The Bone Wars
The tale of dinosaur hunters Edward Cope and Othniel Marsh and their legendary feud set in America's Wild West in the late 1800s.
Tracey Logan takes us back to the wild west of America, and looks at the extraordinary feud that came to be known as the Bone Wars. This is a tale of corruption, bribery and sabotage - not by cowboys, but by two palaeontologists, Edward Drinker Cope and Othniel Charles Marsh, who would stop at nothing in their race to find new dinosaur fossils. This was the golden age of dinosaur discovery, and their bitter war led to the discovery of some of our most iconic dinosaur species: Stegosaurus, Triceratops, Diplodocus and Camarasuarus to name a few. What led these two seemingly respectable men of science to behave in such an unseemly way, and what was the legacy of this now infamous feud? Tracey Logan investigates.
(Photo: Drawing of Apatosaurus dinosaur, BBC Copyright)
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The most infamous feud in the history of palaeontology
Duration: 00:42
Broadcasts
- Mon 15 Jun 201518:32GMTBBC World Service Online
- Mon 15 Jun 201523:32GMTBBC World Service Online
- Tue 16 Jun 201504:32GMTBBC World Service Online
- Tue 16 Jun 201512:32GMTBBC World Service Online
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