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Terrible Lizard: The First Dinosaur Hunters and the Birth of a New Science
 
 
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Terrible Lizard: The First Dinosaur Hunters and the Birth of a New Science [Paperback]

Deborah Cadbury (Author)
4.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (12 customer reviews)


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Book Description

0805070877 978-0805070873 June 1, 2002
In 1812, the skeleton of a monster was discovered beneath the cliffs of Dorset, setting in motion a collision between science and religion, and among scientists eager to claim supremacy in a brand-new field. For Reverend William Buckland, an eccentric naturalist at Oxford University, the fossil remains of a creature that existed before Noah's flood inspired an attempt to prove the accuracy of the biblical record. Novelist Gideon Mantell also became obsessed with the ancient past, and eminent anatomist Richard Owen soon entered the fray, claiming credit for the discovery of the dinosaurs.

In a fast-paced narrative, Terrible Lizard re-creates the bitter feud between Mantell and Owen. Revealing a strange, awesome prehistoric era, their struggle set the stage for Darwin's shattering theories -- and for controversies that still rage today.


Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

In this comprehensive narrative, Cadbury (Altering Eden) tells the story of the first fossilists, whose discoveries challenged the religious convictions of their day as they struggled with the implications of new science. It begins with Mary Anning, who unearthed the skeleton of a monstrous creature beneath the cliffs of Dorset in 1812; Anning would earn the respect of her male peers, but not entry into their exclusive societies. Men like the eccentric Oxford don William Buckland sought to reconcile the biblical account of Noah's flood with the fossil record, while the brilliant Georges Cuvier posited a theory of "catastrophes" to explain the progression of life while still holding true to scripture. The ambitious Richard Owen, who coined the term dinosaur and claimed credit for the discovery of dinosaurs, used his prestige to discount early evolutionary theories in favor of his own backward-looking notions about a biblical past. Unlike his rival Gideon Mantell, whose studies in geology and paleontology laid the foundation for the new science, Owen rarely set foot in a quarry or dig, but he did, according to Cadbury, mine his share of fellow scientists' works for ideas he then claimed as his own. Cadbury makes much of the rivalry between the two men, and to good effect. Her focus on Owen's injustices against Mantell, Owen's corresponding rise to fame, and Mantell's ultimately tragic end lends momentum to her narrative, culminating in the advent of the evolutionary idea with Darwin's On the Origin of Species. This is a must-read book for dinosaur enthusiasts, and for anyone who has ever wondered about the source of our present-day assumptions and unanswered questions about human origins. (June 6)Forecast: In its inevitable sales duel with Christopher McGowan's Dragon Seekers (see review p. 231), Cadbury's more three-dimensional account is sure to win hands down.

Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information, Inc.

--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

From Scientific American

Not long ago my friend George, who recently celebrated his second birthday, put some of his vocabulary on display for me. "Tee-wex," he said, and roared. "Tie-say-watops," he said, and roared again. "Apatosaw-us." Roar number three. It is a remarkable thing that children today can speak Latin, but more remarkable still that the only Latin words they speak are the names of dinosaurs. I have yet to hear George or any other child say "Hallucigenia," or "Ambulocetus," or "Acanthostega"-although they were as remarkable as any velociraptor.

Dinosaurs have such a powerful grip on the public consciousness that it is easy to forget just how recently humans became aware of them. A two-year-old boy today may be able to rattle off three dinosaur names, but in 1824 there was only one dinosaur to be named, period. The word "dinosaur" didn't even exist until 1842. Those confused early years, when the world was baffled by the discovery of absurdly enormous reptiles, represent one of the most fascinating stories in the history of science.

One reason is that its cast is so extraordinary. On the south coast of England, Mary Anning, a poor and uneducated beachcomber, spent 30 years digging up giant marine reptiles and pterosaurs. Gideon Mantell, a shoemaker's son turned doctor, discovered the first dinosaur; he thought dinosaurs would make him rich, but they ultimately destroyed his life. William Buckland, an Oxford geologist who tried to reconcile giant extinct reptiles with Genesis, had a raft of eccentricities, including a penchant for keeping live hyenas and jackals in his college rooms. The time is ripe for a book for the general public about these early paleontologists, and now we have not one but two.

