Dinosaur Hunters: A True Story of Scientific Rivalry and the Discovery of the Prehistoric

by Deborah Cadbury

Hardcover, 2000

Status

Available

Call number

600

Collection

Publication

Foulsham (2000), Edition: First Edition, First Printing, 384 pages

Description

In "The Dinosaur Hunters" Deborah Cadbury recreates the remarkable story of the bitter rivalry between two men: Gideon Mantell uncovered giant bones in a Sussex quarry, became obsessed with the lost world of the reptiles and was driven to despair. Richard Owen, a brilliant anatomist, gave the extinct creatures their name and secured for himself unrivalled international acclaim.

User reviews

LibraryThing member JBD1
Truly fabulous popular account of the scientific discoveries of dinosaurs, bringing in to great effect the undernoticed Mary Anning and Gideon Mantell instead of just the overbearing Richard Owen (who got his, in the end, but still). Excellently done and highly recommended.
LibraryThing member tripleblessings
A history of the scientists of the 19th century who began to understand the nature of the fossil shells and bones found in Britain, and developed the first theories of dinosaurs and geological history. The bitter rivalry between Gideon Mantell, who first discovered and collected many dinosaur
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bones, and Richard Owen, who gave them their name and got all the glory of their discovery, makes a good story. A good popular history of science, well illustrated, and an enjoyable read.
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LibraryThing member delphica
Chock full of dinosaurs! And cool 19th century science, when everything was a curiosity.

So it's England and people have just started to realize that you could put fossils together to get giant skeletons. I was thinking about how insane that must have been -- nowadays, if you found a fossilized
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dinosaur skeleton in your backyard, it would be amazing but at least you'd start from the point of knowing what a dinosaur WAS. Imagine not knowing what dinosaurs were, and then finding the skeleton and realizing you had a FREAKISHLY GIANT LIZARD on your hands.

This book mostly focused on Gideon Mantell, a mostly self-taught amateur fossil-hunter, and Richard Owen, also brilliant but apparently a bit of a jerk who did not play well with others. Overall, the book was interesting and painted a very understandable picture of the context in which this study and research was happening -- they were wrong about a lot of things (we now know), but the incredible thing is how much they got right.
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LibraryThing member Stevil2001
This material, despite its inherent interest (Victorian dinosaurs, man!), could easily have been dull in the hands of another writer. Thankfully, Cadbury keeps it very interesting, by turning it into a sort of group biography. This is the birth of paleontology, as told through the life histories of
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William Buckland, Mary Anning, Gideon Mantell, Richard Owen, Thomas Henry Huxley, and more. I particularly liked the story of Mary Anning, from carpenter's daughter to a key figure in paleontology, but always disadvantaged due to her class and gender. She sketches all these characters in with great deftness, and one enjoys learning little things about them as we go from "undergroundology" to the first instance of dinomania. I am so disappointed that I did not know about the Crystal Palace dinosaurs when I went to London!
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LibraryThing member untraveller
A very good read....I've wanted to get into the beginnings of geology through its start in England for some time and my recent trip to Lyme Regis ignited that fire. I'm starting off a bit slow, but this book along with a few others planned for down the road hopefully will be the way to go. Owen
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comes off as a creep, Mantell's wife is a loser, Cuvier, Darwin, Huxley, Lyell, etc. seem to be more balanced and fair. Nicely done.
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LibraryThing member mbmackay
Story of class & competition for glory over early dinosaur fossil finds. Very readable while comprehensively researched. Richard Owens comes out badly.
Read Oct 2005
LibraryThing member oataker
Deeply enjoyable book about the early fossil hunters. Buckland, a decent Christian and pioneer geologist always struggling to reconcile his faith with the findings as they come in, Owen the wicked schemer, brilliant but really only interested in building his own empire, Huxley the steelily
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efficient destroyer of anyone who got in the way of science and her hero, Mantell, who struggled on against heartbreaking difficulties. He could only work in his spare time, and had limited money and no academic backup. He couldn't tear himself away from the hunt despite it destroying his marriage and livelihood, but he at least treated others with consideration.
Poignant incidental information about the death of Mantell's daughter and a sympathetic coverage of Mary Anning the unsung working class woman behind some of the finds.
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LibraryThing member john257hopper
This is an account of the early discoveries of fossils of dinosaurs and other early creatures, and the evolution (pardonable pun) of knowledge of and thought about the early history of life on earth, throughout the first half of the 19th century. Two key early discoveries are those of the
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icthyosaur by Mary Anning in Lyme Regis, and the iguanadon by Gideon Mantell in Lewes in Sussex. These two come across as appealing and very ordinary human individuals, often taken advantage of by others. This is especially so for Anning, discovering fossils very early on as a girl and young woman in the 1810s and 20s; but also in a different way for Mantell, who, lacking the advantages of inherited wealth and free time of other early pioneers in the field, had to make his mark as a country doctor, helping and sometimes saving the lives of his poor patients, while trying in his spare time to pursue his passion for geology, a passion that strained his happy marriage to eventual breaking point.

One of the key themes as the book goes on is the bitter rivalry between Mantell and anatomist Richard Owen, coiner of the word "dinosaur" and later the founder and first director of the Natural History Museum in London. Owen, while a brilliant man in his own right, was also unscrupulous in claiming credit for discoveries made by Mantell and others, and diminishing their achievements for the sake of his own self-aggrandisement; this worked for him, and he became tutor to Queen Victoria's children, and played a pivotal role in the organisation of the Great Exhibition in 1851. Even after Mantell's tragic death in 1852, wracked by pain caused by being thrown from a carriage a decade earlier and injuring his back, and only able to function by managing the pain with opiates, Owen rubbished Mantell's work and character in an ostensibly anonymous obituary. In a bizarre and rather unsavoury twist of fate, Mantell's twisted spine ended up as an exhibit in Owen's collection. (as an aside, the spine remained in the Royal College of Surgeons until the mid-20th century; Cadbury says it was bombed in the Blitz, though other sources say it was voluntarily destroyed in 1969 due to lack of space).

Another key theme in the book is the battle between science and religion, but it is not cast in the simple Darwinism vs. creationism paradigm; rather it was a gradual movement of the centre of gravity of mainstream scientific opinion along a spectrum of thought where, for much of the three or four decades before Darwin's Origin of Species was published in 1859, the growing evidence for the development of forms of life and the relations between them was accepted (in the teeth of opposition from creationists), but along with an assumption that God provided the original spark for life in the first place and that he wrote the rules by which life forms developed (in modern parlance, "intelligent design"). Owen was an epitome of this view. Darwin and Huxley of course changed the paradigm in the 1860s and later, such that Owen's reputation was ironically itself trashed somewhat unfairly after his death in 1892, and his life's work dismissed due to his opposition to Darwinism.

This was a fascinating read. Unfortunately this Kindle version lacked the illustrations in the print version (which I used to have, but which has annoyingly disappeared from my shelves!).
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Original language

English

Original publication date

2000

Physical description

374 p.; 8.27 inches

ISBN

1857029593 / 9781857029598
Page: 0.6597 seconds