed cat and the marsupial lion to mammoths, mastodons, and the glyptodont, a now-extinct massive armadillo. It also presents a lesser-known ungulate, a relative of horses and deer called Litopterna, which had a body like a camel, a neck like a giraffe, and a trunk like an elephant.

The authors, stated Patricia Manning in School Library Journal, write “… with authority in this lighthearted, informational work.” “Packed with solid facts,” declared Godfrey Hall in School Librarian, “I am positive that this book will be popular with all ages and provide hours of entertaining reading.” Lister’s “field guide,” wrote a Kirkus Reviews contributor, “provides a quite serviceable introduction to these extraordinary creatures for younger readers.” The Ice Age Tracker’s Guide is entertaining, asserted Ian Chipman, writing in Booklist, “delivering information in chatty and irreverent particulars that cover shape, size, behavior, eating habits, and … [other] signs.”

Darwin's Fossils

Darwin’s Fossils: Discoveries That Shaped the Theory of Evolution examines the fossils that Charles Darwin collected during his five-year trip on board HMS Beagle with an eye toward identifying the role they played in developing his theory of natural selection.

“Darwin’s archive,” reported Booklist reviewer Carl Hays, “… reveal[s] how indispensable those assorted skeletal remains and geological artifacts were to Darwin’s research.” A Publishers Weekly reviewer stated that the collection demonstrates “the breadth of Darwin’s interests and his ability to meld such divergent data into a coherent whole.”

BIOCRIT

PERIODICALS

  • Booklist, February 1, 1995, Denise Perry Donavin, review of Mammoths, p. 980; December 1, 2010, Ian Chipman, review of The Ice Age Tracker’s Guide, p. 51; March 1, 2018, Carl Hays, review of Darwin’s Fossils: The Collection That Shaped the Theory of Evolution, p. 10.

  • Kirkus Reviews, October 1, 2010, review of The Ice Age Tracker’s Guide.

  • Publishers Weekly, February 5, 2018, review of Darwin’s Fossils, p. 53.

  • School Librarian, summer, 2010, Godfrey Hall, review of The Ice Age Tracker’s Guide, p. 104.

  • School Library Journal, December, 2010, Patricia Manning, review of The Ice Age Tracker’s Guide, p. 96.

ONLINE

  • Natural History Museum, http://www.nhm.ac.uk/ (July 9, 2018), author profile.

  • Russian Art + Culture, https://www.russianartandculture.com/ (April 7, 2014), Theodora Clarke, “Interview: Theodora Clarke Talks To Prof Adrian Lister from the Natural History Museum about Lyuba the Siberian Mammoth.”

  • Evolution on Planet Earth: The Impact of the Physical Environment Academic Press (Boston, MA), 2003
  • The Ice Age Tracker's Guide Frances Lincoln Children's Books (London, England), 2010
  • Mammoths & Mastodons of the Ice Age Firefly Books (Buffalo, NY), 2014
1. Darwin's fossils : the collection that shaped the theory of evolution LCCN 2017046415 Type of material Book Personal name Lister, Adrian, author. Main title Darwin's fossils : the collection that shaped the theory of evolution / Adrian Lister. Published/Produced Washington, DC : Smithsonian Books, c2018. Projected pub date 1111 Description pages cm ISBN 9781588346179 (pbk.) CALL NUMBER QH366.2 .L57 2018 Request in Jefferson or Adams Building Reading Rooms 2. Darwins's fossils : discoveries that shaped the theory of evolution LCCN 2017473221 Type of material Book Personal name Lister, Adrian, author. Main title Darwins's fossils : discoveries that shaped the theory of evolution / Adrian Lister. Published/Produced London : Natural History Museum, [2018] ©2018 Description 232 pages : illustrations (some color), color maps ; 23 cm ISBN 9780565093921 (paperback) 0565093924 (paperback) CALL NUMBER QH31.D2 L57 2018 Copy 1 Request in Jefferson or Adams Building Reading Rooms 3. Mammoths & mastodons of the Ice Age LCCN 2014395485 Type of material Book Personal name Lister, Adrian, author. Main title Mammoths & mastodons of the Ice Age / Adrian Lister. Published/Produced Richmond Hill, Ontario ; Buffalo, New York : Firefly Books, 2014. Description 128 pages : illustrations (chiefly color), color maps ; 26 cm ISBN 9781770853157 (bound) 1770853154 (bound) Shelf Location FLM2014 089704 CALL NUMBER QE882.P8 L573 2014 OVERFLOWA5S Request in Jefferson or Adams Building Reading Rooms (FLM1) 4. Mammoths : giants of the ice age LCCN 2007026369 Type of material Book Personal name Lister, Adrian. Main title Mammoths : giants of the ice age / Adrian Lister and Paul Bahn ; foreword by Jean M. Auel. Edition Rev. ed. Published/Created Berkeley, Calif. : University of California Press, c2007. Description 192 p. : ill. (chiefly col.), col. maps ; 29 cm. ISBN 9780520253193 (cloth : alk. paper) 0520253191 (cloth : alk. paper) Links Table of contents only http://www.loc.gov/catdir/toc/ecip0721/2007026369.html CALL NUMBER QE882.P8 L57 2007 Copy 1 Request in Jefferson or Adams Building Reading Rooms CALL NUMBER QE882.P8 L57 2007 Copy 2 Request in Jefferson or Adams Building Reading Rooms 5. Evolution on planet earth : the impact of the physical environment LCCN 2002115394 Type of material Book Main title Evolution on planet earth : the impact of the physical environment / edited by Lynn J. Rothschild and Adrian M. Lister. Published/Created Amsterdam ; Boston : Academic Press, c2003. Description xii, 438 p. : ill. 26 cm. ISBN 0125986556 Links Publisher description http://www.loc.gov/catdir/description/els051/2002115394.html Table of contents http://www.loc.gov/catdir/toc/fy051/2002115394.html Book review (E-STREAMS) http://www.e-streams.com/es0703/es0703_3065.html CALL NUMBER QH366.2 .E8618 2003 FT MEADE Copy 2 Request in Jefferson or Adams Building Reading Rooms - STORED OFFSITE 6. Mammoths LCCN 94014972 Type of material Book Personal name Lister, Adrian. Main title Mammoths / Adrian Lister and Paul Bahn ; foreword by Jean M. Auel. Published/Created New York : Macmillan USA, c1994. Description 168 p. : ill. (some col.), col. maps ; 29 cm. ISBN 0025729853 CALL NUMBER QE882.P8 L57 1994 Copy 1 Request in Jefferson or Adams Building Reading Rooms CALL NUMBER QE882.P8 L57 1994 FT MEADE Copy 2 Request in Jefferson or Adams Building Reading Rooms - STORED OFFSITE
  • Natural History Museum - http://www.nhm.ac.uk/our-science/departments-and-staff/staff-directory/adrian-lister.html

    Prof Adrian Lister
    Prof Adrian Lister
    Merit Researcher
    Department: Earth Sciences
    Division: ES Vertebrates and Anthropology Palaeobiology
    Phone: +44 207 942 5398 5398
    ResearchGate
    Quaternary Mammal Research Group
    Adrian Lister

    Introduction
    Summary
    I am a palaeobiologist interested in patterns and processes of species-level evolution, adaptation and extinction. My research focusses mainly on Quaternary to recent large mammals, with special expertise in deer and elephants (including mammoths). The main ongoing projects in my group are: (1) the origin and dwarfing of endemic mammal species (especially elephants and deer) on Mediterranean islands in the Quaternary; (2) the timing and causes of extinction of large mammals ('megafauna') in the Late Quaternary, by mapping the shifting ranges of mammal species in relation to vegetation and people; (3) patterns of speciation and adaptation in fossil elephants and other mammals, with a particular interest in the role of behaviour in initiating adaptive change.

    Qualifications
    Degrees
    PhD, University of Cambridge, United Kingdom, 1976 - 1981

    BA, University of Cambridge, United Kingdom, 1973 - 1976

    Employment history
    Academic
    Honorary Professor, University College London, Genetics, Evolution and Environment, United Kingdom, 2007 - ongoing

    Research Leader in Palaeontology, Natural History Museum, Earth Sciences, United Kingdom, 2007 - ongoing

    BBSRC Advanced Research Fellow, University College London, Biology, United Kingdom, 1992 - 1996

    Lecturer (1992), Reader (1997) and Professor (2002) in Palaeobiology, University College London, Biology, United Kingdom, 1992 - 2007

    Post-Doctoral Research Assistant (2 NERC grants), University College London, Biology, United Kingdom, 1986 - 1991

    Research Fellow, Girton College, Cambridge, Zoology, United Kingdom, 1982 - 1985

    Royal Society European Exchange Fellow, University of Aix-Marseille, France, and Senckenberg Institute, Frankfurt, France and Germany, 1981 - 1982

    Highlighted publications
    Lister AM, Sher AV (2015) Evolution and dispersal of mammoths across the Northern Hemisphere. Science, 350 (6262) : 805 - 809. doi: 10.1126/science.aac5660

    Lister AM (2014) Behavioural leads in evolution: evidence from the fossil record. Biological Journal of the Linnean Society, 112 (2) : 315 - 331. doi: 10.1111/bij.12173

    Lister A (2014) Mammoths: Ice Age Giants. Natural History Museum :

    Lister AM (2013) The role of behaviour in adaptive morphological evolution of African proboscideans. Nature, 500 (7462) : 331 - 334. doi: 10.1038/nature12275

    Weston EM, Lister AM (2009) Insular dwarfism in hippos and a model for brain size reduction in Homo floresiensis. Nature, 459 (7243) : 85 - 88. doi: 10.1038/nature07922

    Lister AM, Edwards CJ, Nock DAW, Bunce M, Van PijlenIA, et al. (2005) The phylogenetic position of the ‘giant deer’ Megaloceros giganteus. Nature, 438 (7069) : 850 - 853. doi: 10.1038/nature04134

    Additional links
    NHM personal web page
    Quaternary Mammal Research

    Grants
    A coupled climate-vegetation-mammal-human model for simulating Late Quaternary megafaunal extinction
    Role: Principal investigator
    Funding: NERC
    Total value £602,680 (to Museum £241,638)
    Dates: 2016 - 2019

    Radiocarbon evidence on extinction of Quaternary megafauna in western Chukotka
    Role: Principal investigator
    Funding: Royal Society
    Total value £5,066 (to Museum £5,066)
    Dates: 2015 - 2017

    Evolutionary Patterns in Deer on Mediterranean Islands
    Role: Principal investigator
    Funding: Leverhulme Trust
    Total value £180,110 (to Museum £180,110)
    Dates: 2013 - 2017

    Seeing genes in space & time: the evolution of neutral and functional genetic diversity using woolly mammoth
    Role: Principal investigator
    Funding: NERC
    Total value £28,370 (to Museum £28,370)
    Dates: 2012 - 2015

    Small is specialised: dwarfism and models of primate origins
    Role: Principal investigator
    Funding: Royal Society
    Total value £3,987 (to Museum £3,987)
    Dates: 2009 - 2009

    Palaeobiological inference through phylogenetic analysis of Pleistocene deer
    Role: Principal investigator
    Funding: FP7 - People
    Total value £173,416.47 (to Museum £173,416.47)
    Dates: 2009 - 2010

    A niche-modelling approach to understanding late-Quaternary megafaunal extinctions
    Role: Principal investigator
    Funding: NERC
    Total value £34,624.33 (to Museum £34,624.33)
    Dates: 2009 - 2012

    Biotic responses to environmental change: dwarf mammals of Mediterranean islands as evolutionary experiments in the Quaternary
    Role: Principal investigator
    Funding: NERC
    Total value £475,713.24 (to Museum £475,713.24)
    Dates: 2009 - 2013

    NERC Quaternary Palaeoecology Advanced Training Short Course 2016-17
    Role: Principal investigatorHill T
    Role: Co-investigator
    Funding: NERC
    Dates: 2017 - 2017

    Committees
    Member, Friends of Crystal Palace Dinosaurs, 2017 - 2017.

