Featured on PDR in the essay Professor Megalow’s Dinosaur Bones: Richard Owen and Victorian Literature

Richard Owen, the Victorian scientist who first named the “dinosaurs”, claimed that he could identify an animal, even an extinct one, from inspecting a single bone. Richard Fallon revisits other Owen-inspired fictions — by R. D. Blackmore, William Makepeace Thackeray, and Charles Kingsley — and finds literature layered with scientific, religious, and political interventions, spurred by the discovery of prehistoric life.

Owen (left) and Huxley (right) in an 1885 edition of Charles Kingsley’s The Water-Babies

Artist

Date

1885


Underlying Rights

Public Domain Worldwide

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Image Size

1929 x 1144

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