American History Hit - How Old is America?
Episode Date: December 23, 2024When fossils were discovered in the US during the 19th Century, it altered American understandings of science, religion, race and more. So what was the Hadrosaurus Foulkii, and why did it have such an... enormous effect?Caroline Winterer, William Robertson Coe Professor of History and American Studies at Stanford University, joins Don for this episode. Caroline's book on this topic is 'How the New World Became Old: The Deep Time Revolution in America'.Produced by Sophie Gee. Edited by Nick Thomson. Senior Producer was Charlotte Long.Sign up to History Hit for hundreds of hours of original documentaries, with a new release every week and ad-free podcasts. Sign up at https://www.historyhit.com/subscribe. You can take part in our listener survey here.All music from Epidemic Sounds/All3 MediaAmerican History Hit is a History Hit podcast. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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Haddonfield, New Jersey is about 10 miles east of Philadelphia.
And on this day, in October 1858, lawyer, philanthropist, and social reformer William Parker Folk is a filthy mess.
Covered in Marl, a clay-like substance, as he finishes up a day of meticulous excavation.
Folk is searching for dinosaur bones.
20 years ago, it seems, farm laborers working in this same pit happened upon unusual skeletal remains, large bones they couldn't.
identify. They reported the find, but without much consequence. Decades later, folk wonders if he
can find more. Paleontology is still a new science in America, and there have been important
findings, imprints of feet, individual teeth and bones. But these have been mostly scattered and
incomplete. This pit, where folk now digs, will eventually produce the first complete set of
dino bones in North America, a skeleton that will be named hadrosaurus Fulke.
after the man himself.
Nose to tail, it will measure more than 20 feet.
The animal would have weighed an estimated 2.5 tons.
It's a discovery that will alter the course of paleontology,
not to mention how museums are designed and constructed to display the beasts.
But it will also change Americans' understanding of the age of their continent.
And by association, how they feel about themselves.
Hi there, I'm Don Wildman.
Thanks for clicking through to another episode of American History Hit.
Glad you're here.
Back in the 19th century, against a backdrop of so much industrial, economic, and social transformation,
a tectonic shift happened to American consciousness.
It had to do with time, specifically the time the North American continent had existed.
Prior to the 1800s, there was widespread acceptance of the biblical version of cosmic origin.
The planet was 6,000 years old, and the Great Flood came about 1,500 years later.
Noah built the ark, saved the animals and mankind from death by drowning.
But that theory would be fundamentally challenged as humans began to closely consider the fossilized bones and other evidence of prehistoric creatures, all of it, suggesting the Earth was much older than the Bible would have us believe.
A new book released this year grapples with this entire phenomenon and its profound implications, entitled How the New World Became Old, the Deep Time Revolution in America, authored by historian,
Carolyn Winterer, the William Robertson co-professor of History and American Studies at Stanford University, where she also chairs the department.
It is an honor to meet you, Professor. May I call you Carolyn?
Absolutely, and it's a pleasure to be here as well.
The Deep Time Revolution, let's first consider the book's title.
What is the concept of Deep Time?
Deep Time is the idea that emerges in the 19th century that the Earth is not in fact 6,000 years old as a literal reading of Genesis.
and the rest of the Bible will tell you, but in fact, millions, if not billions of years old.
And that idea emerges quite rapidly in our very modern history.
Of course, they were finding dinosaur bones way back when, including fossils.
But no one had really brought this together until the scientific age comes along.
That's right. Yeah, they had definitely found fossils of scary creatures before.
And the word fossil simply means coming out of the ground.
mean particularly ancient. So you could imagine that, for example, the dinosaurs had been around,
swimming around the waters of Noah's Ark, for example. So you didn't need deep time for dinosaurs.
You need intellectual revolution to begin to imagine an enormous expanse of time in which
the history of the earth plays out instead of a tiny expanse of time in which the history
of the earth plays out. As if human beings are not coping with enough in the 19th century,
I mean, the whole world is changing under their feet with industry and technology.
Suddenly, the one accepted truth, you know, that Noah saved us is gone or at least disappearing.