    Member, Postgraduate Research and Training Committee, 2012 - 2017.

    Member, Mammoths: Ice Age Giants Exhibition, Project Board, Natural History Museum, 2012 - 2014.

    Member, IUCN Deer Specialist Group, 2007 - 2010.

    Member, Council, Linnean Society of London, 2001 - 2004.

    Chair, UCL Plant and Animal Biology Focus Group, 1999 - 2007.

    Chair, UCL Biology Teaching Quality Monitoring Committee, University College London, 1999 - 2004.

    Member, Council, Scientific Exploration Society, 1999 - 2009.

    Member, UCL Human Sciences Degree Committee, 1998 - 2007.

    Member, UCL Collections Committee, 1998 - 2003.

    Member, IUCN Asian Elephant Specialist Group, 1997 - 2021.

    Member, Executive Committee, Quaternary Research Association, 1995 - 1998.

    Member, International Trust for Zoological Nomenclature, 1994 - 2002.

    Member, Centre for Ecology and Evolution, 1994 - 2014.

    Memberships
    Member, Mammal Society, 2013 - on going.

    Member, Zoological Society of London, 1994 - 2014.

    Member, Linnean Society of London, 1992 - on going.

    Member, Quaternary Research Association, 1976 - on going.

    Editorships
    Assistant editor, Scientific Reports, Nature Publishing Group, 2011 - 2021.

    Associate editor, Journal of Systematic Palaeontology, Taylor and Francis, 2008 - 2021.

    Board member, Russian Journal of Theriology, 2002 - 2021.

    Events
    Conference Attendance
    Invited Keynote Address, 7th International Elephant/Mammoth conference, (Conference),

    Invited Keynote Address, International Deer Conference, (Conference),

    Invited Keynote Address, International Palaeontological Congress, (Conference),

    Organisation
    Other, VII International Mammoth/Elephant Conference, (Conference),

    Organiser, Biotic Responses to Environmental Change, (Symposium),

    Organising committee, VI Intl Mammoth/Elephant Conference, (Conference),

    Organiser, XI International Mammal Congress, (Congress),

    QRA/QUAVER meeting on Late Quaternary Extinctions, (Other),

    Organising committee, V International Mammoth/Elephant Conference, (Conference),

    6th International Conference on Mammoths and Elephants, (Conference),

    Organiser, QRA meeting on Late Quaternary Extinctions, (Conference),

    Organising committee, 5th International Mammoth/Elephant Conference, (Conference),

    Organising committee, CEE Symposium on Ancient DNA, (Conference),

    Internal Positions
    Biotic Response to Environmental Change, Principal Investigator 2012 - 2015.

    Ancient DNA Laboratory Project Board, Senoir User 2011 - 2013.

    Publications
    Lister AM (2017) On the type material and evolution of North American mammoths. Quaternary International, 443 : 14 - 31. doi: 10.1016/j.quaint.2017.02.027

    Chang D, Knapp M, Enk J, Lippold S, Kircher M, Lister A, Macphee RDE, Widga C, Czechowski P, Sommer R, Hodges E, Stümpel N, Barnes I, Dalén L, Derevianko A, Germonpré M, Hillebrand-voiculescu A, Constantin S, Kuznetsova T, Mol D, Rathgeber T, Rosendahl W, Tikhonov AN, Willerslev E, Hannon G, Lalueza-fox C, Joger U, Poinar H, Hofreiter M, Shapiro B (2017) The evolutionary and phylogeographic history of woolly mammoths: a comprehensive mitogenomic analysis. Scientific Reports, 7 : 44585 - 44585. doi: 10.1038/srep44585

    De GrooteI, Flink LG, Abbas R, Bello SM, Burgio L, Buck LT, Dean C, Freyne A, Higham T, Jones CG, Kruszynski R, Lister A, Parfitt SA, Skinner MM, Shindler K, Stringer CB (2016) Correction to ‘New genetic and morphological evidence suggests a single hoaxer created ‘Piltdown Man’’. Royal Society Open Science, 3 (10) : 160679 - 160679. doi: 10.1098/rsos.160679

    Saarinen J, Lister AM (2016) Dental mesowear reflects local vegetation and niche separation in Pleistocene proboscideans from Britain. Journal of Quaternary Science, 31 (7) : 799 - 808. doi: 10.1002/jqs.2906

    Rabinovich R, Lister AM (2017) The earliest elephants out of Africa: Taxonomy and taphonomy of proboscidean remains from Bethlehem. Quaternary International, 445 : 23 - 42. doi: 10.1016/j.quaint.2016.07.010

    Rivals F, Lister AM (2016) Dietary flexibility and niche partitioning of large herbivores through the Pleistocene of Britain. Quaternary Science Reviews, 146 : 116 - 133. doi: 10.1016/j.quascirev.2016.06.007

    Stimpson CM, Lister A, Parton A, Clark-balzan L, Breeze PS, Drake NA, Groucutt HS, Jennings R, Scerri EM, White TS, Zahir M, Duval M, Grün R, Al-omari A, Al MurayyiKSM, Zalmout IS, Mufarreh YA, Memesh AM, Petraglia MD (2016) Middle Pleistocene vertebrate fossils from the Nefud Desert, Saudi Arabia: Implications for biogeography and palaeoecology. Quaternary Science Reviews, 143 : 13 - 36. doi: 10.1016/j.quascirev.2016.05.016

    Lister AM, Breda M (2016) Validity of the name Dama roberti Breda & Lister, 2013, a small European Pleistocene deer, and the status of Cervus polignacus Robert, 1829 and Cervus roberti Pomel, 1853. The Bulletin of Zoological Nomenclature, 73 (1) : 81 - 82. doi: 10.21805/bzn.v73i1.a3

    Saarinen J, Eronen J, Fortelius M, Seppa H, Lister AM (2016) Patterns of diet and body mass of large ungulates from the Pleistocene of Western Europe, and their relation to vegetation. PALAEONTOLOGIA ELECTRONICA, 19 (3) :

    Semprebon GM, Rivals F, Fahlke JM, Sanders WJ, Lister AM, Göhlich UB (2016) Dietary reconstruction of pygmy mammoths from Santa Rosa Island of California. Quaternary International, 406 : 123 - 136. doi: 10.1016/j.quaint.2015.10.120

    Lister A, Self A, Collinge S, White T (2015) Impact of temperature and feeding on mammalian body size. Lister A (Eds). Biotic response to Environmental Change, 2711 11 - 27 11 113 - 3.

    Lister AM, Sher AV (2015) Evolution and dispersal of mammoths across the Northern Hemisphere. Science, 350 (6262) : 805 - 809. doi: 10.1126/science.aac5660

    Lister AM, Grün R (2015) Mammoth and musk ox ESR-dated to the Early Midlandian at Aghnadarragh, County Antrim, Northern Ireland, and the age of the Fermanagh Stadial. Geological Journal, 50 (3) : 306 - 320. doi: 10.1002/gj.2668

    Ersmark E, Orlando L, Sandoval-castellanos E, Barnes I, Barnett R, Stuart A, Lister A, Dalén L (2015) Population Demography and Genetic Diversity in the Pleistocene Cave Lion. Open Quaternary, 1 : doi: 10.5334/oq.aa

    Kolb C, Scheyer TM, Lister AM, Azorit C, De VosJ, Schlingemann M, Rössner GE, Monaghan NT, Sánchez-villagra MR (2015) Growth in fossil and extant deer and implications for body size and life history evolution. BMC Evolutionary Biology, 15 (1) : 19 - 19. doi: 10.1186/s12862-015-0295-3

    Lister AM (2015) Dating the arrival of straight-tusked elephant (Palaeoloxodon spp.) in Eurasia. Bulletin du Musee d'Anthropologie prehistorique de Monaco, Suppl. 6 : 123 - 128.

    Rivals F, Mol D, Lacombat F, Lister AM, Semprebon GM (2015) Resource partitioning and niche separation between mammoths (Mammuthus rumanus and Mammuthus meridionalis) and gomphotheres (Anancus arvernensis) in the Early Pleistocene of Europe. Quaternary International, 379 : 164 - 170. doi: 10.1016/j.quaint.2014.12.031

    Masters JC, Génin F, Silvestro D, Lister AM, Delpero M (2014) The red island and the seven dwarfs: body size reduction in Cheirogaleidae. Journal of Biogeography, 41 (10) : 1833 - 1847. doi: 10.1111/jbi.12327

    Stuart AJ, Lister AM (2014) New radiocarbon evidence on the extirpation of the spotted hyaena (Crocuta crocuta (Erxl.)) in northern Eurasia. Quaternary Science Reviews, 96 : 108 - 116. doi: 10.1016/j.quascirev.2013.10.010

    Lister AM (2014) Behavioural leads in evolution: evidence from the fossil record. Biological Journal of the Linnean Society, 112 (2) : 315 - 331. doi: 10.1111/bij.12173

    Gentry A, Lister A, Roos A-M, Gilbert MTP, Cappellini E (2014) 1758 (Mammalia, Proboscidea) and comments on ‘primary, secondary and tertiary syntypes’ and ‘virtual lectotype designation’. Bulletin of Zoological Nomenclature, 71 : 208 - 213.

    Greenhalgh T, Lister A (2014) Mammoths: Ice Age giants. 19 : 6 - 13.

    Herridge VL, Nita D, Schwenninger J-L, Mangano G, Lister A, Richards D (2014) A new chronology for Spinagallo Cave (Sicily): implications for the evolution of the insular dwarf elephant Palaeoloxodon falconeri. VIth International Conference on Mammoths and their Relatives, Scientific Annals, School of Geology, Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, Greece 102 (Special Volume) :

    Lister A (2014) Can we resurrect a mammoth?. August 2014 : 78 - 79.

    Lister A (2014) Why did the mammoths go extinct?. July 2014 : 76 - 77.

    Lister A (2014) Mammoths in the freezer. 39 : 34 - 37.

    Lister AM (2014) Global Synthesis of mammoth evolution based on molar morphology. VIth International Conference on Mammoths and their Relatives, Scientific Annals, School of Geology, Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, Greece 102 (Special Volume) :

    Lister A (2014) Mammoths and Mastodons of the Ice Age. Firefly : Buffalo. 1 - 128.

    Lister A (2014) Mammoths: Ice Age Giants. Natural History Museum :

    Lister AM, Stuart AJ (2014) Climate forcing of mammoth range shifts in the countdown to extinction. VIth International Conference on Mammoths and their Relatives, Scientific Annals, School of Geology, Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, Greece 102 (Special Volume) :

    Palkopoulou E, Et al. (2014) Holarctic genetic structure and range dynamics in the woolly mammoth. VIth International Conference on Mammoths and their Relatives, Scientific Annals, School of Geology, Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, Greece 102 (Special Volume) :

    Rabinovich R, Lister AM (2014) “Nativity” in the bone-bearing beds of Bethlehem: taxonomy and taphonomy of the elephant remains. VIth International Conference on Mammoths and their Relatives, Scientific Annals, School of Geology, Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, Greece 102 (Special Volume) :

    Rivals F, Mol D, Lacombat F, Lister A, Semprebon G (2014) Dietary traits and resource partitioning in mammoth (Mammuthus rumanus and Mammuthus meridionalis) and mastodon (Anancus arvernensis) in the Early Pleistocene of Europe. VIth International Conference on Mammoths and their Relatives, Scientific Annals, School of Geology, Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, Greece 102 (Special Volume) : 168 - 169.

    Semprebon G, Et al. (2014) The effect of insular dwarfism on dietary niche occupation in mammoths: what were the pygmy mammoths from Santa Rosa Island of California eating?. VIth International Conference on Mammoths and their Relatives, Scientific Annals, School of Geology, Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, Greece 102 (Special Volume) : 182 - 183.

