Image for Show me the bone: reconstructing prehistoric monsters in nineteenth-century Britain and America

Show me the bone: reconstructing prehistoric monsters in nineteenth-century Britain and America - 55636

See all formats and editions

Nineteenth-century paleontologists boasted that, shown a single bone, they could identify or even reconstruct the extinct creature it came from with infallible certainty-"Show me the bone, and I will describe the animal!" Paleontologists such as Georges Cuvier and Richard Owen were heralded as scientific virtuosos, sometimes even veritable wizards, capable of resurrecting the denizens of an ancient past from a mere glance at a fragmentary bone.

Such extraordinary feats of predictive reasoning relied on the law of correlation, which proposed that each element of an animal corresponds mutually with each of the others, so that a carnivorous tooth must be accompanied by a certain kind of jawbone, neck, stomach, limbs, and feet. Show Me the Bone tells the story of the rise and fall of this famous claim, tracing its fortunes from Europe to America and showing how it persisted in popular science and literature and shaped the practices of paleontologists long after the method on which it was based had been refuted.

In so doing, Gowan Dawson reveals how decisively the practices of the scientific elite were-and still are-shaped by their interactions with the general public.

Read More
Available
£95.00
Add Line Customisation
Available on VLeBooks
Add to List
Product Details
University of Chicago Press
022633287X / 9780226332871
eBook (Adobe Pdf, EPUB)
560
21/04/2016
English
455 pages
Copy: 10%; print: 10%
Previously issued in print: 2016 Description based on online resource; title from home page (viewed on August 11, 2016).