How was this absorbed?
How did it enter into the lexicon of American thinking?
What went on then?
Well, as you mentioned, the Industrial Revolution, and in fact, that momentous revolution is accompanied by the Deep Time Revolution.
They are completely related to one another.
One would not have happened without the other.
So as Americans and Europeans in Europe begin digging for, for example, fossil fuels in the ancient
coal forests that lie under North America, they begin to ask themselves, huh, I wonder what rocks lie
underneath this.
I wonder what rocks lie above that.
And that's an economic question, right?
How deeply do I have to dig into the earth in order to get to the fossil forest layered
where the coal is, for example?
But they begin to see, wow, this is, you know, it probably took a really long time for these various deposits of Earth to, you know, lie on top of these ancient coal forests.
They're pretty deep down there.
I'm looking at the processes around me, and I'm having a hard time imagining that this could have happened in 6,000 years.
So probably it happened much longer.
Same thing happens with the fertility of the cotton plantations in the South.
they begin to sort of dig around, like which parts of the south are most fertile.
Ah, oh, here's a layer way down deep that we're digging.
Probably was not deposited in 6,000 years because as I'm looking at the weather and erosion
around me, it's not happening very fast.
So they begin to hit upon this concept that today is called uniformitarianism,
which is a fancy way of saying that the processes that we observe around us today
are also occurring probably in the past.
And that's crucial for the idea of deep time, that things happened long ago, the way they are
happening now. And it flies absolutely directly in the face of catastrophic myths like the Noah
flood story, which, you know, a flood is a catastrophe, right? And biblical history imagined many
of these catastrophes happening to explain the modern world. But by the 19th century, the industrial
revolution and the expansion of slavery into the cotton south and, you know, a series of other
economic and industrial transformations are bringing to Americans' attention that it's possible, actually,
that the Earth's history happened not only in a very different way, but in a much, much longer way.
And we can't underestimate the intelligence of these generations. I mean, they were kind of, you know,
connecting the dots. It was the fact that so much of common belief was in their face that it was hard to
challenge it. But there must have been a lot of writing, a lot of thinking being done on this fact.
People actually aren't really worried about the age of the earth until the 17th century when
Europeans begin to be confronted with alternative chronologies from other places that
they're visiting like China. And so that's why they actually become obsessed with this 6,000-year
number, which didn't really exist before that time. It's Europeans saying, well, you know, we want
the Bible to be not just the unique history of the Hebrew people. We want the Bible to be the history
of the whole world. So we're going to run the numbers on the Bible, right? We're going to get our
calculators or our abacuses, you know, whatever, sheets of paper, and we're going to add up all of the
generations and the begets and whatever dates we can find. And we're going to come up with this number.
And 4004 BC, in fact, it's October 23rd, 4004B.C. on a Saturday night is determined by James
usher, an Irish Archbishop, to be the age of the earth as he declares it in 1660. So this is
sort of floating around for a couple hundred years as authoritative science, right? It's religion,
but it's also science at a time that people didn't see a conflict between the two. But it's only
in the course of the 19th century when people are intensively coming into contact with the
ground underneath their feet because of the industrial revolution. And
over the course of various digging programs, you know, trying to find fertile soil in New Jersey,
calcium carbonate enriched soil because they've exhausted the soil after 200 years of colonization.
Again, the fossil fuels of the coal forest, a stratum that is today called the Carboniferous era,
it's very, very long ago. They begin to be just confronted from all side with the fact that this could really
not have happened super quickly without a critical thing, which is a miracle. And they are now also
in the business of denying miracles, right? They're starting to imagine that the earth is disenchanted,
that maybe God put the earth into motion, but he's certainly not reaching into our daily lives,
you know, saying, here's a comet, here's a flood, you know, as they might have imagined before.
And so that's why uniformitarianism, this idea of slow, you know, boring, non-catastrophic changes
becomes a substitute for catastrophic flood stories like the story of Noah.
It all really intersects with the rise, the triumphalism in the United States, the rise of
manifest destiny and all that sort of thing.
