Excellent personal account by paleontologist Michael Novacek, who led several expeditions (1990-1994) into the Gobi Desert in search of fossils, the first such expedition from the United States since the the 1920s. Novacek provides a detailed chronicle of the many practical challenges of working in remote desert areas of a poor country still emerging from decades of totalitarian rule. A recurring theme is the difficulty of travel: rough roads (where there are roads); finicky vehicles; the need to haul water, food, and fuel; the dangers of getting lost; dust storms, scorpions, and poisonous snakes.
This account is balanced brilliantly with detailed descriptions of the bones and fossil eggs his team uncovered. The Gobi Desert is famous for producing remarkable fossils of marquee dinosaurs Oviraptor, Velociraptor, and Protoceratops. Adding in discoveries made by Zofia Kielan-Jaworowska, Roy Chapman Andrews, and Mongolian paleontologist Demberelyin Dashzeveg, Novacek is able to reconstruct the lives of Cretaceous dinosaurs and mammals. Novacek also discusses the relationships between different lineages of animals, especially the then-emerging understanding that birds are truly dinosaurs.