Scientific American A hotly anticipated press conference was held by National Geographic
magazine in Washington DC on 15 October 1999. With much fanfare, they
announced the discovery of a new feathered fossil from China that was a
chimera with a fascinating mix of characters. A team of paleontologists,
enthusiastic amateurs and editorial staff were behind the naming and
description of the species, dubbed Archaeoraptor liaoningensis. It was
to be unveiled in the November issue of the magazine. [....]
The team behind the announcement had no idea on that fateful October
day, but within just a few months Archaeoraptor liaoningensis would be
revealed as one of the biggest fossil hoaxes in history, and the chance
discovery of another fossil by Chinese Professor Xu Xing was the key to
uncovering the deception. Archaeoraptor was soon dubbed the ‘Piltdown
bird’ and the ‘Piltdown chicken’ by the press, in reference to the
biggest fossil hoax of all time, in which faked remains of putative
early hominids were dug up from Piltdown in England in 1912. For
National Geographic – a bastion of publishing usually beyond reproach –
this embarrassment would be one of the greatest blunders in its 125-year
history.
The problem of faked fossils in China is serious and growing. It is
exacerbated by the fact that most of the fossils are pulled from the
ground by desperately poor farmers and then sold on to dealers and
museums rather than being found by paleontologists on fossil digs, which
is how specimens are discovered in most other parts of the world.
Liaoning, an impoverished and heavily industrialized province of northeastern China, has been a center for paleontological activity since the early 1990s, when many early bird fossils were found there. When Sinosauropyteryx – the first known feathered dinosaur – was discovered there in 1996, it spurred a fossil hunting gold rush the likes of which had never been seen before.[...]
Liaoning, an impoverished and heavily industrialized province of northeastern China, has been a center for paleontological activity since the early 1990s, when many early bird fossils were found there. When Sinosauropyteryx – the first known feathered dinosaur – was discovered there in 1996, it spurred a fossil hunting gold rush the likes of which had never been seen before.[...]
Another much more serious problem, however, is posed by forged, faked
and manipulated specimens – such as National Geographic’s Archaeoraptor –
which are becoming increasingly common. Farmers who dig for fossils do
so to supplement their meagre incomes and are well aware that complete
and spectacular specimens are worth far more than the fragmentary
remains. Some don’t even realize they are faking specimens and combine
pieces of different fossils found at the same locale. In the most
extreme cases, this manipulation is intentional, involving fossils found
at disparate locations. It sounds crude, but even the experts have to
look carefully to detect the trickery when master forgers have been at
work. [...]
Subsequent detailed CT scans by Rowe ultimately revealed that
Archaeoraptor was glued together from 88 different pieces of a number of
different fossils. Significantly, two of those were species unknown to
science, making the specimens important in their own right. The tail was
from Microraptor, then the smallest dinosaur ever discovered (see
chapter 7), while the front half was a primitive bird that subsequently
named Yanornis in a 2002 Nature paper entitled ‘Archaeoraptor’s better
half’.
Luis Chiappe says it’s puzzling how the description of Archaeoraptor ended up in print in National Geographic, as ‘the red flag for that one should have been raised long before it got to that point’. With hindsight it seemed obvious that the animal was a chimera of bird and dinosaur features, he says, but it was put together with great skill. [...]
China’s new fossil industry has appeared in the blink of an eye and its
paleontological community is still finding its feet, but if Chinese
authorities and museums are going to maintain their credibility, they
will have to tackle the problem of faked fossils and the trafficking of
fossils overseas. A remarkable series of finds has given us a window
into a weird and unexpected world, but the trade in faked, manipulated
and illegally obtained fossils has tainted what are otherwise
spectacular collections.
If (supposed) rabbonim can issue fake seruvim, why can't (supposed) scientists issue fake fossils?
ReplyDeleteI dig. Issuing phony Seruvim is a dina-sore point, no bones about it. It Rex marriages.
ReplyDelete