The Ancients - Jurassic America
Episode Date: March 27, 2025Tristan Hughes explores Ancient America's true age; how 19th-century fossil discoveries across North America revealed a history far older than previously believed, challenging the notion that the Amer...icas were a 'New World.'Tristan is joined by Professor Caroline Winterer as they discuss walking on 4 billion-year-old rocks in Eastern Canada, uncovering the first trilobites and the sensational dinosaur discoveries like the T-Rex and Brontosaurus that mesmerised the public and scientific community alike.More on:Ice Age America:https://open.spotify.com/episode/4KZruCMwpO7TakuiMs7DMp?si=2b1fdca8b18c4ef4The Ancient Amazon:https://open.spotify.com/episode/5YxnzfGa4x4Z8l4JE6Uwmh?si=0ec9d00afb0b476eTyrannosaurus Rex:https://open.spotify.com/episode/3uxH3HHjSuEk0mHmjFU9k7?si=1f57b9a555ac4bffPresented by Tristan Hughes. Audio editor is Aidan Lonergan, the producer is Joseph Knight. The senior producer is Anne-Marie Luff.The Ancients is a History Hit podcast.All music from Epidemic SoundsSign 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
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The New World, a term that for centuries was applied to the Americas. But by the 19th century, this idea that America was a young continent compared to Europe and
Asia was becoming obsolete. The remains of great ancient creatures of terrifying beasts
were starting to be unearthed. Suddenly the reality of just how old their continent was
began to dawn on Americans. A history more ancient than anyone could ever have imagined,
a place of primordial natural beauty. It's the Ancients on History Hit. I'm Tristan Hughes, your
host. Today we're exploring the story of deep time America, how in the 19th century people began
unearthing countless fossils of ancient animals
and dinosaurs that revealed how the New World might in fact be the oldest world of all,
challenging the commonly held view of the time that the world was in fact only 6,000
years old.
Now our guest today is Professor Caroline Winterer from Stanford University. Caroline
has recently written a
new book exploring this deep time revolution in America and it was wonderful to get her on the
podcast. We're going to explore everything from 4 billion year old rock formations in northeast
Canada to 500 million year old trilobites and of course, dinosaur remains. We'll be examining
the dinosaur craze that seized America through the 19th century as great sea beasts and dinosaur remains start to be discovered, and much more.
Forget Jurassic Park, think Jurassic America.
Caroline, it is a pleasure to have you on the podcast today.
Well, thank you.
It's a pleasure to be here.
Now, I'm used to on the podcast sometimes delving into particular monuments or focusing
in on a particular period of ancient history or prehistory.
This one feels like we're going to be talking in millions of years and so on.
Is this the story of actually how old North America is and the misconceptions there
were about that in previous centuries? Yeah, there were a lot of misconceptions
until very recently, actually 200 years ago, people around the world thought that the Americas were
only about 6,000 years old, which was the age of the Earth. And within the space of a mere century, they absolutely
changed their minds about it, thinking it was a billion or even more years old. So that
was quite a change of their minds.
ALAN And this is this idea of deep time. So what
is that?
KS Yes. Deep time is the view that actually probably most of your listeners carry around
with them without knowing it. And that is the view that
the planet Earth itself is billions of years old and life upon it several hundred million of years
old. That view, even though it's broadly accepted today, is in fact a very new idea. and it emerges in the space of a mere century between around 1800 and 1900, when people
in Europe and the Americas began to imagine that the Earth was quite old and not the 6,000 years
that a literal reading of the Bible would suggest. ALICE Yes, absolutely. Well, let's focus in on
North America. And first off, how old do we therefore think the North American continent is understood to be? Today, scientists believe that the North
American continent is over 4 billion years old. Whoa.
Yeah. Whoa. And also, you can walk on some of those 4 billion years old rocks if you go to
the eastern part of Canada, where the so-called Canadian shield
of extremely ancient rocks is visible at the surface. You can walk on four-billion-year-old
rocks.
Toby So for four billion years, those rocks have
been there. They haven't been modified or changed, and you can still see them today?
Sarah You can still see them today. Most rocks of
that age have been submerged under the continental shelves. So they're swimming under the crust of the Earth
somewhere and gradually getting digested deep in the bowels of the Earth. But for whatever reason,
the luck of long geological time in Eastern Canada, there are some that are still there. Now, of course, they've
been blasted over the millennia by the icy winds and whatever other dramatic effects
happen, but there they are.
ALICE And do we also have other famous names? I
might think immediately of Yellowstone or the Grand Canyon. Do these well-known geological features in the USA
today, do they have their origins billions of years back as well?
