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The First Fossil Hunters: Paleontology in Greek and Roman Times. by Adrienne Mayor
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The First Fossil Hunters: Paleontology in Greek and Roman Times.

by Adrienne Mayor

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This was a really cool book. The author examined various Greek and Roman myths to look for a fossil-based explanation.

For example, Mayor takes the gigantic bones worshipped by the Greeks as those of ancient heroes, compares them to the fossil record of the place the bones were found, and deduces that some of the bones were actually most likely fossilized mammoth bones.

It's an intriguing way of looking at early natural history. A good read, and not too technical, though I did find the later chapters a bit repetitive. ( )
  ladyerin | Apr 18, 2007 |
A very different approach to paleontology. Studying the folklore for evidence of fossil finds in ancient time. Can't wait to get hold of the next book. ( )
  imaginontech | Sep 5, 2006 |
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Amazon.com (ISBN 0691058636, Hardcover)

Since fossils have presumably existed for millions of years, why don't we see much paleontological thought from ancient writers? Classics scholar Adrienne Mayor suggests that we can, in fact, learn much about the Greek and Roman attitudes toward fossils if we turn to a surprising source of data and theory: their myths. In The First Fossil Hunters, she explores likely connections between the rich fossil beds around the Mediterranean and tales of griffins and giants originating in the classical world. Striking similarities exist between the Protoceratops skeletons of the Gobi Desert and the legends of the gold-hoarding griffin told by nomadic people of the region, and the fossilized remains of giant Miocene mammals could be taken for the heroes and monsters of earlier times. Mayor makes her case well, but, as with all interpretive science, the arguments are inconclusive. Still, her novel reading of ancient myth--and her critique of the modern scientific mythology that seeks to explain the lack of classical paleontological thinking--is compelling and thought-provoking.

The final chapter of The First Fossil Hunters is an engrossing and occasionally quite funny look at "Paleontological Fictions" dating back several thousand years; the false tritons and centaurs give P.T. Barnum and his successors a much longer genealogy than previously thought. Whether or not you accept Mayor's analysis of Greek and Roman thinking, The First Fossil Hunters should open your eyes to new possibilities about our distant past. --Rob Lightner

(retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:58:04 -0400)

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