    Meiri M, Lister AM, Collins MJ, Tuross N, Goebel T, Blockley S, Zazula GD, Van DoornN, Dale GuthrieR, Boeskorov GG, Baryshnikov GF, Sher A, Barnes I (2013) Faunal record identifies Bering isthmus conditions as constraint to end-Pleistocene migration to the New World. Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences, 281 (1776) : 20132167 - 20132167. doi: 10.1098/rspb.2013.2167

    Lister AM, Hall C (2014) Variation in Body and Tooth Size with Island Area in Small Mammals: A Study of Scottish and Faroese House Mice ( Mus musculus ). Annales Zoologici Fennici, 51 (1-2) : 95 - 110. doi: 10.5735/086.051.0211

    Cappellini E, Gentry A, Palkopoulou E, Ishida Y, Cram D, Roos A-M, Watson M, Johansson US, Fernholm B, Agnelli P, Barbagli F, Littlewood DTJ, Kelstrup CD, Olsen JV, Lister AM, Roca AL, Dalén L, Gilbert MTP (2014) Resolution of the type material of the Asian elephant, Elephas maximus Linnaeus, 1758 (Proboscidea, Elephantidae). Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society, 170 (1) : 222 - 232. doi: 10.1111/zoj.12084

    Palkopoulou E, Dalen L, Lister AM, Vartanyan S, Sablin M, Sher A, Edmark VN, Brandstrom MD, Germonpre M, Barnes I, Thomas JA (2013) Holarctic genetic structure and range dynamics in the woolly mammoth. Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences, 280 (1770) : 20131910 - 20131910. doi: 10.1098/rspb.2013.1910

    Meiri M, Lister AM, Higham TFG, Stewart JR, Straus LG, Obermaier H, González MoralesMR, Marín-arroyo AB, Barnes I (2013) Late-glacial recolonization and phylogeography of European red deer ( Cervus elaphus L.). Molecular Ecology, 22 (18) : 4711 - 4722. doi: 10.1111/mec.12420

    Breda M, Lister AM (2013) Dama roberti, a new species of deer from the early Middle Pleistocene of Europe, and the origins of modern fallow deer. Quaternary Science Reviews, 69 : 155 - 167. doi: 10.1016/j.quascirev.2013.01.029

    Huntley B, Allen JRM, Collingham YC, Hickler T, Lister AM, Singarayer J, Stuart AJ, Sykes MT, Valdes PJ (2013) Millennial Climatic Fluctuations Are Key to the Structure of Last Glacial Ecosystems. PLoS ONE, 8 (4) : e61963 - e61963. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0061963

    Lister AM (2013) The role of behaviour in adaptive morphological evolution of African proboscideans. Nature, 500 (7462) : 331 - 334. doi: 10.1038/nature12275

    Lister A, Breda M (2013) Systematics of the endemic Pleistocene deer of Mediterranean islands. International Conference on Ruminant Phylogenetics, 39 9 - 3 9 9Zitteliana 31 (B) : 27 - 28.

    Lister AM, Dirks W, Assaf A, Chazan M, Goldberg P, Applbaum YH, Greenbaum N, Horwitz LK (2013) New fossil remains of Elephas from the southern Levant: Implications for the evolutionary history of the Asian elephant. Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology, 386 : 119 - 130. doi: 10.1016/j.palaeo.2013.05.013

    Lister AM, Stuart AJ (2013) Extinction chronology of the woolly rhinoceros Coelodonta antiquitatis: reply to Kuzmin. Quaternary Science Reviews, 62 : 144 - 146. doi: 10.1016/j.quascirev.2012.10.039

    Lister AM (2013) Speciation and evolutionary trends in Quaternary vertebrates, In: Encyclopaedia of Quaternary Science (2nd Edition) 4, (Elias S (Eds). Elsevier : 723 - 732.

    Parfitt SA, Lister AM (2013) The ungulates from the Peştera cu Oase, In: Life and Death at the Peştera cu Oase: A Setting for Modern Human Emergence in Europe, Trinkaus E, Constantin S, Zilhão J (Eds). Oxford University Press : Oxford. 189 - 203.

    Turvey ST, Tong H, Stuart AJ, Lister AM (2013) Holocene survival of Late Pleistocene megafauna in China: a critical review of the evidence. Quaternary Science Reviews, 76 : 156 - 166. doi: 10.1016/j.quascirev.2013.06.030

    Brace S, Palkopoulou E, Dalen L, Lister AM, Miller R, Otte M, Germonpre M, Blockley SPE, Stewart JR, Barnes I (2012) Serial population extinctions in a small mammal indicate Late Pleistocene ecosystem instability. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 109 (50) : 20532 - 20536. doi: 10.1073/pnas.1213322109

    Herridge VL, Lister AM (2012) Extreme insular dwarfism evolved in a mammoth. Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences, 279 (1741) : 3193 - 3200. doi: 10.1098/rspb.2012.0671

    Nyström V, Humphrey J, Skoglund P, Mckeown NJ, Vartanyan S, Shaw PW, Lidén K, Jakobsson M, Barnes I, Angerbjörn A, Lister A, Dalén L (2012) Microsatellite genotyping reveals end-Pleistocene decline in mammoth autosomal genetic variation. Molecular Ecology, 21 (14) : 3391 - 3402. doi: 10.1111/j.1365-294X.2012.05525.x

    Rivals F, Semprebon G, Lister A (2012) An examination of dietary diversity patterns in Pleistocene proboscideans (Mammuthus, Palaeoloxodon, and Mammut) from Europe and North America as revealed by dental microwear. Quaternary International, 255 : 188 - 195. doi: 10.1016/j.quaint.2011.05.036

    Albayrak E, Lister AM (2012) Dental remains of fossil elephants from Turkey. Quaternary International, 276-277 : 198 - 211. doi: 10.1016/j.quaint.2011.05.042

    Lister AM, Dimitrijević V, Marković Z, Knežević S, Mol D (2012) A skeleton of ‘steppe’ mammoth (Mammuthus trogontherii (Pohlig)) from Drmno, near Kostolac, Serbia. Quaternary International, 276-277 : 129 - 144. doi: 10.1016/j.quaint.2012.03.021

    Lister AM (2012) Quantitative analysis of mammoth remains from Lynford, Norfolk, England, In: Neanderthals among Mammoths: Excavations at Lynford Quarry, Norfolk, Boismier WA, Gamble C, Coward F (Eds). English Heritage Archaeological Reports : 205 - 214.

    Stuart AJ, Lister AM (2012) Extinction chronology of the woolly rhinoceros Coelodonta antiquitatis in the context of late Quaternary megafaunal extinctions in northern Eurasia. Quaternary Science Reviews, 51 : 1 - 17. doi: 10.1016/j.quascirev.2012.06.007

    Lister AM (2011) Natural history collections as sources of long-term datasets. Trends in Ecology & Evolution, 26 (4) : 153 - 154. doi: 10.1016/j.tree.2010.12.009

    Ukkonen P, Aaris-sørensen K, Arppe L, Clark P, Daugnora L, Lister A, Lõugas L, Seppä H, Sommer R, Stuart A (2011) Woolly mammoth (Mammuthus primigenius Blum.) and its environment in northern Europe during the last glaciation. Quaternary Science Reviews, 30 (5-6) : 693 - 712. doi: 10.1016/j.quascirev.2010.12.017

    Johnson KG, Brooks SJ, Fenberg PB, Glover AG, James KE, Lister AM, Michel E, Spencer M, Todd JA, Valsami-jones E, Young JR, Stewart JR (2011) Climate Change and Biosphere Response: Unlocking the Collections Vault. BioScience, 61 (2) : 147 - 153. doi: 10.1525/bio.2011.61.2.10

    Elias S, Kuzmina S, Edwards ME, Lister AM (2011) Beringia and beyond: Papers celebrating the scientific career of Andrei Vladimirovich Sher, 1939–2008. Quaternary Science Reviews, 30 (17-18) : 2037 - 2038. doi: 10.1016/j.quascirev.2011.06.005

    Kaagan LM, Bahn PG, Lister AM (2011) Discovery of a horse engraving from Bruniquel, France.. Antiquity, 85 :

    Kahlke R-D, García N, Kostopoulos DS, Lacombat F, Lister AM, Mazza PP, Spassov N, Titov VV (2011) Western Palaearctic palaeoenvironmental conditions during the Early and early Middle Pleistocene inferred from large mammal communities, and implications for hominin dispersal in Europe. Quaternary Science Reviews, 30 (11-12) : 1368 - 1395. doi: 10.1016/j.quascirev.2010.07.020

    Kuzmina S, Lister AM, Edwards ME (2011) Andrei Sher and Quaternary science. Quaternary Science Reviews, 30 (17-18) : 2039 - 2048. doi: 10.1016/j.quascirev.2011.05.025

    Lister AM, Brooks SJ, Fenberg PB, Glover AG, James KE, Johnson KG, Michel E, Okamura B, Spencer M, Stewart JR, Todd JA, Valsami-jones E, Young J (2011) Natural history collections as sources of long-term datasets. Trends in Ecology and Evolution, 26 (3) : 153 - 154. doi: 10.1016/j.tree.2010.12.009

    Stuart AJ, Lister AM (2011) Extinction chronology of the cave lion Panthera spelaea. Quaternary Science Reviews, 30 (17-18) : 2329 - 2340. doi: 10.1016/j.quascirev.2010.04.023

    Breda M, Collinge SE, Parfitt SA, Lister AM (2010) Metric analysis of ungulate mammals in the early Middle Pleistocene of Britain, in relation to taxonomy and biostratigraphy I: Rhinocerotidae and Bovidae. QUATERNARY INTERNATIONAL, 228 (1-2) : 136 - 156. doi: 10.1016/j.quaint.2010.05.010

    Lister AM, Parfitt SA, Owen FJ, Collinge SE, Breda M (2010) Metric analysis of ungulate mammals in the early Middle Pleistocene of Britain, in relation to taxonomy and biostratigraphy II: Cervidae, Equidae and Suidae. QUATERNARY INTERNATIONAL, 228 (1-2) : 157 - 179. doi: 10.1016/j.quaint.2010.05.014

    Lister AM, Stuart AJ (2010) The West Runton mammoth (Mammuthus trogontherii) and its evolutionary significance. Quaternary International, 228 (1-2) : 180 - 209. doi: 10.1016/j.quaint.2010.07.032

    Stuart AJ, Lister AM (2010) Introduction: The West Runton Freshwater Bed and the West Runton Mammoth. Quaternary International, 228 (1-2) : 1 - 7. doi: 10.1016/j.quaint.2010.07.035

    Stuart A, Lister A (2010) The West Runton Freshwater Bed and the West Runton Mammoth: Summary and conclusions. Quaternary International, 228 (1-2) : 241 - 248. doi: 10.1016/j.quaint.2010.07.033

    Stewart JR, Lister AM, Barnes I, Dalen L (2010) Refugia revisited: individualistic responses of species in space and time. Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences, 277 (1682) : 661 - 671. doi: 10.1098/rspb.2009.1272

    Albayrak E, Lister AM (2010) Remains of fossil elephants from Turkey. 5th International Conference on Mammoths and their Relatives, Quaternaire 3 (hors serie) : 159 - 160.

    Barnes I, Brace S, Dalen L, Lister A, Meiri M, Stewart J (2010) Ancient DNA analyses of the mammoth fauna: a synthesis. 5th International Conference on Mammoths and their Relatives, Quaternaire 3 (hors serie) : 62 - 63.

    Knapp M, Et al. (2010) Population mitogenomics of Eurasian woolly mammoths. 5th International Conference on Mammoths and their Relatives, Quaternaire 3 (hors serie) :

    Lister AM (2010) A framework for assessing the taxonomic position of mammoth molars using lamellar frequency. 5th International Conference on Mammoths and their Relatives, Quaternaire 3 (hors serie) : 38 - 39.