The Dragon Seekers is the work of a practicing paleontologist (Christopher McGowan is a senior curator at the Royal Ontario Museum and teaches at the University of Toronto). The book is therefore filled with historical details that matter to a fossil hunter: the methods the early fossilists used to extract bones from cliffs, the squabbles over naming new species, the staffing of museums. It is brief and pleasant, but for sheer narrative pleasure, I'd have to recommend Deborah Cadbury's Terrible Lizard instead. Cadbury, a BBC television producer, turns what could have been just a string of anecdotes into high drama. Much of her success comes from her depth of research: she has scoured diaries, letters and newspaper archives and can tell her story in the words of the people who lived it.

For Cadbury, Gideon Mantell is the tragic hero of the early days of dinosaur hunting. Scrounging one quarry after another, he built up one of the finest private fossil collections in the world at the time. Even when he had just a few scraps of dinosaur bones, Mantell knew that he had found the remains of giant reptiles. He didn't back down when the leading scientists of his day told him he had found nothing but fish teeth and rhino horns. But Mantell's obsession with his fossils eventually left him bankrupt and alienated from his wife and children. And just when he began to earn scientific respect, he crossed paths with the ruthless Sir Richard Owen. Owen didn't know how to dig up fossils, but he did know how to pluck the strings of academic power. He managed to make himself England's authority on all life, both living and dead.

It was Owen, not Mantell, who in 1838 was appointed by the British Association for the Advancement of Science to survey the giant extinct reptiles of England. In his report, he gave them the name "dinosaurs" but mentioned Mantell only in scorn. The dinosaurs lifted Owen on their colossal backs to heights of fame and wealth. Mantell meanwhile faded into obscurity, his fossils dispersed and forgotten.

Owen used dinosaurs as an argument against evolution: if life progressed through time, it made no sense that the extinct dinosaurs were so much more impressive that today's reptiles. He thought that life unfolded over geologic time according to certain laws, but no one-not even himself, it seems-really understood his ideas. Then Darwin blindsided Owen with an elegant, powerful theory that encompassed all of life, dinosaurs included. Owen ultimately became irrelevant. The dinosaur sculptures that he had built for the Crystal Palace exhibition are now chipped, broken and beset with weeds.

My chief complaint with both books is that they unintentionally raise an important question that neither answers: The discovery of dinosaurs was unquestionably fascinating, but was it ultimately very important? I'm not so sure. One of the great triumphs of 19th-century paleontologists was their use of fossils as Rosetta stones to decipher the global geologic record. But dinosaurs were only one group of animals among many that they used. Darwin was certainly inspired by fossils but not by dinosaurs. Instead it was the giant ground sloths and other extinct mammals he dug up in South America that made him think about the connections between present and past life. The word "dinosaur" appears nowhere in The Origin of Species.

In the 1940s George Gaylord Simpson reinvigorated paleontology when he showed that mutations and natural selection could account for changes in the fossil record. But he used horses and other mammals as proof, not dinosaurs. Since then, paleontology has surged from the backwaters of evolutionary research to the crest of the wave. Punctuated equilibrium, the causes and effects of mass extinctions, plate tectonics' role in the origin of species, the coevolutionary arms races between predators and prey-in all these cases, it was fossils that showed how evolution works. Rarely did these fossils belong to dinosaurs; they were instead snails, plankton, pond scum and other unglamorous creatures. The fossils of dinosaurs are beautiful and spectacular, but compared with other animals, they're also very hard to find. A thousand fossil crabs can say much more about how evolution works than a single T. rex.

Only in the past couple of generations have paleontologists really started to use dinosaurs in cutting-edge research in evolution. Dinosaur paleontologists were among the first scientists to use the newest methods of classification (known as cladistics), and as a result, they've been able to explore the incremental evolution of birds from dinosaurs. Dinosaurs are becoming important sources of information about how the breakup of continents influences evolution, how changing the rules by which embryos develop shapes new anatomy and how asteroids can trigger mass extinctions. The subtitle of The Dragon Seekers claims that the study of dinosaurs paved the way for Darwin, yet the reverse may be closer to the truth.

Carl Zimmer is the author of Parasite Rex and At the Water's Edge. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.


