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When Pittsburgh steel tycoon Andrew Carnegie opened the Carnegie Institute in 1895, he hoped that his friend O.C. Marsh would provide a dinosaur for his new museum. However, Marsh died in 1898, leaving Carnegie without a dinosaur. Then the New York Post published a story about a colossal sauropod skeleton found in Wyoming by a man named Bill Reed. Carnegie was determined to get the fossil for his museum, but the University of Wyoming was just as determined. Carnegie's fortune eventually won the prize. When the dinosaur was excavated, it was named Diplodocus carnegii in his honor, and casts of the fossil were displayed around the world. Journalist Rea researched the tale of the Diplodocus fossil from original correspondence. He begins his book where the famous feud between Marsh and Edward Drinker Cope ended, skipping the earlier history of fossil discoveries in the Western United States, which has already been covered in David Wallace's The Bonehunters' Revenge (LJ 9/15/99) and Mark Jaffe's The Gilded Dinosaur (LJ 1/00). Recommended for academic and public libraries. Amy Brunvand, Univ. of Utah Lib., Salt Lake City
Copyright 2002 Cahners Business Information, Inc.
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
An extensive bibliography and index enhance this truly enjoyable and informative history,
By Midwest Book Review (Oregon, WI USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Bone Wars: The Excavation Of Andrew Carnegie's Dinosaur (Paperback)
Knowledgeably written by former journalist Tom Rea, Bone Wars: The Excavation And Celebrity Of Andrew Carnegie's Dinosaurs is the award- winning true story of how a Diplodicus carngeii fossil (named after famous industrialist and philanthropist Andrew Carnegie) found in the Wyoming badlands helped bring about public fascination with the great beasts of millennia past. Though Bone Wars is entirely nonfiction, it is so deftly written that it reads like a novel as it follows the battles of individuals, conflicting scientific theories, and even instances of backstabbing and double-crossing in the bone-hunting world of a century past. An extensive bibliography and index enhance this truly enjoyable and informative history, which is especially recommended for dinosaur and paleontology enthusiasts.
6 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Bruce Millers Review,
By A Customer
This review is from: Bone Wars: The Excavation Of Andrew Carnegie's Dinosaur (Hardcover)
Where Dead Voices GatherNick Tosches Little Brown and Company writer: BRUCE MILLER With his big bushy moustache and sun-weathered skin, "The whole story is filled with interesting characters," says Rea. Rea comes from a family that knows geology and paleontology "Not until I got here did I realize how many letters they were," Correspondence between Carnegie and then-museum director "[Holland's] secretary typed and saved every letter, even put The first person who caught Rea's attention was Bill Reed, the "He was a frontiersman who was dealing with people from the The story of Carnegie's dinosaur was "a natural for a book,"
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