    Lister AM, Allen JRM, Davies SWG, Blockley S, Higham T, Gamble C, Huntley B, Stuart AJ (2010) Extinction of the woolly mammoth: integrating radiocarbon, vegetational and archaeological evidence. 5th International Conference on Mammoths and their Relatives, Quaternaire 3 (hors serie) :

    Lister A, Ursell B (2010) The Ice Age Tracker's Guide. Frances Lincoln :

    Ukkonen P, Et al. (2010) Dating North European mammoths (Mammuthus primigenius Blum.): a nearly continuous record from 53 ka to 11 ka. European Geological Union, European Geological Union General Assembly Conference Abstracts 12 :

    Scourse JD, Coope GR, Allen JRM, Lister AM, Housley RA, Hedges REM, Jones ASG, Watkins R (2009) Late-glacial remains of woolly mammoth ( Mammuthus primigenius ) from Shropshire, UK: stratigraphy, sedimentology and geochronology of the Condover site. Geological Journal, 44 (4) : 392 - 413. doi: 10.1002/gj.1163

    Chritz KL, Dyke GJ, Zazzo A, Lister AM, Monaghan NT, Sigwart JD (2009) Palaeobiology of an extinct Ice Age mammal: Stable isotope and cementum analysis of giant deer teeth. Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology, 282 (1-4) : 133 - 144. doi: 10.1016/j.palaeo.2009.08.018

    Chritz K, Dyke G, Zazzo A, Lister A, Monaghan N (2009) NEW INSIGHTS ON GIANT DEER (MEGALOCEROS GIGANTEUS) PALEOBIOLOGY INFERRED FROM STABLE ISOTOPE AND CEMENTUM ANALYSIS. JOURNAL OF VERTEBRATE PALEONTOLOGY 29 : 78A - 78A.

    Herridge V, Lister A (2009) A Cretan Mammoth? Using morphology to resolve an ancient DNA debate. Abstracts of the 69th Annual Meeting of the Society of Vertebrate Paleontology, Bristol, September 23-26 2009. Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology 29(3, Suppl.) :

    Lister AM (2009) The biotic effects of climate change. Clinical Medicine, 9 (1) : 14 - 15. doi: 10.7861/clinmedicine.9-1-14

    Lister AM (2009) Late-glacial mammoth skeletons ( Mammuthus primigenius ) from Condover (Shropshire, UK): anatomy, pathology, taphonomy and chronological significance. Geological Journal, 44 (4) : 447 - 479. doi: 10.1002/gj.1162

    Stewart JR, Barnes I, Lister AM, Dalén L (2009) Refugia Revisited: Individualistic responses of species in space and time. Proceedings of the Royal Society of London, Series B, 265 : 1219 - 1226.

    Weston EM, Lister AM (2009) Insular dwarfism in hippos and a model for brain size reduction in Homo floresiensis. Nature, 459 (7243) : 85 - 88. doi: 10.1038/nature07922

    Kumordzi BB, Oduro W, Oppong SK, Danquah E, Lister A, Sam MK (2008) An elephant survey in Digya National Park, Ghana, and implications for conservation and management. PACHYDERM, 27 - 34.

    Lister A (2008) British Fossil Elephants. 13 : 8 - 11.

    Lister AM, Stuart AJ (2008) The impact of climate change on large mammal distribution and extinction: Evidence from the last glacial/interglacial transition. Comptes Rendus Geoscience, 340 (9-10) : 615 - 620. doi: 10.1016/j.crte.2008.04.001

    Lister AM (2008) Review of: Kahlke, R.-D. 2006. Untermassfeld: A Late Early Pleistocene (Epivillafranchian) Fossil Site Near Meiningen (Thuringia, Germany) and its Position in the Development of the European Mammal Fauna, BAR International Series 1578. Quaternary Science Reviews. 27 : :

    Lister AM (2008) British fossil elephants. Deposits Magazine, 13 : 8 - 11.

    Weston EM, Lister AM (2007) Cranial capacity and insular dwarfism: A case study of the extinct dwarf Hippopotamuses from Madagascar. JOURNAL OF MORPHOLOGY, 268 (12) : 1148 - 1149.

    Weston E, Lister A (2007) Brain size and insular dwarfism: A case study of the extinct dwarf hippopotamuses from Madagascar. JOURNAL OF VERTEBRATE PALEONTOLOGY 27 (3) : 165A - 165A.

    Shoshani J, Ferretti MP, Lister AM, Agenbroad LD, Saegusa H, Mol D, Takahashi K (2007) Relationships within the Elephantinae using hyoid characters. Quaternary International, 169-170 : 174 - 185. doi: 10.1016/j.quaint.2007.02.003

    Barnes I, Shapiro B, Lister A, Kuznetsova T, Sher A, Guthrie D, Thomas MG (2007) Genetic Structure and Extinction of the Woolly Mammoth, Mammuthus primigenius. Current Biology, 17 (12) : 1072 - 1075. doi: 10.1016/j.cub.2007.05.035

    Barnes I, Shapiro B, Lister A, Kuznetsova T, Sher A, Guthrie D, Thomas M (2007) Genetic structure and extinction in the woolly mammoth. Boeskorov G (Eds). Abstracts :

    Bastos-silveira C, Lister AM (2007) A morphometric assessment of geographical variation and subspecies in impala. Journal of Zoology, 271 (3) : 288 - 301. doi: 10.1111/j.1469-7998.2006.00211.x

    Binladen J, Sher A, Stuart T, Hofreiter M, Lister A, Tikhonov A, Shapiro B, Xulong L, Willersev E (2007) Ancient DNA: population dynamics and structure of woolly rhinoceros (Coelodonta antiquitatis) in Eurasia. Boeskorov G (Eds). Abstracts : 165 - 166.

    Davies P, Lister AM (2007) Palaeoloxodon. In Chazan, M. and Horwitz, L.K. (eds). Holon: A Lower Paleolithic Site in Israel, In: null, null : 123 - 131.

    Horwitz LK, Chazan M, Lister AM, Monchot H, Porat N (2007) The late lower Paleolithic site of Holon, Israel: subsistence, technology, and chronology.. Journal of Anthropological Archaeology, 25 : 436 - 447.

    Lister AM (2007) The evolutionary relationships and history of the red deer complex. Lovari S (Eds).

    Lister AM (2007) Evolution in the ice age. The Palaeontological Association Newsletter. Abstracts of the 51st Annual Meeting, 16th-19th December 2007 Uppsala 66 :

    Lister AM (2007) Cervidae, In: Holon: A Lower Paleolithic Site in Israel. American School of Prehistoric Research Bulletin, Chazan M, Horwitz LK (Eds). null : 111 - 121.

    Lister A, Bahn P (2007) Mammoths: Giants of the Ice Age. University of California Press : Berkeley.

    Lister AM, Sher AV (2007) Did the Mammuthus meridionalis stage ever arrive in America?. Boeskorov G (Eds). Abstracts : 119 - 120.

    Parfitt SA, Barendregt RW, Breda M, Candy I, Collins MJ, Coope GR, Durbridge P, Field MH, Lee JR, Lister AM, Mutch R, Penkman KEH, Preece RC, Rose J, Stringer CB, Symmons R, Whittaker JE, Wymer JJ, Stuart AJ (2007) The earliest record of human activity in northern Europe, In: Neanderthals in Europe Proceedings of the International Conference, Tongeren, 2004. Études et Recherches Archéologiques de l’Université de Liège, and Publicaties van het Provinciaal Gallo-Romeins Museum Tongeren, Demarsin B, Otte M (Eds). null : 15 - 20.

    Reich M, Gehler A, Mol D, Van derPlichtH, Lister AM (2007) The rediscovery of the type material of Mammuthus primigenius (Mammalia: Proboscidea).. Boeskorov G (Eds). Abstracts :

    Stuart AJ, Lister AM (2007) Patterns of Late Quaternary megafaunal extinctions in Europe and northern Asia. LATE NEOGENE AND QUATERNARY BIODIVERSITY AND EVOLUTION: REGIONAL DEVELOPMENTS AND INTERREGIONAL CORRELATIONS, VOL II 259 : 287 - 297.

    Stuart AJ, Lister AM (2007) Patterns of Late Quaternary megafaunal extinctions in Europe and northern Asia. Courier Forschungsinstitut Senckenberg, 259 : 289 - 299.

    Stevens RE, Lister AM, Hedges REM (2006) Predicting diet, trophic level and palaeoecology from bone stable isotope analysis: a comparative study of five red deer populations. Oecologia, 149 (1) : 12 - 21. doi: 10.1007/s00442-006-0416-1

    Hofreiter M, Lister A (2006) Mammoths. Current Biology, 16 (10) : R347 - R348. doi: 10.1016/j.cub.2006.04.020

    Hofreiter M, Lister AM (2006) Mammoths. Current Biology. 16 : : R347 - R348.

    Parfitt SA, Barendregt RW, Breda M, Candy I, Collins MJ, Coope GR, Durbidge P, Field MH, Lee JR, Lister AM, Mutch R, Penkman KEH, Preece RC, Rose J, Stringer CB, Symmons R, Whittaker JE, Wymer JJ, Stuart AJ (2005) The earliest record of human activity in northern Europe. Nature, 438 (7070) : 1008 - 1012. doi: 10.1038/nature04227

    Krause J, Dear PH, Pollack JL, Slatkin M, Spriggs H, Barnes I, Lister AM, Ebersberger I, Pääbo S, Hofreiter M (2006) Multiplex amplification of the mammoth mitochondrial genome and the evolution of Elephantidae. Nature, 439 (7077) : 724 - 727. doi: 10.1038/nature04432

    Lister AM (2005) Subspecies differentiation among moose (Alces alces (L.)): geographical variation in cranial morphology.. Quaternaire, Supplement, 2 : 31 - 37.

    Lister AM, Edwards CJ, Nock DAW, Bunce M, Van PijlenIA, Bradley DG, Thomas MG, Barnes I (2005) The phylogenetic position of the ‘giant deer’ Megaloceros giganteus. Nature, 438 (7069) : 850 - 853. doi: 10.1038/nature04134

    Lister AM, Sher AV, Van EssenH, Wei G (2005) The pattern and process of mammoth evolution in Eurasia. Quaternary International, 126-128 : 49 - 64. doi: 10.1016/j.quaint.2004.04.014

    Sher AV, Lister AM, Morlan RE (2005) Early Siberian mammoths in northern Yukon. The World of Elephants 2, 4 (Mammoth Site Scientific Papers) : 153 - 157.

    Shoshani J, Ferretti M, Lister AM, Saegusa H, Agenbroad LD, Mol D, Takahashi K (2005) On the relationships within the Elephantinae using hyoid characteristics. Agenbroad LD, Symington RL (Eds). 4 : Mammoth Site : Hot Springs, South Dakota. 160 - 165.

    Wei GB, Lister AM (2005) Significance of the dating of the Majiangou site for understanding Eurasian mammoth evolution.. Vertebrata PalAsiatica, 43 : 243 - 244.

    Stuart AJ, Kosintsev PA, Higham TFG, Lister AM (2004) Pleistocene to Holocene extinction dynamics in giant deer and woolly mammoth. Nature, 431 (7009) : 684 - 689. doi: 10.1038/nature02890

    Lister AM (2004) The impact of Quaternary Ice Ages on mammalian evolution. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences, 359 (1442) : 221 - 241. doi: 10.1098/rstb.2003.1436

    Lister AM, Bennett KD, Dunbar RIM, Sheldon PR (2004) Continuing the debate on the role of Quaternary environmental change for macroevolution - Discussion. PHILOSOPHICAL TRANSACTIONS OF THE ROYAL SOCIETY B-BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES, 359 (1442) : 303 - 303.

    Lister A, Hewitt GM (2004) Genetic consequences of climatic oscillations in the Quaternary - Discussion. PHILOSOPHICAL TRANSACTIONS OF THE ROYAL SOCIETY B-BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES, 359 (1442) : 195 - 195.