KS Yes. Well, and actually, I should say, so do parts of the British Isles. If you go
to Scotland, you can see some very, very ancient rocks, actually rock formations that are shared
with North America. But yes, deep in the Grand Canyon are rocks
that are also billions of years old.
And you can also, you have to work a little harder
than on the Canadian shield,
but if you hike all the way down to the bottom
to the Colorado River,
you will encounter very, very ancient rocks.
And it was these rocks that Americans began to discover
over the course of the 19th century and to imagine that
they were not 6,000 years old, that they were in fact quite a bit older than that. And that's what
my book is calling the deep time revolution, because it really is revolutionary to think
about time in such expansive terms, essentially how big the stage is for the story
of Earth and for the story of life upon it.
Mason And with this unraveling of thought, as you say, as more information comes to light and the
technological advancements that come with it, so that these people can start realising just how old
the North American continent was, what were the main types of materials that they had available
to learn more about this stuff and just how old some of these things were? I mean, how can you tell
that particular rocks could be some 4 billion years old?
Well, this is such a great question. So in fact, they didn't know how old the rocks actually were
until the early 1900s. And that's when they discovered radiometric dating, which is dating
rocks by the decay of electrons and protons and all the chemists out there. Science. Yes,
fill in with science. So that's what we call actual dates, is assigning an actual year value,
like how old you are, how old I am, how old the earth is.
They did not have this before 1900.
And so what I'm calling the deep time revolution unfolds
only with relative dates.
So that's saying that a layer of rock that lies on top
of another one is younger, right?
Because we imagine that things are deposited in order, right?
As you would make a sand castle at the beach,
the layer on the bottom was put down
at one o'clock in the afternoon,
the layer on the top was put down at three o'clock.
But you actually have no idea how old the layers are.
And so what's extraordinary about the deep time revolution
is that it unfolds precisely in the absence of what you were calling
scientific instruments. So this is purely an act of the imagination. Young rocks are on top,
older rocks are underneath, but we can only have fights about relative dates, not about actual dates.
So it's really purely an act of the imagination that they are imagining deep
time. And it's really not until the 20th century that we can start saying, oh, this is billions,
and that's millions, et cetera, et cetera. It's the same thing that happens with the discovery
of dinosaur fossils and all kinds of fossils. Around what we would say now 500 million years old. They have no idea. They only know
that the trilobite fossils, you know, these little sort of about the size of the face of an Apple
watch, right, that's the size of a trilobite, these funny little things that look like horseshoe crabs,
they find these by the millions in the northern Appalachian mountains. They think they look really weird, but they know very hauntingly
that these are the first beings that lie over the rocks that have no fossils. So these must be the
first life forms created on Earth. But created by what and created by whom? Did God in fact
by what and created by whom? Did God in fact create trilobites first? Putting aside Adam and Eve,
was it in fact instead the trilobites that God created first? And then after them, the dinosaurs that are eventually found in Strata all over the East Coast, but especially in the Midwest,
the East Coast, but especially in the Midwest. All of these wonderful discoveries occur in the absence of any kind of actual dates, which makes this revolution all the more amazing.
Mason- You mentioned that trilobites as well. I would love to do an episode just about trilobites
in the future. I think trilobites are fascinating little things. But you've kind of preempted what
I want to talk about next, which is, okay, we're talking about the time now where there's life in the North American continent, and let's say over
the hundreds of millions of years in the past. Can you give us a sense? I know there are
different eras at the time of the dinosaurs, the Ice Age more recently, and then the trilobites
further back. But do we get a sense? Are there different, dare I say, kind of keystone species
that we should just highlight? 800 million years, think of this 600 million years thing. Could you kind of give
us a sense of that and how we should imagine that? Yeah, absolutely. It's a wonderful series of
exciting finds, each of which is very meaningful. So the first, of course, are the trilobites,
and you should definitely do an episode on trilobites. They love the trilobites. They imagine that God in His infinite
love for the life forms He created gave the first oceans to these lowly creatures. And one of the
huge debates of the time was whether the trilobites had had eyes. It was unclear in the fossil record
because they're soft tissues. They had disappeared. But they did imagine that God must
have given them eyes because God would have wanted them to see and enjoy the beautiful sunlit waters
of the infant oceans. So they created a new Eden around the trilobites, God's first created beings.
Then came right on top, it was later called the Carboniferous. These are the huge fossil forests that gave us the
industrial age. And contrary to our own era where we wring our hands about all the pollution that
we've put into the air that is causing climate change, because we've essentially taken these
fossil forests and aerosolized them, we've put them into the atmosphere where they're causing
warming. People in the 19th century, both in Britain and America, when they found the fossil forests,
which are basically oil deposits, they said, oh, well, this is a sign once again of God's
love for his human creatures.