Product Details

  • Paperback: 384 pages
  • Publisher: Holt Paperbacks (June 1, 2002)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0805070877
  • ISBN-13: 978-0805070873
  • Product Dimensions: 8 x 5.5 x 0.9 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 13.6 ounces
  • Average Customer Review: 4.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (12 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #558,356 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

 

Customer Reviews

12 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
4.8 out of 5 stars (12 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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9 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Utterly first rate adventure story, July 22, 2001
TERRIBLE LIZARD is a first rate history of the period in the early 19th century when a group of individuals began, for the first time, to understand the fossils that had been known for some time as the remains of giant reptiles who lived in a time that predated human history. But it is also very much an adventure story, and like all good adventure stories, it has a hero, a heroine, an excellent set of supporting characters, and, of course, a dastardly villain. In a word, the story told is how Gideon Mantell undertook much of the work in formulating the earliest conception of giant reptiles who lived eons before humans but had his achievement appropriated by the gifted but ambitious and devious Richard Owen.

The heroine of the story is Mary Anning, who sparked the interest of the early geologists by her uncanning ability to unearth fossils and near complete skeletons from the area around Lyme Regis in southern England. Hers is a somewhat sad story, for while she repeatedly spurs science on by her remarkable discoveries, she lives her life in a perpetual struggle against poverty. Nevertheless, the way her contributions, despite her being merely the daughter of a carpenter who died while she was a child, gain her the respect and esteem of some of the leading scientists in England, is inspiring.

The hero of the story, and the individual around whom much of the book revolves, is Gideon Mantell. Despite working as a physician with a brutally demanding schedule, Mantell managed to build up a first rate collection of fossil remains, and became the first person to identify and describe most of the first dinosaurs to be discovered. Ignored at first because of his social and amateur status, Mantell gradually gained the respect of his peers and gained admittance to the Royal Society. Despite this, he was never able to obtain patronage or a scientific position that would have allowed him to pursue his studies full time. His plight is the source of much of the pathos of the book.

The villain of the story is the overly ambitious and somewhat sadistic Richard Owen, who provided us with the word "dinosaur" but who also attempted to claim as his own much of the work done by Mantell and others. In contrast to Mantell, Owen early in his life obtains positions that allow him to study anatomy full time, and enjoys the patronage of the nation as he gains more and more power. His arrogance, dishonesty, lust for power, and his unremitting attempt to coopt the credit rightfully belonging to others, made me wonder if the title of the book in part refers to him.

Along the way, we encounter a number of other extraordinary characters, from the famed French anatomist Georges Cuvier to William Buckland--who with Mantell was the first to describe the dinosaurs--to the great geologist Charles Lyell to Charles Darwin.

A thoroughly enjoyable history that I can heartily recommend to anyone interested in intellectual history, paleontology, or just a flat out adventure tale.

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8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Bitter bones, March 23, 2002
Deborah Cadbury does the burgeoning genre of popular science proud with this book. It has all the necessary elements. A human interest story with heroes and villians, an interesting historical setting and a good scientific foundation. The history and science revolves around the gigantic fossilized bones that were being discovered throughout southern England in the early 19th century. Paleontology and Geology were just beginning as sciences. Evolution was a concept but not yet a theory as this was pre-Darwin's ORIGIN OF SPECIES. Indeed in 1812 when an uneducated and simple villager named Mary Anning found a gigantic skeleton on a beach under the Dorset cliffs, there was nothing else to call it but a monster. The word "dinosaur" didn't exist. It was coined in 1842 by Richard Owen, one of the principal characters in this story.

Mary's discovery started the great quest to identify, categorize, name and date these bones. We meet Gideon Mantell, the poor son of a shoemaker who by dint of hard work and education became a country doctor and a member of the scientific community. He is the sympathetic character this story revolves around and the author wants us to embrace him. Mantell was one of THE DINOSAUR HUNTERS which is in fact the more appropriate title used for this book's edition in Britain. Mantell was typical of these amateur paleontologists who were combing southern England in the hopes of making some great discovery. It's true that only some were eccentric but it's also fair to say they all shared an obsession for bones. Mantell filled his home with fossils, developing one of the finest private collections in England. His devotion to the world of dead creatures came at a cost. It drained all the life out of his marriage and his wife left him in 1839. Mantell did at least have some success, discovering the skeleton of what would later be named the Iguanadon. That's about the only success he had though and his life story as told here is one of disappointment and bitterness with a sad ending.

