The First Fossil Hunters
Dinosaurs, Mammoths, and Myth in Greek and Roman Times
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نقد و بررسی
April 1, 2000
Heraclides explained the rotation of the earth two millennia ago, but what did the ancients ever accomplish in paleontology? Nothing, say most historians of science, misled by Aristotle's silence on the subject. Mayor dispels this prevalent error by combining the skills of the literary scholar with those of the dinosaur hunter. Under her perceptive scrutiny, long-neglected Greek and Roman stories about dying monsters become reliable maps for locating precisely those areas in which modern scientists find prodigious fossils. And though modern specialists might discount such tales as mere fantasies, Mayor views early myths about griffins and ogres as serious efforts to explain the bones of extinct creatures. Less laudable than the fascinating monster myths are the instances of ancient paleontological fraud, which Mayer uncovers as she recounts how Romans flocked to view faked fossils of centaurs and tritons. Indeed, although readers will learn a good deal here about the remains of mammoths and protoceratops, they will learn much more about the human imagination, that fertile source of science, of legend--and of fraud. ((Reviewed April 1, 2000))(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2000, American Library Association.)
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