He has given us the capacity to warm ourselves and to create light in the darkness. God's first forest or the forest primeval,
as the poet Longfellow called them,
were God's gift from the past to the present day.
So that was another key marker.
I remember watching a show when I was much younger
called Prehistoric Park,
and I think they went to Carboniferous
and it was almost where the insects were much bigger
than they are today, like giant dragonflies,
centipedes and scorpions. Is that from that time period, roughly? and it was almost where the insects were much bigger than they are today, like giant dragonflies,
centipedes, and scorpions. Is that from that time period, roughly?
Yes. Think of a Louisiana bayou, a big swamp with atmosphere and clouds and all, and then
dragonflies the size of small gliders, centipedes the size of a Volkswagen. These were places that are fun to imagine. You wouldn't
want to be there. And they actually started making paintings of them. And actually,
all of our greenhouses of the present era are ultimately descended from the first greenhouses
of the 19th century, which were meant to recreate the tropical foliage of the Carboniferous. So
they had a love affair with the Carboniferous
because this was gonna save us from the lot of humanity
for the last however many thousand years,
which was to be dark, cold, tired.
You know, everyone was tired all the time
because they had to work, but now they had machines,
machines that were powered by the ancient fossil forests
that had swaddled the infant earth.
So that was the second one.
Then came, okay, this comes the fun part, right,
is the dinosaurs.
So they begin to scrape away again at the earth
and they find on top these enormous skeletons,
you know, the size of a 737 of giant sea creatures,
mosasaurs, and this was quite extraordinary. One of the reasons that they found
them was because they were in search of fertile soils to re-fertilize the land that had been
exhausted by 200 years of tobacco cultivation. So the first Europeans to come to North America
had arrived in the 1600s. They immediately started
making tobacco plantations to send tobacco to places like England, for example, where all of
Europe became addicted to smoking. But after 200 years of this, in the early 1800s, all of the soils
in the American South had been exhausted. So the soils of the Cretaceous, which basically means
chalky, were used to re-fertilize what became the cotton plantations of the slave South in the period
1800 to 1860. Our listeners may have heard of the term the cotton kingdom. This is the Cotton Kingdom essentially stretching from South Carolina to
Mississippi and the Mississippi River itself, the giant artery of water whose sides, the canyon
sides clearly exposed these fertile soils that happened also to be full of gigantic dinosaur fossils,
which they then excavated and brought back
to the museums first of the United States,
places like Philadelphia, you can still see them.
Some of them have American names,
the hadrosaurus named after Haddonfield, New Jersey.
But also they love to ship them to Europe to say,
hey, you guys think that we're
inferior Americans, right? We had the chutzpah to seek independence from mother Britain 50 years ago.
We think, you know, we're so great. And in fact, we are so great because here,
here on this ship is a giant fossil of a dinosaur that is bigger than your puny little English fossils.
It's almost kind of a reversal, isn't it?
At the time, there were a lot of people who were collecting antiquities from Egypt and
Greece and Disney and bringing them to Britain or France or whatever, and they become part
of the exhibitions.
And America is almost a bit late, but it is almost a contrast to that. Now America is
front of the queue with things that they're actually discovering in their own land. Look
what we can bring to the party kind of thing, I guess.
It is exactly that. It is no more sophisticated than four-year-olds in the playground. My bucket
is bigger. Americans have Look what I've got.
Americans have a terminal inferiority complex.
Many carry it still today.
The Greeks and Romans had never been to the new world,
no matter what you read on the web.
Romans and Greeks had never been to the new world.
And they didn't have the middle ages
in the sense of crumbling castles and monarchies
and all these things.
But now they had dinosaur
fossils that were bigger and also that were older. So what they couldn't win on the culture front,
they won on the antiquity and size front. And they continue to do that today. If you come to
American Natural History Museums, all you ever read is how much older they are than European fossils.
So it's not like Americans got over it. You mentioned in passing earlier Cretaceous. With those key dinosaur periods in deep time,
millions of years ago, is it in America? It feels like the main areas are there. It's
the Cretaceous, the last period, which ends with the meteorite, the Jurassic beforehand,
Jurassic Park and so on. Triassic before that, but that's more the rise of
the dinosaurs. Is Jurassic and Cretaceous those periods where, I'm guessing, it's the richest
fossil records from in America? Oh, yes. And they discover that the whole
Midwest of the United States, which is 1500, 2000 miles wide, If your listeners can imagine the area between the Rocky Mountains in the West
and the Great Lakes in the East.
They realized that this had been an ancient ocean
that North America had been divided into two.