The idea that the North American continent had so much of evidence of this.
deep time in it from the vast abundance of coal to the amount of dinosaur bones they eventually
find out west especially, but they were already up and down the East Coast as well. This all
contributes to this real feeling of like, we're special because we have a continent that's actually
older than everyone else. And that was real, right? Oh, that was so real. Americans enter the American
revolution with this terminal inferiority complex relative to Europe because, you know, boom,
1776. Yeah, they're a young republic, but there's no evidence that this is going to last very long.
So they're this untried, new Democratic Republic and versus the ancient monarchies of Europe
who are always threatening to reinvade them. So, you know, and they come into the 19th century
still with this chip on their shoulder. We're such a young nation. We have so much to prove at any
moment the Brits are going to reinvade or maybe France will. So they started casting about for a different
foundation on which to build their nationalism. And they end up kind of hitting on this beautiful
solution. They say, well, yes, you know, we are the youngest nation politically. So we are fresh.
We are like the atom among nations, you know, in this Garden of Eden that is the new United
States. But we are also simultaneously the oldest world of all when you start thinking in terms
of the age of the rocks that lie beneath us. And so behind our society. And so behind our
story of manifest destiny that God is watching over our land. There's now this really deep backstory.
God, at the very beginning of Earth's history, pulled North America out of the oceans and said,
this is my country, this is my land. And Americans feel so strongly about this that by the late
19th century, they consecrate the first national parks, Yellowstone, Yosemite, all of these, quote,
national parks, they're like natural cathedrals. They're where Americans go to say, this is where I see
God in the antiquity of American nature. No other nation in the world has the same concept at that time.
It's a very American idea. And the celebration of the landscape, as you're saying, these national
parks. But it goes back to even the Hudson River School painting where they're, you know,
attaching these natural, the majesty of the land to, uh,
a sort of theology of this place.
That's right.
You know, Europe has what Americans do not have.
It has the Greco-Roman ruins, which Americans are terminally envious about.
And it also has the remnants of castles and cathedrals.
You know, and they just love going there to see these ruins and all of this kind of remnants of high culture.
And they look around and they say, we have none of this in the United States.
but we actually have something better.
They convinced themselves over the course of the 19th century.
We have something even older.
We have cathedrals of nature.
We have glacial flanks in Yosemite Valley that are millions of years old.
We have geysers spewing out of Yellowstone that are testament to underground volcanoes
and only a power as majestic and overwhelming as the Christian God.
could have endowed the United States with this level of super grander.
So take that old world, you know.
Right.
We're the new world, but we're even older than you are.
Yeah.
And it plays, of course, into the whole racial argument of American society.
If this place is so old, then it predates everything.
And so we belong here as much as anyone who we found here or who we brought here.
You know, it's this whole idea of white America attaching.
itself to this ideal. That's right. As Americans begin to excavate in essentially the Nebraska
territory after the Civil War, they encounter numerous peoples, the plains, tribes of Indians,
and underneath them, they also find the remnants of dinosaurs. And so they begin to craft a new
argument and say, okay, the native peoples of the Americas, all right, you know, they may have been
the first peoples in the Americas, but gosh, that's not very old, because many layers underneath
we're finding the first animals that were in North America. There's the huge first mammals like
the Brontotherium and other crazy huge mammals of the era that is called the Miocene. But even underneath those,
my goodness, we're finding Brontosaurus, Tyrannosaurus wrecks. You know, they give these
mega muscular names to these animals and say, well, these were here before.
the Indians. And we are finding them. So they are ours and the land is ours and the native peoples
really have no claim. And they also don't understand deep time. So we can safely take this land from them.
So that's the argument that they make. But it also has to do with the South. As you say, there's so much
good soil down there. This Cretaceous soil, which is a black soil, should be worked by black people.
So God had made the soil of Southern States that way for the ease of using enslaved labor.
That's exactly right.
As white Americans move into the lands that we call the Cotton South,
so Georgia, Alabama, Louisiana, Mississippi in the decades after 1800,
they have to encounter, you know, the question,
how do we get this soil to be fertile?
