Chapter 4 – History of Dinosaur Studies

Introduction

Current Dinosaur Renaissance

Started in the early 1970’s

First Dinosaur Renaissance

Started in the early1800’s

Coincided with the development of paleontology as a science

 

Dinosaur Studies before the “Renaissance”

Early recognition of Dinosaur Fossils

China – reference to “dragon bones” about 300 B.C.E.

Central Asia – legend of the griffin may be based on Protoceratops

North America – Indians living in western areas underlain by Mesozoic sedimentary rocks explained dinosaur bones as the remains of former animals

SW Africa – cave paintings of animals making dinosaur tracks

Early Scientific Studies of Dinosaurs: The Europeans

Recognition that fossils were the remains of former organisms (but not dinosaurs!)

Leonardo da Vinci, Nicholas Steno, Robert Hooke

Robert Plot – probable first description and illustration of a dinosaur bone in 1677 (specimen is lost and can’t be confirmed as dinosaur bone)

Thought it was from an elephant, probably was Megalosaurus

Referred to as Scrotum humanum by Richard Brookes in 1763

John Woodward –first cataloguing of a dinosaur bone in 1728

Subsequent investigation shows that it probably is a bone from Megalosaurus

Georges Cuvier

First to recognize extinction of organisms; co-developer of principle of biologic succession

Reverend William Buckland

First (1824) scientific description of a dinosaur (theropoda) – Megalosaurus - based on a lower jaw with teeth found in 1815

An instructor to Charles Lyell

Weird guy

Gideon Algernon Mantell

Second (1825) scientific description of a dinosaur (0rnithopoda) – Iguanodon - based on teeth and a few bones found in 1822

Also described (1833) an anklosaur - Hylaeosaurus

Anecdotally Mary Ann Mantell actually found the Iguanodon fossils, but this seems unlikely

Sir Richard Owen

Invented the term dinosauria in 1842 for Megalosaurus, Iguanodon and Hylaeosaurus

Neglected to include Cetiosaurus, Poekilopleuron and Thecodontosaurus

Benjamin Waterhouse Hawkins

Prominent Victorian artist working with Owen

Reconstructed dinosaurs as large, heavy-set quadrupeds

Interesting notes concerning French and German dinosaur discoveries

First dinosaur eggshell fragments described and associated with dinosaur skeletal material by various French paleontologists in the mid-1800’s

Plateosaurus, a prosauropod, was discovered and named in 1837 by Christian von Meyer

Thomas Henry Huxley

Most vigorous defender of Darwin

First to note the links between dinosaurs and birds

Harry Govier Seeley

Divided Dinosauria into Saurischia and Ornithischia based on hip structure

Argued that Dinosauria was polyphyletic, not monophyletic; that is, Dinosauria was not a clade

Louis Antoine Marie Joseph Dollo

Studied 39 Iguanodon skeletons recovered from a coal mine in Bernissart, Belgium

Clearly demonstrated that Iguanodon was bipedal and that the spike placed by Mantell on the nose actually was its thumb

Early Scientific Studies of Dinosaurs: The North Americans

Reverend Edward Hitchcock

Interpreted dinosaur tracks in the Connecticut River valley as those of large, prehistoric birds beginning in 1836

First to describe dinosaur coprolites (fossil feces), which he also attributed to birds

Helped develop the field of ichnology, the study of trace fossils

Joseph Leidy

Premier American paleontologist in the middle 1800’s

First to describe any dinosaur as bipedal, namely Hadrosaurus

Pointed out that it was likely a facultative quadruped, that is, it would have walked on all fours if necessary

Described Troodon based on teeth only

Edward Drinker cope and Othniel Charles Marsh

Premier American paleontologists in the late 1800’s

“Bitter Rivals”

Cope was a protégé of Leidy and was associated with the Academy of Natural Sciences in Philadelphia

Impressive contributions to the study of reptiles and amphibians

Marsh was a professor at Yale, Vertebrate Paleontologist of the USGS and President of the National Academy of Science

His rich uncle George Peabody built the Yale-Peabody Museum of Natural History for him

Named over 100 dinosaur species between them during the 20-year long “Great Dinosaur Rush” including:

Stegosaurus, Diplodocus, Apatosaurus, Allosaurus, Ceratosaurus, Triceratops and Camptosaurus

Many came from the Upper Jurassic Morrison Formation

Sternberg Family

Father and three sons found lots of dinosaur bones in Canada in the first half of the 1900’s, particulary in Cretaceous strata exposed along the Red Deer River in Alberta, which became Dinosaur Provincial Park, and home of the Royal Tyrell Museum of Paleontology

Found the first dinosaur mummies with preserved skin impressions

Finds included: Prosaurolophus, Chasmosaurus, Styracosaurus and Gorgosaurus

Henry Fairfield Osborn

Protégé of Cope

President of the American Museum of Natural History in the early 1900’s

Sent out many fossil collecting expeditions, including the Central Asian Expeditions to the Gobi Desert in the 1920’s

Barnum Brown

Protégé of Osborn

Discoverer of Tyrannosaurus rex in the Upper Cretaceous Hell Creek Formation of Montana in 1902

First paleontologist to discuss gastroliths in 1907

Other finds included: Corythosaurus, Monoclonius, Leptoceratops and Struthiomimus

John Bell Hatcher

Protégé of Marsh; discovered numerous ceratopsian skeletons, many with skulls

George Mercer Dawson, Joseph Burr Tyrell, Lawrence M. Lambe

Prominent Canadian paleontologists

Scientific Studies of Dinosaurs in the First Half of the 20th Century

Marked by the deaths of Cope and Marsh in the late 1890’s

Many paleontologists prominent in the first half of the 20th century began their careers in the late 1800’s, including Barnum Brown and the Sternbergs

Earl Douglass

Discovered site now Dinosaur National Monument in Utah and Colorado

Quarried site for 13 years using dynamite

Specimens sent to the Carnegie Museum of Natural History in Pittsburgh

Finds included: Allosaurus, Apatosaurus, Diplodocus, Stegosaurus and a juvenile Camarasaurus

Tendaguru, Tanzania

Prolific Late Jurassic dinosaur site

Werner Janensch directed most of the work at the site prior to WWI

Kentrosaurus, a new species of stegosaur, was discovered there, along with Barosaurus and Brachiosaurus

Howe and Cleveland-Lloyd Quarries

Prolific Late Jurassic dinosaur sites in Wyoming and Utah

Howe Quarry first to mapped in great detail

Cleveland-Lloyd Quarry has a high concentration of Allosaurus

Roland T. Bird

Protégé of Barnum Brown

Most famous for work with dinosaur tracks, in particular those found in 1939 in Glen Rose, Texas, in Lower Cretaceous rocks exposed along the Paluxy River

Mapped the Howe Quarry early in his career

Friedrich von Huene

Prominent dinosaur taxonomist

Worked extensively with dinosaurs from the Late Triassic

Roy Chapman Andrews

Led Central Asian Expeditions to the Gobi Desert in the 1920’s

Discovered first confirmed dinosaur nests with eggs

Finds included: Velociraptor, Oviraptor, Protoceratops and Psittacosaurus

Russian and Polish paleontologists mounted Mongolian expeditions in the 1940’s and 1960’s

American paleontologists from the American Museum of Natural History showed that the nests discovered during the 1920’ actually belonged to Oviraptor

C. C. Young (Yang Zhong-jian)

Prominent Chinese paleontogist

 

Dinosaur Studies of the Recent Past: The Beginnings of a Renaissance and a New Legacy

The Latter Half of the 20th Century and Globalization of Dinosaur Studies

Edwin C. Colbert

Discovered prolific site of the Late Triassic dinosaur, Coelophysis, at Ghost Ranch, New Mexico, in 1947

Found evidence of cannibalism

John Ostrom

Credited with sparking the “Dinosaur Renaissance” by his work with the Early Cretaceous dinosaur, Deinonychus, first reported in 1969

Argued that some dinosaurs were more active and birdlike in their behavior than reptilian

José F. Bonaparte

Premier South American paleontologist, who discovered Argentinosaurus and Abelisaurus

Bob Bakker, Jack Horner, Paul Sereno, Martin Lockley, Phil Currie, Altangeral Perle, Tony Thulborn, Anusuya Chimsamy and Armand de Ricqlés

 

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