    (2004) Evolution on Planet Earth: The Impact of the Physical Environment. Rothschild LR, Lister AM (Eds). Academic Press : 1 - 438.

    Chun-hsiang C, Lister A (2004) PLEISTOCENE ELEPHANTID REMAINS IN TAIWAN. JOURNAL OF VERTEBRATE PALEONTOLOGY 24 (3) : 46A - 46A.

    Lister AM (2004) Les mammifères de la période glaciaire. April-June 2004 : 56 - 63.

    Lister AM (2004) Elephants, In: Grzimek’s Animal Life Encyclopaedia, 2nd Edition, Kleiman DG, Geist V, McDade MC, Trumpey JE (Eds). Gale : 161 - 175.

    Lister AM (2004) Ecological Interactions of elephantids in Pleistocene Eurasia: Palaeoloxodon and Mammuthus, In: Human Paleoecology in the Levantine Corridor, Goren-Inbar N, Speth JD (Eds). Oxbow : Oxford. 53 - 60.

    Lister AM, Van EssenH (2004) The earliest mammoths in Europe. Kahlke RD (Eds). 18th International Senckenberg Conference: VI International Palaeontological Colloquium, Weimar, 254 4 - 25 4 4Terra Nostra 152 - 154.

    Besnier C, Ylinen L, Strange B, Lister A, Takeuchi Y, Goff SP, Towers GJ (2003) Characterization of Murine Leukemia Virus Restriction in Mammals. Journal of Virology, 77 (24) : 13403 - 13406. doi: 10.1128/JVI.77.24.13403-13406.2003

    Bradshaw RH, Hannon GE, Lister AM (2003) A long-term perspective on ungulate–vegetation interactions. Forest Ecology and Management, 181 (1-2) : 267 - 280. doi: 10.1016/S0378-1127(03)00138-5

    Lister AM, Rawson P (2003) Land/sea relations and speciation in the marine and terrestrial realms, In: Evolution on Planet Earth: The Impact of the Physical Environment, Rothschild L, Lister A (Eds). Academic Press : London. 297 - 315.

    Lister AM, Rothschild L (2003) Epilogue, In: Evolution on Planet Earth: The Impact of the Physical Environment, Rothschild L, Lister A (Eds). null : 415 - 416.

    Lister AM, Van EssenH (2003) Mammuthus rumanus (Stefanescu), the earliest mammoth in Europe, In: Advances in Palaeontology ‘Hen to Panta’, Petulescu A, Stiuca E (Eds). Romanian Academy, ‘Emil Racovita’ Inst. of Speleology : Bucarest. 47 - 52.

    Rothschild LR, Lister AM (2003) Introduction, In: Evolution on Planet Earth: The Impact of the Physical Environment, Rothschild L, Lister A (Eds). Academic Press : London. ix - xii.

    Cardillo M, Lister A (2002) Evolutionary biology: Death in the slow lane. Nature, 419 (6906) : 440 - 441. doi: 10.1038/419440a

    Stuart AJ, Sulerzhitsky LD, Orlova LA, Kuzmin YV, Lister AM (2002) The latest woolly mammoths (Mammuthus primigenius Blumenbach) in Europe and Asia: a review of the current evidence. Quaternary Science Reviews, 21 (14-15) : 1559 - 1569. doi: 10.1016/S0277-3791(02)00026-4

    Cardillo M, Lister A (2002) Death in the slow lane. Nature. 419 : : 440 - 441.

    Lister AM, Sher AV (2001) The Origin and Evolution of the Woolly Mammoth. Science, 294 (5544) : 1094 - 1097. doi: 10.1126/science.1056370

    Stewart JR, Lister AM (2001) Cryptic northern refugia and the origins of the modern biota. Trends in Ecology & Evolution, 16 (11) : 608 - 613. doi: 10.1016/S0169-5347(01)02338-2

    Stuart A, Lister A (2001) The mammalian faunas of Pakefield/Kessingland and Corton, Suffolk, UK: evidence for a new temperate episode in the British early Middle Pleistocene. Quaternary Science Reviews, 20 (16-17) : 1677 - 1692. doi: 10.1016/S0277-3791(01)00034-8

    Chazan M, Monchot H, Porat N, Lister A, Davies P, Kolska HorwitzL (2001) Le site acheuléen de plein air d'Holon (Israël) : premiers résultats. Comptes Rendus de l'Académie des Sciences - Series IIA - Earth and Planetary Science, 332 (3) : 201 - 207. doi: 10.1016/S1251-8050(00)01503-2

    Davies P, Lister AM (2001) Palaeoloxodon cypriotes, the dwarf elephant of Cyprus: size and scaling comparisons with P. falconeri (Sicily-Malta) and mainland P. antiquus. Cavarretta G (Eds). The World of Elephants, Consiglio Nazionale delle Ricerche : 479 - 480.

    Lister AM (2001) “Gradual” evolution and molar scaling in the evolution of the mammoth. Cavarretta G (Eds). The World of Elephants, Consiglio Nazionale delle Ricerche : 648 - 651.

    Lister AM (2001) Age profile of mammoths in a Late Pleistocene hyaena den at Kent’s Cavern, Devon, England.. Anthropological Papers of the University of Kansas, 22 : 35 - 43.

    Lister; AM (2001, 13 4) Tales from the DNA of Domestic Horses. Science. 292 (5515) : : 218 - 219. doi: 10.1126/science.292.5515.218

    Stuart AJ, Lister AM (2001) The Late Quaternary extinction of woolly mammoth (Mammuthus primigenius), straight-tusked elephant (Palaeoloxodon antiquus) and other megafauna in Europe. Cavarretta G (Eds). The World of Elephants, 722 - 723.

    Thomas MG, Lister AM (2001) A statistical appraisal of molecular and morphological evidence for mammoth-elephant relationships. Cavarretta G (Eds). The World of Elephants, Consiglio Nazionale delle Ricerche : 688 - 692.

    Thomas MG, Hagelberg E, Jones HB, Yang Z, Lister AM (2000) Molecular and morphological evidence on the phylogeny of the Elephantidae. Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences, 267 (1461) : 2493 - 2500. doi: 10.1098/rspb.2000.1310

    Gonzalez S, Kitchener AC, Lister AM (2000) Survival of the Irish elk into the Holocene. NATURE, 405 (6788) : 753 - 754.

    Lister A (2000) In praise of dung. 36 :

    Lister AM, Blashford-snell J (2000) Exceptional size and form of Asian elephants in western Nepal.. Elephant, 2 : 33 - 36.

    Lister AM (1999) The Pliocene deer of the Red Crag Nodule Bed. Deinsea: Annual of the Natural History Museum Rotterdam, 7 : 217 - 224.

    Lister AM (1999) Epiphyseal fusion and postcranial age determination in the woolly mammoth, Mammuthus primigenius (Blum.). Deinsea 6: 79-88. [25]. Deinsea: Annual of the Natural History Museum Rotterdam, 6 : 79 - 88.

    Lister AM (1998) The age of early Pleistocene mammal faunas from the ‘Weybourne Crag’ and Cromer Forest-bed Formation (Norfolk, England).. Netherlands Journal of Geosciences, 60 : 271 - 280.

    Lister AM, Grubb P, Sumner SRM (1998) Taxonomy, morphology and evolution of European roe deer, In: The European Roe Deer, Andersen R, Duncan P, Linnell JDC (Eds). Scandinavian University Press : Oslo. 23 - 46.

    Lister AM, Kadwell M, Kaagan LM, Jordan WC, Richards MB, Stanley HF (1998) Ancient and modern DNA in a study of horse domestication.. Ancient Biomolecules, 2 : 267 - 280.

    Lister AM, Stuart AJ (1998) Vertebrates, In: Late Quaternary Environmental Change in North-West Europe, Preece RC, Bridgland DR (Eds). Chapman & Hall : London. 254 - 260.

    Tsoukala E, Lister AM (1998) Remains of straight-tusked elephant, Elephas (Palaeoloxodon) antiquus Falc. & Caut. (1847) ESR-dated to oxygen isotope stage 6, from Grevena (W. Macedonia, Greece).. Bollettino della Societa` Paleontologica Italiana, 37 : 117 - 139.

    Lister AM, Van PijlenIA, Burke TA (1997) Subspeciation in northern Cervids: a combined molecular and morphological approach based on modern and ancient material. Milne JA (Eds). Recent Developments in Deer Biology Macaulay Institute : Aberdeen.

    Lister AM (1996) Sexual dimorphism in the mammoth pelvis: an aid to gender determination, In: The Proboscidea: Trends in Evolution and Paleoecology, Shoshani J, Tassy P (Eds). Oxford University Press : Oxford. 254 - 259.

    Lister AM (1996) Evolution and taxonomy of Eurasian mammoths, In: The Proboscidea: Trends in Evolution and Paleoecology, Shoshani J, Tassy P (Eds). Oxford Univesity Press : Oxford. 203 - 213.

    Lister AM (1996) The stratigraphical interpretation of large mammal remains from the Cromer Forest-bed Formation, In: The Early Middle Pleistocene of Europe, Balkema : Rotterdam. 25 - 44.

    Lister AM (1996) The evolutionary response of vertebrates to Quaternary environmental change.. NATO ASI Series 1, 47 : 287 - 302.

    Lister AM (1996) Dwarfing in island elephants and deer: processes in relation to time of isolation.. Symposia of the Zoological Society of London, 69 : 277 - 292.

    Lister AM (1996) The morphological distinction between bones and teeth of fallow deer (Dama dama) and red deer (Cervus elaphus). International Journal of Osteoarchaeology, 6 (2) : 119 - 143. doi: 10.1002/(SICI)1099-1212(199603)6:2<119::AID-OA265>3.0.CO;2-8

    Rink W, Schwarcz H, Stuart A, Lister A, Marseglia E, Brennan B (1996) ESR dating of the type Cromerian freshwater bed at West Runton, U.K.. Quaternary Science Reviews, 15 (7) : 727 - 738. doi: 10.1016/0277-3791(96)00034-0

    Lister AM, Sher AV (1995) Ice cores and mammoth extinction. Nature, 378 (6552) : 23 - 24. doi: 10.1038/378023a0

    De RouffignacC, Bowen DQ, Coope GR, Keen DH, Lister AM, Maddy D, Robinson JE, Sykes GA, Walker MJC (1995) Late Middle Pleistocene interglacial deposits at Upper Strensham, Worcestershire, England. Journal of Quaternary Science, 10 (1) : 15 - 31. doi: 10.1002/jqs.3390100104

    Lister A (1995) Why are elephants migrating to a Park in Nepal?.

    Lister AM (1995) Sea-levels and the evolution of island endemics: the dwarf red deer of Jersey. Geological Society, London, Special Publications, 96 (1) : 151 - 172. doi: 10.1144/GSL.SP.1995.096.01.12

    Lister AM (1994) The evolution of the giant deer, Megaloceros giganteus (Blumenbach). Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society, 112 (1-2) : 65 - 100. doi: 10.1111/j.1096-3642.1994.tb00312.x

    Hagelberg E, Thomas MG, Cook CE, Sher AV, Baryshnikov GF, Lister AM (1994) DNA from ancient mammoth bones. Nature, 370 (6488) : 333 - 334. doi: 10.1038/370333b0

    Lister A (1994) Ancient DNA: not quite Jurassic Park. Trends in Ecology & Evolution, 9 (3) : 82 - 84. doi: 10.1016/0169-5347(94)90199-6

    Agenbroad LD, Lister AM, Mol D, Roth VL (1994) Mammuthus primigenius remains from the Mammoth Site of Hot Springs, South Dakota, In: The Hot Springs Mammoth Site: a Decade of Field and Laboratory Research in Paleontology, Geology and Paleoecology, Agenbroad LD, Mead JI (Eds). Mammoth Site : Hot Springs, South DAkota. 269 - 281.