So, again, they start digging and they uncover this very rich layer of what
is called the Cretaceous. It just means chalky, right? It's very rich in minerals. And they say,
aha, this is a great fertile place on which to build cotton plantations. And it must mean that long ago,
God prepared the southern states of America for chattel slavery because there used to be an ancient
ocean here, which we're finding in the Cretaceous, where, you know, we find these giant sea
monsters and they're like amazing. But now they've all formed this,
very rich layer of soil on which we can create cotton plantations. And it's obvious that God would not
have created this soil if he did not want us to use black people to work that soil. So that's where
we get the term black belt for the sort of layers of the lower south. First, it refers to the black
soil that is exceptionally rich. And then eventually it begins to refer to the black people who work
the land there. I don't get the connection between finding black soil and then justifying slavery. That seems like a leap.
It's a leap, but they are up against a growing number of northerners and, you know, former enslaved people
themselves saying slavery is unjust. It is a human rights violation. And we need to get rid of slavery.
We know these people as the abolitionists and southern planters are grasping at straws, any argument that is going to justify
the existence of four million slaves below the Mason-Dixon line. And so if God made an ancient
ocean and wants black people to work the land on that ancient ocean, so be it. They form part of
what's called the pro-slavery argument. And it is preached from every pulpit in the South.
But the pulpit of deep time. The pulpit of deep time. Yeah, you have to kind of simultaneously
believe that the Genesis myth is maybe sort of true. I mean, they're all, you know,
Bible reading people. But now alongside the Genesis story, there is the deep time story.
So it is fascinating how we can carry multiple and, in fact, contradictory stories in
our heads at the same time. Well, that's the modern world, isn't it? I'll be right back
after this short break. Meantime, if you'd like us to cover anything specifically, if you have any ideas
as a subject matter we should be looking at, send us an email at a H-H at historyhit.com.
We'd love to hear from you.
It all happens in the context of the Second Great Awakening, which was all throughout the 19th century,
which was so much about reaching back to, you know, the Bible for strength in the face of this
modern emerging world.
That group must have been very threatened by this idea for obvious reasons.
But how do they absorb it and, I imagine, use it to their own good?
By the end of the Civil War era, there are a growing number of evangelical Protestants who begin to push back against what they see is the sideline of the Genesis story of creation.
So many, many Protestants say, yeah, I can do both, right?
I can read the Genesis story on Sunday and then go out and dig for really ancient fossils on Monday.
And fine, I have no problem with that because, you know, science, right?
But there are a growing number who today are known as the Young Earth creationists who begin to craft the first modern objection to Deep Time.
And they hang on to Archbishop Usher's 400B.0004 BC creation date.
And they begin to form a sort of onslaught against Deep Time by the early 1900s.
They have a new Bible called the Schofield Bible, which begins with Genesis.
but then it has the date, 4004 BC, above it, saying, you know, this is our date, right?
This is not mythological.
This is not just a story that was told long ago.
This is true.
And they begin to craft a whole school curricula and textbooks that say, yeah, you know, there's dinosaurs.
We have no problem with dinosaurs, but they're not ancient.
They're less than 6,000 years old.
Today, you can visit the Creation Museum outside.
of Cincinnati, Ohio, which is enormous. It's very well attended. Millions of people go there every year.
It's run by a group called Answers in Genesis, and they deny the antiquity of the Earth.
They deny the Deep Time Revolution. So they've built an arc recently where there are dinosaurs aboard.
So it's interesting. Yeah, they track science in order to, like, absorb it and reject it. It's very
interesting. I'm taken by your idea that there's two tracks for the average American citizen.
You can go to church, but then you can also make money. That's the religion, other religion of
the United States back then, the emerging mercantile era, where making money is part of a spiritual
existence, where you can better yourself and the growth is tangible. That's always been the
balancer in American society. Yes. And the deep time revolution carries all that with it, that as you're
absorbing deep time. You're absorbing what, you know, at the time, we're believed to be the God-given
gifts of the Industrial Revolution, trains, fossil fuels, which actually is a term coined in the 1820s,
along with natural resources. And, you know, at that time, natural resources was meant to imply
that long ago, God had planted these first baby forests on the baby earth as gifts for us modern people.
