″Bone War. When paleontology gave us a mean story

″Bone War.  When paleontology gave us a mean story

On October 23, 1994, a headline appeared on the pages of the newspaper Los Angeles Times Supposedly ambiguous features: “famous paleontologist’s skull distracts from ‘dinosaur hunting'”. The news, initially reported by the Associated Press news agency, refers to a rocambolesque story. In short, the photographer National GeographicLouie Psihoyos finished his world tour by taking pictures for his book Dinosaur hunting, a journey into prehistoric times, is told through the work of paleontologists in different countries. Psihoyos has amassed an archive of 50,000 images, with dozens of paleontologists, from the deserts of the American Southwest to the Chinese steppes. According to the article published in Los Angeles TimesThe success of the book alerted the Museum of Archeology and Anthropology at the University of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia to a fact. On his journey of tens of thousands of kilometres, Louie Psihoyos was accompanied by the item numbered 4989. This, housed in a wooden box, identified the skull of the 19th century paleontologist Edward Drinker Cope. “What I thought was an innocent act turned into a scandal,” Psihoios told the aforementioned newspaper, adding that he had “raised the skull on loan.” A fact that enraged curator Alan Mann, who classified the case as “scandalous”.

By Andrea Hargraves

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