    Goren-inbar N, Lister A, Werker E, Chech M (1994) A Butchered elephant skull and associated artifacts from the Acheulian site of Gesher Benot Ya'Aqov, Israel. Paléorient, 20 (1) : 99 - 112. doi: 10.3406/paleo.1994.4604

    Lister AM (1994) Survival of the smallest. 6 : 60 - 61.

    Lister AM (1994) Skeletal associations and bone maturation in the Hot Springs mammoths, In: The Hot Springs Mammoth Site: a Decade of Field and Laboratory Research in Paleontology, Geology and Paleoecology, Agenbroad LD, Mead JI (Eds). Mammoth Site : Hot Springs, South Dakota. 253 - 268.

    Lister AM, Agenbroad LD (1994) Gender determination of the Hot Springs mammoths, In: The Hot Springs Mammoth Site: a Decade of Field and Laboratory Research in Paleontology, Geology and Paleoecology, Agenbroad LD, Mead JI (Eds). Mammoth Site : Hot Springs, South Dakota. 208 - 214.

    Lister A, Bahn P (1994) Mammoths. Boxtree : London. 1 - 168.

    Tchernov E, Horwitz LK, Ronen A, Lister AM (1994) The faunal remains from Evron Quarry in relation to other Lower Paleolithic hominid sites in the southern Levant.. Quaternary Research, 42 : 328 - 339.

    Lister AM (1993) Mammoths in miniature. Nature, 362 (6418) : 288 - 289. doi: 10.1038/362288a0

    Grun R, Lister AM (1993) Collection of ESR samples from the interior of mammoth teeth causing minimal damage.. Ancient TL, 11 : 45 - 46.

    Lister AM (1993) Cervidae (Deer), In: The Lower Paleolithic Site at Hoxne, England, Singer R, Gladfelter B, Wymer JJ (Eds). Chicago University Press : Chicago. 174 - 190.

    Lister AM (1993) ‘Gradualistic’ evolution: Its interpretation in Quaternary large mammal species. Quaternary International, 19 : 77 - 84. doi: 10.1016/1040-6182(93)90026-C

    Lister AM (1993) The stratigraphical significance of deer species in the cromer forest-bed formation. Journal of Quaternary Science, 8 (2) : 95 - 108. doi: 10.1002/jqs.3390080202

    Lister AM (1993) Patterns of evolution in Quaternary mammal lineages.. Linnean Society Symposium Series, 14 : 71 - 93.

    Lister AM (1993) The Condover mammoth site: excavation and research 1986-93.. Cranium, 10 : 61 - 67.

    Ayliffe L, Lister A, Chivas A (1992) The preservation of glacial-interglacial climatic signatures in the oxygen isotopes of elephant skeletal phosphate. Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology, 99 (3-4) : 179 - 191. doi: 10.1016/0031-0182(92)90014-V

    Lister A (1992) Mammalian fossils and quaternary biostratigraphy. Quaternary Science Reviews, 11 (3) : 329 - 344. doi: 10.1016/0277-3791(92)90004-R

    Lister AM, Joysey KA (1992) Scaling effects in elephant dental evolution - the example of Eurasian Mammuthus, In: Structure, Function and Evolution of Teeth, Smith P, Tchernov E (Eds). Freund : Jerusalem. 185 - 213.

    Lister AM (1991) Evolutionary patterns in mammalian species. Trends in Ecology & Evolution, 6 (8) : 239 - 240. doi: 10.1016/0169-5347(91)90068-9

    Lister AM, Brandon A (1991) A pre-Ipswichian cold stage mammalian fauna from the Balderton Sand and Gravel, Lincolnshire, England. Journal of Quaternary Science, 6 (2) : 139 - 157. doi: 10.1002/jqs.3390060204

    Gibbard P, West R, Zagwijn W, Balson P, Burger A, Funnell B, Jeffery D, De JongJ, Van KolfschotenT, Lister A, Meijer T, Norton P, Preece R, Rose J, Stuart A, Whiteman C, Zalasiewicz J (1991) Early and early Middle Pleistocene correlations in the Southern North Sea basin. Quaternary Science Reviews, 10 (1) : 23 - 52. doi: 10.1016/0277-3791(91)90029-T

    Lister AM (1991) Late Glacial mammoths in Britain, In: The Late Glacial in north-west Europe, Barton RNE, Roberts AE, Roe DA (Eds). Council for British Archaeology : London. 51 - 59.

    Lister AM (null) The pattern of evolution of the mammoth in Europe. Fourth International Congress of Systematic and Evolutionary Biology, 17 7 - 1 7 7

    Lister AM, Mcglade JM, Stuart AJ (1990) The Early Middle Pleistocene Vertebrate Fauna from Little Oakley, Essex. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences, 328 (1248) : 359 - 385. doi: 10.1098/rstb.1990.0117

    Garutt WE, Gentry A, Lister AM (1990) Mammuthus Brookes 1828 Mammalia Proboscidea Proposed Conservation And Elephas primigenius Blumenbach 1799 Currently Mammuthus primigenius Proposed Designation As The Type Species Of Mammuthus And Designation Of A Neotype. The Bulletin of zoological nomenclature., 47 : 38 - 44. doi: 10.5962/bhl.part.2651

    Lister A (1990) Taxonomy and biostratigraphy of Middle Pleistocene deer remains from Arago (Pyrénées-Orientales, France).. Quaternaire, 1 (3) : 225 - 230. doi: 10.3406/quate.1990.1939

    Lister A (1990) Critical reappraisal of the Middle Pleistocene deer species "Cervus" elaphoides Kaklke.. Quaternaire, 1 (3) : 175 - 192. doi: 10.3406/quate.1990.1935

    Lister A, Keen D, Crossling J (1990) Elephant and molluscan remains from the basal levels of the Baginton-Lillington Gravels at Snitterfield, Warwickshire. Proceedings of the Geologists' Association, 101 (3) : 203 - 212. doi: 10.1016/S0016-7878(08)80005-3

    Lister AM (1989) Proboscidean evolution. Trends in Ecology & Evolution, 4 (12) : 362 - 363. doi: 10.1016/0169-5347(89)90099-2

    Lister AM (1989) Rapid dwarfing of red deer on Jersey in the Last Interglacial. Nature, 342 (6249) : 539 - 542. doi: 10.1038/342539a0

    Lister AM (1989) Mammalian faunas and the Wolstonian debate, In: The Pleistocene of the West Midlands: Field Guide, Quaternary Research Association : Cambridge. 5 - 12.

    Bridgland DR, Allen P, Currant A, Gibbard P, Lister A, Preece R, Robinson J, Stuart A, Sutcliffe A (1988) Report of Geologists' Association Field Meeting in north-east Essex, May 22nd–24th, 1987. Proceedings of the Geologists' Association, 99 (4) : 315 - 333. doi: 10.1016/S0016-7878(88)80056-7

    Lister A, Lister AM, Chapman NG (1988) Variation in lateral metacarpals of fallow deer, Dama dama (L.).. Journal of Zoology, 216 : 597 - 603.

    Coope GR, Lister AM (1987) Late-glacial mammoth skeletons from Condover, Shropshire, England. Nature, 330 (6147) : 472 - 474. doi: 10.1038/330472a0

    Lister AM (1987) Diversity and evolution of antler form in Quaternary deer., In: Biology and Management of the Cervidae, Smithsonian Institution : Washington, DC. 81 - 98.

    Lister AM (1987) Megaloceros Brookes 1828 Mammalia Artiodactyla Proposed Emendation Of The Original Spelling. The Bulletin of zoological nomenclature., 44 : 255 - 256. doi: 10.5962/bhl.part.348

    Lister AM (1987) Megaceros or Megaloceros? The nomenclature of the giant deer.. Quaternary Newsletter, 52 : 14 - 16.

    Lister AM (1987) Giant deer and giant red deer from Kent’s Cavern, and the status of Strongyloceros spelaeus Owen.. Transactions and Proceedings of the Torquay Natural History Society, 19 : 189 - 198.

    Lister AM (1986) New results on deer from Swanscombe, and the stratigraphical significance of deer remains in the Middle and Upper Pleistocene of Europe.. Journal of Archaeological Science, 13 : 319 - 338.

    Janis CM, Lister AM (1985) The morphology of the lower fourth premolar as a taxonomic indicator in the Ruminantia, and the systematic position of Triceromeryx.. Journal of Paleontology, 59 : 405 - 410.

    Storch G, Lister AM (1985) Leptictidium nasutum, ein Pseudorhyncocyonide aus dem Eozän der “Grube Messel” bei Darmstadt (Mammalia, Proteutheria).. Senckenbergiana Lethaea, 66 : 1 - 13.

    Lister A (1984) The fossil record of elk (Alces alces (L)) in Britain.. Quaternary Newsletter, 1 - 7.

    Lister AM (1984) Evolutionary and ecological origins of British deer. Proceedings of the Royal Society of Edinburgh. Section B. Biological Sciences, 82 (04) : 205 - 229. doi: 10.1017/S0269727000003754

    Lister A (1984) Evolutionary case histories from the fossil record.. Nature, 309 : 114 - 115.

    Coxon P, Hall AR, Lister A, Stuart AJ (1980) New evidence on the vertebrate fauna, stratigraphy and palaeobotany of the interglacial deposits at Swanton Morley, Norfolk. Geological Magazine, 117 (06) : 525 - 525. doi: 10.1017/S0016756800028880

    De GrooteI, Flink LG, Abbas R, Bello SM, Burgia L, Buck LT, Dean C, Freyne A, Higham T, Jones CG, Kruszynski R, Lister A, Parfitt SA, Skinner MM, Shindler K, Stringer CB (2016) New genetic and morphological evidence suggests a single hoaxer created ‘Piltdown man’. Royal Society Open Science, 3 (8) : 160328 - 160328. doi: 10.1098/rsos.160328

    Courses taught
    Postgraduate: 2017-18 NERC ATSC Quaternary Palaeoecology

    1/2018 - 2/2018.

    Postgraduate: 2016-17 NERC ATSC Quaternary Palaeoecology

    1/2017.

    Postgraduate: 2016-17 NERC ATSC Quaternary Palaeoecology
    1/2017.

    MSc: MSc Taxonomy & Biodiversity: Palaeobiology Module

    2/2016 - 3/2016.

    Postgraduate: 2015-16 NERC ATSC Quaternary Palaeoecology
    NHM
    11/2015 - 12/2015.

    MSc: MSc Taxonomy & Biodiversity: Palaeobiology Module

    3/2015.

    Postgraduate: 2014-15 NERC ATSC Quaternary Palaeoecology
    NHM
    12/2014.

    Third year: Mammalian Evolution

    11/2014 - 11/2020.

    MSc: MSc Taxonomy & Biodiversity: Palaeontology & Stratigraphy Module
    Imperial College, London
    The Natural History Museum, London
    3/2014.

    Supervision
    Doctorate (PhD) Co-supervisor to Dickinson M
    Amino-acid racemisation dating of mammalian tooth enamel
    1/10/2014 - 30/9/2017.

    Doctorate (PhD) Lead supervisor to De Souza L
    The evolution of endemic deer in the Malta-Sicily archipelago
    1/10/2013 - 30/9/2016.

    Doctorate (PhD) Lead supervisor to Owen F
    Pleistocene horses of Europe
    1/10/2012 - 30/9/2015.

    Course developed
    Co developers: Pappa S, Hill , Lister
    Moulding and analysis of enamel features microwear and mesowear (Quaternary Palaeoecology Advanced Training Short Course), 2016

    Awards
    IMP (Individual Merit Promotion), 2009 - 25/3/2021.

    Royal Society/Leverhulme Senior Research Fellowship, 2000 - 2001.

    Stopes Medal, Geologists' Association, London, 1997.

    Media
    Broadcasts
    Ice Age Giants, BBC2, 1/6/2017.

    Walking through Time, Channel 4, 1/6/2016.

