I agree with the other reviewer. "Bones of Contention" by Paul Chambers may actually be *the* best popular science book ever written! I've read the 2003 paperback edition, the one subtitled "The Fossil that Shook Science".
Chambers is a former palaeontologist and employee of the Natural History Museum
of London. He has also been involved in BBC's popular series "Walking with
Dinosaurs". Clearly, he is also a very able writer. The first part of this
book reads like a detective story, and the rest also contains its fair share of
scandal and suspense. The style is lively, informative and (often) fast-paced.
You could probably read this book from cover to cover in just a few days. And
no, you don't need to know anything about the subject before you start reading.
Chambers will fill you in, trust me.
So what is the subject, then? Most of the book is about Archaeopteryx, or
rather about the scandals and intrigues surrounding the fossils of this
primordial bird ever since the first was discovered in 1861. It seems that
scandals keep erupting around these fossils on a semi-regular basis! In the last
chapters, Chambers also mentions some recent fossil birds from China, and the
controversy surrounding those.
The first Archaeopteryx fossil was discovered by an unknown mineworker in the
German town of Solnhofen in 1861. He quite simply stole the fossil and gave it
to a black market dealer, who apparently offered the poor worker some cheap
medicines in return. The dealer, Carl Häberlein, eventually managed to sell the
fossil for an extortionate price to the British Museum. Well, actually, the
Museum didn't want to buy it, thinking the price to high, but the notorious
palaeontologist Richard Owen embezzled the money from the Museum's funds,
buying it anyway! Owen then blamed the deal on a hapless assistant, who had
been stupid enough to sign all letters to the dealer with his own name. In
1876, a second fossil of the strange creature was discovered, also in
Solnhofen. By a strange co-incidence, it found its way to Ernst Häberlein, the
son of the black market dealer Carl, who had sold the first fossil to Owen!
Häberlein junior was more honest than his father, buying (and selling) the
fossil legally. This specimen eventually ended up in the Humboldt Museum in
Berlin.
In a later chapter, we are taken forward in time, to the 1980's, when Fred
Hoyle and Chandra Wickramasinghe, two otherwise respected astronomers, claimed
that the two Archaeopteryx fossils are forgeries, and part of a vast, Darwinian
conspiracy. Naturally, such far-fetched claims pretty much destroyed Hoyle's
and Wickramasinghe's reputation, and the British Musuem even revoked their
permission to study the Archaeopteryx fossil. Of course, there is no proof for
their wild assertions. However, the 1990's saw a real scandal, when National
Geographic magazine massively promoted a fossil of a flying dinosaur from China
that turned out to be a rather crude hoax.
"Bones of Contention" also mention the curious in-fighting within the
scientific community between palaeontologists and a smaller group of
ornithologists, sometimes known as BAND (Birds Are Not Dinosaurs). All
scientists agree that birds are descended from reptiles, but which ones? The
theropod dinosaurs, says the majority. Some other reptile, says BAND. Some
people seems to have devoted their entire lives to fighting this battle. (The
author is, on balance, a supporter of the dinosaur faction. So am I. T-Rex is
more related to the House Sparrow than to snakes and lizards!)
Chamber's book also contain some rather startling assertions. For instance, he
claims that Darwin's foremost defender in Britain, Thomas Huxley, didn't really
believe in Darwin's theories! He supported them mostly to get back at Owen,
whom he hated on a very personal level. Both Owen and Huxley doubted whether
Archaeopteryx was really a missing link between reptiles and birds. We also
learn that the notorious bishop "Soapy Sam" Wilberforce published
articles in science journals, and that the audience at Oxford considered him
the winner of the debate with Huxley! And so on. Well, I haven't checked all
these claims, but at least they sound interesting.
My edition of the book also contains a few entertaining typos. At one point,
Chambers talks about the great discoveries within astrology. Come again? I
suppose he means astronomy! At another page, he claims that Huxley debated Owen
in Oxford. Of course, he debated Wilberforce.
Be that as it may, "Bones of Contention" deserves five stars
hands-down.
"And yet, it flies".
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