Griffins, Cyclopes, Monsters, and Giants--these
fabulous creatures of classical mythology continue to
live in the modern imagination through the vivid
accounts that have come down to us from the ancient
Greeks and Romans. But what if these beings were more
than merely fictions? What if monstrous creatures once
roamed the earth in the very places where their legends
first arose? This is the arresting and original thesis
that Adrienne Mayor explores in The First Fossil
Hunters. Through careful research and meticulous
documentation, she convincingly shows that many of the
giants and monsters of myth did have a basis in fact--in
the enormous bones of long-extinct species that were
once abundant in the lands of the Greeks and
Romans. As Mayor shows, the Greeks and Romans were
well aware that a different breed of creatures once
inhabited their lands. They frequently encountered the
fossilized bones of these primeval beings, and they
developed sophisticated concepts to explain the fossil
evidence, concepts that were expressed in mythological
stories. The legend of the gold-guarding griffin, for
example, sprang from tales first told by Scythian
gold-miners, who, passing through the Gobi Desert at the
foot of the Altai Mountains, encountered the skeletons
of Protoceratops and other dinosaurs that littered the
ground. Like their modern counterparts, the ancient
fossil hunters collected and measured impressive
petrified remains and displayed them in temples and
museums; they attempted to reconstruct the appearance of
these prehistoric creatures and to explain their
extinction. Long thought to be fantasy, the remarkably
detailed and perceptive Greek and Roman accounts of
giant bone finds were actually based on solid
paleontological facts. By reading these neglected
narratives for the first time in the light of modern
scientific discoveries, Adrienne Mayor illuminates a
lost world of ancient paleontology.
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