Welcome to brain Stuff production of I Heart Radio. Hey, brain Stuff, I'm Lauren Vogelbaum, and this is a classic episode from our erstwhile host, Christian Sager. It concerns the murky mysteries of prehistoric animals and the even murkier motivations of some of the people who have hunted their fossils. Hey, great stuff, it's Christian Sager. So our question for the day is did the Brontosaurus exist? And the short answer, yeah, it sure did. But like so many answers, this one
spawns a lot more questions. Is that really its correct name? How is it related to the apatosaurus? Wasn't it given the wrong skull? And if it did exist, was it delicious? Let's back up, We're gonna go to eighteen seventy seven. The confusion over the Brontosaurus stems partially from confusion in biological taxonomy, but also from a bitter rivalry of paleontologists. That's right, a rivalry between friends turned enemies whose battle
for fame and power destroyed them. Both meet both Neil Charles marsh and Edward Drinker cope everything about giving your kid a middle name like Drinker. They became good enough friends while studying natural history together that in the eighteen sixties they even named newly discovered fossils after each other. But Marsh was ambitious, like Slytherin ambitious. When Cope showed him around a fossil quarry in Camaraderie, Marsh struck a
deal with the quarry owner behind Cope's back. All the fossils found there and the profits attached to them went straight to Marsh, and it sparked what history calls the bone Wars. This was a fiery race to find and published papers about new ancient creatures. One of these creatures was the Apatosaurus a jacks, a huge plant eater with a long neck and all that Marsh discovered in eighteen
seventy seven. The skeleton was incomplete, but Marsh wanted the credit for finding it, so he slapped on the head of another dinosaur found nearby, a Chimarasaurus, in his published reconstruction. Then in eighteen eighty five, Marsha's fossil collectors sent him a set of bones belonging to a larger, long necked, long tailed herbivore, a more complete set. Marsh decided it was a different animal and published his discovery of the
Brontosaurus excels Us. His illustration of its skeleton was the first dinosaur sketch to receive wide lay circulation, and it caught the public's imagination. His haste was understandable. Cope was battling Marsha's superior connections by practicing what's been called taxonomic carpet bombing. He would publish fourteen hundred articles in his fifty six years. The two former das slandered and sabotaged
each other into financial and reputational ruin. Our friends over its stuff you missed in history class, actually did a whole podcast two part in it if you want a deeper dive. But back to the Brontosaurus. Shortly after Cope and Marsha's deaths, a paleontologist studying Marsha's work noticed that the Apatosaurus and the Brontosaurus skeletons were really similar, So similar that the scientific community deemed the Brontosaurus excels Us
an adult specimen of the Apatosaurus genus. So in nineteen o three, Brontosaurus lost its official status, but museums, it seems, didn't get the memo. Starting in nineteen o five, the Saura pods started seeing display around the world labeled Brontosaurus excels us, sometimes with a Camarasaurus head. It wasn't until the nineteen nineties that these pervasive mistakes were corrected at large.
But the story or doesn't end there. In April of a group led by paleontologist Emmanuel Chop published a study analyzing eighty one sauropod specimens, including precise measurements of four hundred and seventy seven different physical features. According to their findings, they reported not only that Marsha's Brontosaurus excelsis skeleton had enough differences to be considered its own species, but that there should be two additional specimens in the Brontosaurus genus.
For now, the Brontosaurus isn't back for sure. It's up to the scientific community to come to a consensus on whether Brontosaurus and a Patosaurus deserve their own separate genera. But the thunder lizard certainly wasn't a fake. Marsh was just kind of a jerk. Oh, I love this one. Uh. Today's episode was written by me and produced by Tyler clayg. Brain Stuff is production of I Heart Radio's host that Works for More In this lots of other topics you
can dig. Visit our home planet, how Stuff Works dot com. Plus for more podcasts. For my heart Radio, visit the I heart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you listen to your favorite shows,