    Sunday Brunch, Channel 4, 1/6/2014.

    Consulting on David Attenborough’s Natural History Museum Alive, Sky TV, 1/6/2013.

    Woolly Mammoth: Secrets from the Ice, BBC2, 1/6/2012.

    Museum of Life, BBC2, 1/6/2009.

  • Russian Art + Culture - https://www.russianartandculture.com/interview-theodora-clarke-talks-to-prof-adrian-lister-from-the-natural-history-museum-about-lyuba-the-siberian-mammoth/

    INTERVIEW: THEODORA CLARKE TALKS TO PROF ADRIAN LISTER FROM THE NATURAL HISTORY MUSEUM ABOUT LYUBA THE SIBERIAN MAMMOTH
    BY Theodora Clarke POSTED 04/07/2014 12:00 AM

    Theodora Clarke speaks to Professor Adrian Lister, mammoth researcher at the Department of Palaeontology at the Natural History Museum, about their current exhibition Mammoths: Ice Age Giants. The star of the exhibition is the world’s most complete mammoth, baby Lyuba, who was discovered in Siberia in 2007. She died around 42,000 years ago at just one month old. This is the first time Lyuba has been exhibited in Western Europe.

    Image courtesy of the Natural History Museum
    Image courtesy of the Natural History Museum

    Theodora Clarke: What is the main purpose of the exhibition? Is it to educate the public? Professor Adrian Lister: To educate the public, to entertain the public, and I suppose from a scientific point of view it is to highlight the Ice Age as a very interesting period of time. To see Lyuba in public is a once in a lifetime opportunity. She is normally tucked away in the North East of Siberia, she hasn’t been in much public display in Russia. We don’t have such an object in the UK so she is really the star attraction and the possibility to see an extinct mammoth in the flesh is possibly the only time our normal visitors will have such an opportunity. To learn about how much detail we’ve got from the Ice Ages, how much information we’ve got about these animals and the links to today. You only have got to look at the mammoth to see it’s a kind of elephant. That’s obvious and so you make the link to modern elephants. It also shows the value in studying the recent past, so studying fossils is not just purely an intellectual exercise but it does actually inform us, by analogy, of things that are going on, mind mapping for the future. We also hope it will be very entertaining; it is a family exhibition so you know it has all the interactive stuff. The exhibition starts with the origin of mammoths through 60 million years of evolution, and it explains that mammoths are a species of elephant. It’s very interactive and we’re encouraging people to get involved hence the “please touch” signs. This is perhaps unusual for a museum. The mammoths are quite close to us in time, since the last Ice Age. So if we go back to 20,000 years ago, which may sound like a long time but in paleontological terms is quite recent, there were already people around – this is far more recent to us in time than say dinosaurs. That’s part of the rationale, as when we look at the world of the last Ice Age – we’re looking at the world that almost immediately precedes today. So it is relevant to today’s world when we have all these sorts of climate changes in the Ice Age and we can try and understand how they affected their animals and plants. TC: In terms of selecting the subject of the exhibition, are there a number of mammoths in the Natural History Museum collection? AL: Yes, and Lyuba is the most intact one, yet she has come from Russia. There has been a number of intact carcasses found in Siberia. You never ever get any soft tissue preserve, so Lyuba is extremely special. All you ever get in things of this level of antiquity, 90% of the time is bones and teeth. So the frozen carcasses are absolutely unique and very rare. Over the last 200 years that people have been actively looking for them, only about ten partial mammoth carcasses have been found and she is the most complete one ever. It is partly supposition as there are no bones in a mammoths trunk so we have to figure out what these things of over 15 million years looked like. We have to try and figure out from the skull and so on. Image courtesy of the Natural History Museum
    Image courtesy of the Natural History Museum

    TC: Did mammoths live all over the world? AL: Mammoths started off in Africa and came north and spread across Europe and into Asia and to North America. They never got into South America or Australia. TC: How well preserved is DNA from over 40,000 years ago? AL: We have got lots of it but it is fragmented and the question that everybody wants to know the answer to – can we grow a mammoth – the answer is probably no, not ever. It is like an alphabet soup when you extract DNA from these remains, its bits and pieces, not complete. So you can’t exactly grow a baby animal from it. Some people say that they might be able to stitch it all back together again and then of course you have to put it into an elephant’s egg and an Asian elephant has to be the surrogate mother as it is its closest living relative. TC: So it could be possible in the future but whether it’s a good idea or not, well that’s another thing? AL: Well, that’s two separate questions. First whether it’s technically possible and second whether it’s a good idea to do it from an ethical behavioural point of view is another issue. At the moment we are nowhere near close enough to be able to do it technically so fortunately we don’t have to address those difficult questions. If you could clone a mammoth, you could clone a Neanderthal. It’s exactly the same. And then you’ve got even more ethical issues. So what we try and focus on instead is what you can do with DNA, such as with the hair colour. By extracting a particular gene that codes for hair colour, we’ve figured out a mammoth is actually a dark brown colour and not orange. And another example was that they actually extracted the gene for haemoglobin from the mammoth’s tissue and it was adapted to the cold more than the haemoglobin of living elephants. TC: How did Lyuba come to be so well intact? AL: We think that Lyuba came to be preserved so well because she was buried very quickly and the idea is that she probably fell into a pool of soft mud and basically suffocated. Then in that Northern part of Siberia, once your blood is at depth and the ground freezes around you – it gets covered over and it will never thaw again – this is the permafrost. And that is basically how she has been preserved in ice over 40,000 years and then what happened was in 2006 a river flowing very close to where she was buried – actually eroded her out of the river bank and she was washed down stream and just deposited on the river bank and spent about 9 months there and was found the following spring by this reindeer herder and his son and the rest of it is history. All the organs are still there inside. And in the stomach you can see the remains of her mother’s milk. She was only about a month old when she died. We know that from counting growth rings in her teeth. Much of this research was done by Dan Fisher, who is a colleague of mine at the University of Michigan. She is pretty much at birth size; she was only 30 days old when she died. The hair is the one thing that has been lost. She would have been completely covered in hair when alive. You can see a few patches that remain. The hair would have basically fallen off. So when these carcasses are found in situ in the soil in which they were buried, quite often the hair is quite loose around the carcass. But because she was washed into a river and downstream – all the hair has gone. Also her ears are a lot smaller than living elephants, which is an adaptation to living in a cold environment. The trunk is the only complete trunk that we have from any mammoth. Image courtesy of International Mammoth Committee/Francis Latreille
    Image courtesy of International Mammoth Committee/Francis Latreille

    TC: What would have been the environment where she was living? AL: This was 42,000 years ago during the last Ice Age. The ice sheets would have been elsewhere, but temperatures in the summer would have been no more than -20°C and -50°C in the winter. There would have been a lot of grass for them to eat, but no trees at all in that environment. It must have been quite rich because a fully grown mammoth would have been five or six tonnes of body mass and probably needed about 200 kilos of food a day. They lived in herds so there must have been a lot of plant growth. TC: How can she be preserved without formaldehyde? AL: She has been freeze-dried; all the water has come out of the body naturally and gradually. So she is stable at room temperature and humidity. TC: Have you found quite a few mammoths in Siberia? AL: There are thousands of remains and they are mostly bones, tusks and teeth, the sort of things that are fossils. In terms of actual carcasses there have been probably a dozen partial carcasses in various stages of completeness found over the last 200 years. But this is the only one that you could say is complete. TC: I read that you had done an excavation on one in the UK? AL: In the UK there have been several, we have also had plenty of mammoth fossils from London because of the Thames. During the Ice Age when a river was flowing and depositing soil and gravel, of course if animals were going to the river their carcasses or bits of them got washed into the river and were buried at the bottom. For example, when they excavated under Trafalgar Square to build all the embassies there were lots of animal bones. In different parts of the country when they are digging for sand or gravel for road building, that sand and gravel is usually laid down by rivers in the last Ice Age and that’s why it is there. Very often lots of bones of different types of mammals come to light. One of the biggest places was a place called Stanton Harcourt in Oxford, where over the last 20 years they have dug up hundreds and hundreds of mammal fossils. Probably the single best known mammal fossil site is in Shropshire where we excavated a complete skeleton in the 1980s, and about four juvenile mammoths. Image courtesy of the Natural History Museum
    Image courtesy of the Natural History Museum

    TC: So what was the main reason that mammoths went extinct? Loss of their habitat? AL: I think it’s loss of habitat and natural climate warming at the end of the last Ice Age which drove a replacement of their grassland habitat by forest and so they were squeezed down to what we call ‘refugia’ – small areas where they had probably survived in the past in those cycles. This time we’re talking about 10,000 years ago, there was a new factor and that was people – advanced stone age hunters – which had never before actually spread into northern Siberia. Human culture had reached a point whereby about 12,000 years ago people were naturally moving into those kinds of areas for the first time and maybe hunting the last population to extinction, but that is contentious. I think it is probably a combination of habitat change and hunting. The last part of the exhibition is all about living elephants and we have a consolation message where we make the link between why mammoths went extinct and how elephants are faced by similar threats through hunting and loss of their habitat. TC: And would you say it is the same two factors today? AL: Yes exactly, that is the message. Of course today humans are driving the habitat change, because it is not only about climate change but about destroying the habitats, and they have been poached; 20,000 elephants were illegally killed in Africa in the last year. It is not sustainable. They’re really in a highly threatened situation and that’s the message we want to leave. The mammoths are kind of a message from the past if you like, once things are extinct, that’s it, we’ve lost them. TC: And what are you working on as your next project? AL: Well I’m currently looking at the evolution of elephants in Africa. The evolution of the modern species and whether the modern African elephants are one species or two. I’m working on about six different projects. I’m working on the evolution of mammoths in North America and how it came to be a different species; the Colombian mammoth in North America. They must have come over from Eurasia at some point. I’m also collaborating with people doing more on the mammoth DNA. Trying to learn more about mammoths’ adaptations from their DNA. For more information on Mammoths: Ice Age Giants: http://www.russianartandculture.com/exh-mammoths-ice-age-giants- Natural History Museum: http://www.nhm.ac.uk