If Mantell is the sympathetic character then the opposite emotional responses should be directed towards Richard Owen. Cadbury paints a very unflattering portrait of the man (Sir Richard eventually) who founded the Natural History Museum, invented "Dinosauria", and was consulted by royalty, prime ministers, and academia on all things fossilized. The author says he was "instinctively predatory" and if Cadbury rather than her publishers chose the title for the book, then it's very appropriate as it's quite clear from her writing who she sees as the TERRIBLE LIZARD.

Mantell is reminiscent of William "Strata" Smith in THE MAP THAT CHANGED THE WORLD. The same disdain as shown by the scientific elite and similar financial difficulties. Smith's story however had an ultimately redeeming end. Not so here. Mantell had to sell his fossil collection to the Natural History Museum and following a carriage accident which badly damaged his spine and left him with severe backaches he declined rapidly. He died from an ovedose of the opiates that he took to relieve the pain. Owen's success had been at the direct expense of Mantell as he had been quite willing to claim Mantell's work as his own. From his well connected position within the scientific community Owen was very effective in preventing recognition for others and garnering it for himself. A bit of poetic justice arrived by way of Thomas Huxley who discredited some of Owen's work (specifically his view on the differences between human and ape brains). In doing so Huxley did in large measure what Owen had done to Mantell. Owen had also argued that Dinosaurs were proof against evolution. He reasoned that since evolution said life progressed it was impossible then that ancient and extinct creatures should be more splendid than those living today. Since fossils proved that dinosaurs were in fact many times more magnificent that the reptiles Owen saw around him, then evolution must be wrong he said. If Huxley embarrassed him then Darwin's stunning and well reasoned theory of evolution published in 1859 pretty much put paid to Owen's arguments. He outlived Darwin but only to his chagrin as he finally accepted the reality of Darwinism and the sting of being bettered scientifically.

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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A Great Story Well Told, May 20, 2001
By A Customer
I've read quite a few of the current slew of books attempting to popularise science in the wake of Dava Sobel's Longitude, but I think this is the best. Not only is it a gripping drama with a wonderful parade of characters, and tragedies and triumphs galore, but more importantly it covers the most dramatic change in our perception of ourselves and the world. Consider: at the start of the book in the early nineteenth century religion still reigned supreme, the Bible was the literal truth, and the study of what came to be known as geology and biology was the province of enthusiastic amateurs. But then, from the cliffs of Lyme Regis and from the quarries used to provide the stones for the growth of the new industrial towns and cities came these extraordinary fossils, these remains of the most incredible animals, plus clear evidence for those who could see of the unimagineable lengths of time involved in the formation of the various strata of rocks in which these remains were embedded. The resulting debate was surely one of the most momentous in scientific history, culminating in the publication of Darwin's Origin of Species in 1859. I think Cadbury tells the story superbly. I particularly enjoyed the way the story starts in Jane Austen territory - Lyme Regis, early years of the century, keen young doctors and clergymen collecting plants and fossils - and then as it centres more on London gets darker, entering the familiar world of Dickens, with child deaths, disfigurements, and the crushing of hope beneath the merciless wheels of ruthless ambitions etc. etc.. Great stuff
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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
On the south coast of England at Lyme Regis in Dorset, the cliffs tower over the surrounding landscape. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
giant land reptiles, giant fossil reptiles, herbivorous teeth, giant thigh bone, lizard tribe, sea lizards, ancient crocodiles, arborescent ferns, fused sacrum, herbivorous reptile, giant bones, marine lizards, geological sequence, giant reptiles, replacement teeth, fossil teeth, ancient reptiles
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Gideon Mantell, Richard Owen, Geological Society, Royal Society, William Buckland, Mary Anning, Royal College, Georges Cuvier, Charles Lyell, Age of Reptiles, Sir Everard, Professor Buckland, Professor Owen, Reverend Conybeare, Crystal Palace, Professor Silliman, Hunterian Museum, New Zealand, William Clift, Whiteman's Green, Zoological Society, Mary Mantell, Isle of Wight, John Hunter, Prince Albert
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