So they're super optimistic about the discovery of sources of heat and light, you know, because for thousands of years, humans, you know, it had been dark and they were always tired.
You know, we forget how hard life was before the Industrial Revolution.
And suddenly, they found a solution.
And they directed their energies toward using science and engineering to dig up the fossil forest, but then also on Sunday's giving thanks to the God.
who implanted those forests long ago.
It's quite extraordinary.
I can't miss the chance to mention someone who doesn't get enough notice.
Louis Agassiz, the Harvard naturalist and geologist of that time,
who had so much to do with everything, didn't he?
Louis Agassiz is the greatest scientist you have never heard of.
You know, he's been completely eclipsed by Charles Darwin.
But Louis Agassiz, a Swiss scientist who is a Sikh-French accent,
comes to the United States in 1848, and he becomes this nationally famous figure.
He goes out on the lecture circuit, and everyone thinks he's handsome, and he has a million students.
But he believes in Deep Time, but he does not believe in Charles Darwin's idea that Deep Time is the
container for species evolution.
He says, oh, no, no, no, no.
No, God created each layer of life in a sequence of creating.
and destruction and creation and destruction over many, many millions of years.
So what you're seeing in the fossil record over deep time is the constant workings of the
benevolent creator God, not some weird idea that says that God is not necessary.
Yes, but God, you know, natural selection basically says, well, you know, maybe God is out there,
but we don't need God for natural selection.
It can happen just according to nature.
Nature is a kind of wave talking about God without talking about God.
And so Darwin is very, very threatening when the origin of species is published in 1859.
And Agassi just is just jumping up and down in rage.
He can't stand the origin of species.
And he becomes the chief American opponent to this kind of heretical idea
that somehow the long story of life can be told without reference to the creator God.
And because he sort of lost the battle with Charles Darwin, we've forgotten about him.
But he had many ideas up his sleeve. He's the guy who invented the idea of the ice age
that, you know, long ago, at some point, the earth was encased in a layer of ice. It was a snowball
earth, and that the reason that the United States is so flat from the Appalachians all the way to
the Rocky Mountains is because an enormous blanket of ice not that long ago crushed the
whole American landscape. And who was behind the icy blanket, none other than God himself,
preparing America for the great fertile plains that we farm today.
So he called the Ice Age that great agent, you know, capital G, capital A,
by which he saw the hand of God in the great geological workings of the world,
so different from his contemporary Charles Darwin who sees maybe God,
but maybe not God.
in the workings of deep time. It's very extraordinary.
Carolyn, how does deep time, all of which is in your book, the themes of deep time, intersect
with the idea of American exceptionalism, which was such a big part of the 19th century?
Deep time is at the heart of American exceptionalism, because what it is saying to Americans is
that, well, you know, God may have been crafting the entirety of the planet, but he was lavishing
special attention on North America.
And we can tell because this is such a fertile land,
all of the geological processes extending from millions of years to the present
have yielded the fossil forests that are fueling the Industrial Revolution,
the Cretaceous lands of the South that are fueling the cotton boom
that makes the U.S. the largest cotton exporter in the world before the Civil War.
It is creating the great fertility.
of the North American plains.
So, of course, even though the United States is still so new, Americans are at pains to constantly
say, yes, yes, yes, we are new.
But that is just a sign of God's special benediction, special mission for the United States.
Yeah.
All this and more you can find between the covers of this important new book, How the New World
Became Old, the Deep Time Revolution in America.
This is a really exciting conversation for me.
I mean, it's rare that you land on something that is a really new academic idea that doesn't get enough articulation.
And this is just that.
Carolyn Winter, who has been our guest today, William Robertson co-professor of History and American Studies at Stanford University.
It is an honor to talk to you.
Carolyn, nice to meet you.
Nice to meet you.
This was a great pleasure.
Hello, folks.
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