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Print Marked Items
Darwin's Fossils: The Collection That
Shaped the Theory of Evolution
Carl Hays
Booklist.
114.13 (Mar. 1, 2018): p10.
COPYRIGHT 2018 American Library Association
http://www.ala.org/aboutala/offices/publishing/booklist/
Full Text:
Darwin's Fossils: The Collection That Shaped the Theory of Evolution. By Adrian Lister. Apr. 2018.160p.
illus. Smithsonian, paper, $19.95 (97815883461791.576.8.
The voyage Charles Darwin took in 1835 to the Galapagos Islands, where he catalogued a colorful variety
of finches, is often cited in books about the groundbreaking scientist's life as the primary inspiration for his
insights into evolution. Yet Darwin's five-year journey involved many inland excursions, including three
trips to the Andes, where he gathered a treasure trove of fossils that also played an enormous role in
developing his theories. As a researcher at London's Natural History Museum as well as a fossil expert,
Lister takes advantage of his easy access to much of Darwin's archive to reveal how indispensable those
assorted skeletal remains and geological artifacts were to Darwin's research. Lister recounts Darwin's full
itinerary in chronology, along with descriptions of key findings during each ground-based expedition,
including major discoveries about extinct mammals and coral-reef formation. Richly illustrated with photos
from the fossil collection and line drawings produced when Darwin was alive, Lister's work is an essential
acquisition for every library prizing quality books on evolution.--Carl Hays
Source Citation (MLA 8th
Edition)
Hays, Carl. "Darwin's Fossils: The Collection That Shaped the Theory of Evolution." Booklist, 1 Mar. 2018,
p. 10. General OneFile, http://link.galegroup.com/apps/doc/A532250764/ITOF?
u=schlager&sid=ITOF&xid=f86548c3. Accessed 3 June 2018.
Gale Document Number: GALE|A532250764
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Darwin's Fossils: The Collection That
Shaped the Theory of Evolution
Publishers Weekly.
265.6 (Feb. 5, 2018): p53.
COPYRIGHT 2018 PWxyz, LLC
http://www.publishersweekly.com/
Full Text:
Darwin's Fossils: The Collection That Shaped the Theory of Evolution
Adrian Lister. Smithsonian, $19.95 trade paper (160p) ISBN 978-1-58834-617-9
When Charles Darwin returned to England after five years on the HMS Beagle, he brought back more than
the outline of the theory of evolution, as Lister elucidates in this well-researched look at an aspect of
Darwin scholarship. As Lister, a scientist in the Earth Sciences Department at the Natural History Museum,
London, so well explains, Darwin was also responsible for delivering a huge array of fossils to England that
both shaped his ideas on evolution and influenced the thinking of the scientific community at large. Lister
also demonstrates that many of Darwin's original hypotheses based on the fossils, such as the geological
origin of southern South America and the origin of atolls, continue to prove useful. The range of fossils
discussed--from some of the largest mammals ever found in South America (such as the Notiomastodon
platensis) to microscopic algae, as well as pieces of petrified wood--speaks to the breadth of Darwin's
interests and his ability to meld such divergent data into a coherent whole. This is a welcome addition to the
ever-growing body of literature dealing with the life and work of Darwin. (Apr.)
Source Citation (MLA 8th
Edition)
"Darwin's Fossils: The Collection That Shaped the Theory of Evolution." Publishers Weekly, 5 Feb. 2018,
p. 53. General OneFile, http://link.galegroup.com/apps/doc/A526810427/ITOF?
u=schlager&sid=ITOF&xid=a5437624. Accessed 3 June 2018.
Gale Document Number: GALE|A526810427
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The Ice Age Tracker's Guide
Ian Chipman
Booklist.
107.7 (Dec. 1, 2010): p51.
COPYRIGHT 2010 American Library Association
http://www.ala.org/aboutala/offices/publishing/booklist/
Full Text:
The Ice Age Tracker's Guide.
By Adrian Lister. Illus. by Martin Ursell.
2010. 32p. Frances Lincoln, $17.95 (9781845077181). 569. Gr. I-3.
The two superstars of extinct species--the sabre-tooth cat and the woolly mammoth--bump shoulders with
such other lost creatures as the moa (a wingless bird that stood more than 10 feet tall), the litoptern (a
camel-like thing that looks lifted from Star Wars), and the glyptodont (a lumbering armadillo-tank hybrid)
in this fun guide to the prehistoric animal world. An introduction welcoming readers to the chilly world of
the Ice Age would have been nice, but the book instead jumps directly into two-page spreads dominated by
spry illustrated tableaux and speckled with factoids, delivering information in chatty and irreverent
particulars that cover shape, size, behavior, eating habits, and--in keeping with the spirit of the tracker's
guide angle--droppings, footprints, and auditory signs of each animal's presence. A world map shows off the
general areas where each species lived along with the time spans during which they existed, and curious
readers will find even more tasty details in the endpapers to this most edutaining offering.--Ian Chipman
Chipman, Ian
Source Citation (MLA 8th
Edition)
Chipman, Ian. "The Ice Age Tracker's Guide." Booklist, 1 Dec. 2010, p. 51. General OneFile,
http://link.galegroup.com/apps/doc/A243798158/ITOF?u=schlager&sid=ITOF&xid=f5184e19.
Accessed 3 June 2018.
Gale Document Number: GALE|A243798158
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Lister, Adrian: THE ICE AGE
TRACKER'S GUIDE
Kirkus Reviews.
(Oct. 1, 2010):
COPYRIGHT 2010 Kirkus Media LLC
http://www.kirkusreviews.com/
Full Text:
Lister, Adrian THE ICE AGE TRACKER'S GUIDE Frances Lincoln (Adult Picture Books) $17.95 10, 1
ISBN: 978-1-84507-718-1
A picture-book field guide to 11 ice-age mammals (including the armadillo-like glyptodont) and one ice-age
bird (the moa) by a well-known paleontologist provides a quite serviceable introduction to these
extraordinary creatures for younger readers. It is neatly organized to address the most frequently asked
questions: Each animal is given its own two pages, with geographic and environmental habitats, physical
and behavioral description and intriguing facts. Ursell's detailed ink-and-watercolor illustrations are full of
humor but offer a clear glimpse of what these creatures must have looked like, though it's too bad there are
no size comparisons for most of these creatures with more familiar animals or objects. The facts are
delivered in the present tense ("Woolly Mammoths live in groups of 20 or 30..."), with more detail about the
actual dates of emergence and extinction given on a two-page habitat-range map as well as in very detailed
paragraphs on each creature in the "more information" pages. (Nonfiction. 5-10)
Source Citation (MLA 8th
Edition)
"Lister, Adrian: THE ICE AGE TRACKER'S GUIDE." Kirkus Reviews, 1 Oct. 2010. General OneFile,
http://link.galegroup.com/apps/doc/A256561712/ITOF?u=schlager&sid=ITOF&xid=223bf276.
Accessed 3 June 2018.
Gale Document Number: GALE|A256561712
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Mammoths
Denise Perry Donavin
Booklist.
91.11 (Feb. 1, 1995): p980.
COPYRIGHT 1995 American Library Association
http://www.ala.org/aboutala/offices/publishing/booklist/
Full Text:
With stunning color drawings, photographs of artifacts and fossils, and a captivating text, Lister and Bahn
introduce some of the least known prehistoric creatures. Often lumped in with dinosaurs, mammoths
actually lived 60 million years later, in conjunction with early man. These cousins to the elephant,
fascinating in themselves, offer some incredible insights into the evolution of humankind. The authors sort
out myths from archaeological findings and share some wonderful news about digs around the world.
Appended are a glossary, maps to mammoth sites throughout the world, a guide to sites and museums, and a
bibliography.
Source Citation (MLA 8th
Edition)
Donavin, Denise Perry. "Mammoths." Booklist, 1 Feb. 1995, p. 980. General OneFile,
http://link.galegroup.com/apps/doc/A16625464/ITOF?u=schlager&sid=ITOF&xid=41ad073e.
Accessed 3 June 2018.
Gale Document Number: GALE|A16625464
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Lister, Adrian. The Ice Age Tracker's
Guide
Patricia Manning
School Library Journal.
56.12 (Dec. 2010): p96.
COPYRIGHT 2010 Library Journals, LLC. A wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No
redistribution permitted.
http://www.schoollibraryjournal.com/
Full Text:
LISTER, Adrian. The Ice Age Tracker's Guide. illus. by Martin Ursell. 32p. map. Frances Lincoln. 2010. Tr
$17.95. ISBN 978-1-84507-718-1. LC number unavailable.
Gr 3-5--"Hunters" of Ice Age fauna will find the tawny pages in this "guide" a trove of pointers for
identifying a round dozen of predators and prey. What does a giant ground sloth's poop look like? Just how
big is a dwarf elephant? And where might one come across a marsupial lion? Fact boxes add a few details,
and "Warning!" boxes advise wariness of anti-human behaviors. Size, shape, food, fur (if any), locations,
and other tidbits are scattered about the watercolor and ink illustrations, and are reinforced by two pages of
solid paragraphs of text on each creature. Lister, a respected British paleontologist, writes with authority in
this lighthearted, informational work. A double-page global distribution map uses color coding to pinpoint
specific locations for the species described. While not as wildly popular as T. rex or Argentineosaurus,
critters like saber-tooth cats and woolly rhinos can give them a run for their money. And then there's that
Litoptern....--Patricia Manning, formerly at Eastchester Public Library, NY
Manning, Patricia
Source Citation (MLA 8th
Edition)
Manning, Patricia. "Lister, Adrian. The Ice Age Tracker's Guide." School Library Journal, Dec. 2010, p. 96.
General OneFile, http://link.galegroup.com/apps/doc/A243452346/ITOF?
u=schlager&sid=ITOF&xid=c3868c92. Accessed 3 June 2018.
Gale Document Number: GALE|A243452346
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Lister, Adrian and Ursell, Martin: The Ice
Age Tracker's Guide
Godfrey Hall
School Librarian.
58.2 (Summer 2010): p104.
COPYRIGHT 2010 The School Library Association
http://www.sla.org.uk/school-librarian.php
Full Text:
Lister, Adrian and Ursell, Martin
The Ice Age Tracker's Guide
Frances Lincoln, 2010, pp32, 11.99 [pounds sterling]
978 1 84507 718 1
[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]
A top quality book written by an expert in palaeontology and evolution, it provides an insight into life
during the Ice Age. A guide to a selection of long extinct creatures, it features the hairy Mastodon and the
strange Litoptem to name just two. Full of humour, it has been delightfully illustrated by award winning
Martin Ursell who has also been involved with books by Roald Dahl and Ted Hughes. There are
comprehensive notes on the various creatures and plenty of tit bits about their lifestyles and habitats. There
are some fascinating sections on ice age animal tracks and warning in case you meet any of these creatures
when you are out on your adventures!
Great fun but also packed with solid facts, I am positive that this book will be popular with all ages and
provide hours of entertaining reading. There is an excellent map at the back which shows you where you
might have found these creatures during their lifetime. I particularly liked the woolly rhino that looked quite
grumpy and also the unusual dwarf elephant which stood only one metre high. This is without a doubt an
award winning book which will entertain and inform. A must for any school library with a section at the
back which fleshes out the details found elsewhere in the book. I can definitely recommend this book as it
had me chuckling all evening.
Godfrey Hall
Hall, Godfrey
Source Citation (MLA 8th
Edition)
Hall, Godfrey. "Lister, Adrian and Ursell, Martin: The Ice Age Tracker's Guide." School Librarian, Summer
2010, p. 104. General OneFile, http://link.galegroup.com/apps/doc/A243042612/ITOF?
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u=schlager&sid=ITOF&xid=76a0b113. Accessed 3 June 2018.
Gale Document Number: GALE|A243042612

Hays, Carl. "Darwin's Fossils: The Collection That Shaped the Theory of Evolution." Booklist, 1 Mar. 2018, p. 10. General OneFile, http://link.galegroup.com/apps/doc/A532250764/ITOF? u=schlager&sid=ITOF. Accessed 3 June 2018. "Darwin's Fossils: The Collection That Shaped the Theory of Evolution." Publishers Weekly, 5 Feb. 2018, p. 53. General OneFile, http://link.galegroup.com/apps/doc/A526810427/ITOF? u=schlager&sid=ITOF. Accessed 3 June 2018. Chipman, Ian. "The Ice Age Tracker's Guide." Booklist, 1 Dec. 2010, p. 51. General OneFile, http://link.galegroup.com/apps/doc/A243798158/ITOF?u=schlager&sid=ITOF. Accessed 3 June 2018. "Lister, Adrian: THE ICE AGE TRACKER'S GUIDE." Kirkus Reviews, 1 Oct. 2010. General OneFile, http://link.galegroup.com/apps/doc/A256561712/ITOF?u=schlager&sid=ITOF. Accessed 3 June 2018. Donavin, Denise Perry. "Mammoths." Booklist, 1 Feb. 1995, p. 980. General OneFile, http://link.galegroup.com/apps/doc/A16625464/ITOF?u=schlager&sid=ITOF. Accessed 3 June 2018. Manning, Patricia. "Lister, Adrian. The Ice Age Tracker's Guide." School Library Journal, Dec. 2010, p. 96. General OneFile, http://link.galegroup.com/apps/doc/A243452346/ITOF?u=schlager&sid=ITOF. Accessed 3 June 2018. Hall, Godfrey. "Lister, Adrian and Ursell, Martin: The Ice Age Tracker's Guide." School Librarian, Summer 2010, p. 104. General OneFile, http://link.galegroup.com/apps/doc/A243042612/ITOF? u=schlager&sid=ITOF. Accessed 3 June 2018.