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The Dinosaur War

Season 4
June 12, 2019
illustration of rival scientists

Behind the fossilized teeth, bones, and claws displayed in the National Museum of Natural History’s new Fossil Hall is the story of two men and a nasty feud. During the paleontology boom of the late 1800s, scientists O.C. Marsh and Edward Cope went from good friends who named species after each other, to the bitterest of enemies who eventually ruined each other's lives and careers. Come for the dinos, stay for the grudges.

Transcript

From the Collections

Pappichthys corsoni Cope

Cosoryx teres Cope

Diatryma gigantea Cope

Allosaurus fragilis Marsh, 1877

Coryphodon elephantopus (Cope)

Thinosaurus leptodus Marsh, 1872

Triceratops sulcatus Marsh, 1890

Triceratops horridus Marsh, 1889

Triceratops prorsus Marsh, 1890

Triceratops prorsus Marsh, 1890

Othnielosaurus consors (Marsh, 1894)

Triceratops prorsus Marsh, 1890

Triceratops sulcatus Marsh, 1890

Allosaurus fragilis Marsh, 1877

Allosaurus fragilis Marsh, 1877

Stegosaurus stenops Marsh, 1887

Camptosaurus dispar Marsh, 1879

Triceratops horridus Marsh, 1889

Camptosaurus dispar Marsh, 1879


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