Yeah, and that there were these giant monsters
swimming in the ocean, you know,
cavorting in these shallow seas,
and that on the beaches on both sides, east and west, there had been giant T-Rexes, you know, cavorting in these shallow seas and that on the beaches, on both sides, east and west,
there had been giant T-Rexes, you know,
and we should think of the significance of that name,
Tyrannosaurus Rex, you know, it's the king terrible lizard,
as many like things as you can cram into a single name.
And it's not surprising that Americans would have named it,
you know, the terrible king lizard.
They wanted a king, they never had a king, so of course it's not surprising that Americans would have named it, you know, the terrible king lizard. They wanted a king. They never had a king. So of course it's Rex. And the more terrifying,
the better. Brontosaurus, Allosaurus, T-Rex, all of these things had been patrolling the scary
beaches of the Jurassic and the Cretaceous afterwards. And they began in the 1850s, 60s, and 70s
to create these extraordinary colored landscape paintings
of this time that no one had ever seen
and no one ever would see, right?
Cause humans didn't come along
until many millions of years later.
But they began to imagine
that not only was North America very old and that it had this
enormous antiquity of the Jurassic and the Cretaceous, but that very significantly,
these were older than the native peoples who now live there on the dry land of places like the
Nebraska territory, which white Americans were trying to take over. And so there was a very
sharp political dimension to the claims of the antiquity of North America. It was that it was
older than the most ancient peoples who lived there, the quote, Native Americans. So it was
essentially white Americans saying, you know, you say you're the first Americans, but in fact,
the first Americans were T-Rexes and Brontosaurus, so don't even try.
Trilobites.
Yes, and trilobites. Yeah, don't even try. And that this solid,
dry land that you are now living on, they were speaking to the Lakota Sioux, for example, this dry land is not yours,
it is ours and we take claim of the deep antiquity beneath your feet. In a sense, the Cretaceous
and the Jurassic, they're not just sort of sitting there passively awaiting discovery,
they are invented and created partly for political uses.
And it's that dark side of many of these stories, not just in America, but across the
world where deep archaeology can be twisted for political means. But it's important to
highlight regardless, isn't it? I would actually quite like to talk about those sea discoveries,
those sea fossils, because you mentioned earlier mosasaurs, which they are one of those big
sea beasts, aren't they? And this is something to get your head around today. So the Midwest, you think, of course, land as far as the eye can see, but back there,
they are discovering these massive sea beasts that lurk beneath the waves.
I guess smaller beasts, ammonites, those kind of ammonite things, but also the big ones
too.
Oh, yes.
It is just a riot of wonder and they have fun with it, right? They pull out the
mosasaurs, which is named after the Meuse River in northern Belgium, where they find some of these
sea creatures also when they're digging for coal and things like that. And so they sort of say,
oh, well, we have a Meuse River monster as well. And as you say, the ammonites, these, you know, if you can imagine
a car tire that is swirled and they fill museums with these wondrous sea creatures and imagine,
you know, this North America that is so alien to them that now it's just flat, boring Midwest,
you know, what Americans call fly over flyover territory. You fly from New York
to San Francisco, and it's all the flat stuff in between. But now they thought, well, it's flat
because it used to be an ocean, and God had seen to it that that ocean dried into a fertile landscape
that now supports the farms of America. And so every farmer who digs in his or her fields
and finds an ammonite or a mosasaur or ichthyosaur or any kind of swimming saurus should immediately
ship those extraordinary fun ancient creatures to the museums of New York City and Philadelphia so
that we could show them off to the world and to visiting British scientists like Thomas Huxley, you know, who comes to the United States and says,
wow, this is great.
Well, this is the next thing I was going to ask is that as news spreads out, you know,
from beyond America that look at what these amazing things that are coming out to the
ground, is there just almost a rush to get out there to learn more about these discoveries
that are being made?
There is a rush to get out there to learn more about these discoveries that are being made? There is a rush to get out there. Darwin, sadly himself, never comes to North America,
but Darwin's bulldog, Thomas Huxley, who is even more Darwinian than Darwin is,
he comes to America. He visits not only the extraordinary dinosaur fossils, but what came
after the age of dinosaurs, which was the age of mammals.
And he realizes that some of these strata,
for example, the Cretaceous and the Jurassic,
are more visible in North America
than they were anywhere in Europe.
So Europe had had those time periods,
but they weren't sitting on the surface,
easily accessible in the same quantity
as they were in the giant space of North America.
So, America becomes the great fossil hunting ground for Europeans. And in some sense, it
still remains so today, although now, of course, many other areas of the world have been opened up
for fossil hunting like China and North Africa, etc. We'll definitely go back to exploring more of
that fossil hunting story and some particular
really interesting examples of that race to unearth these fossils and who these people
were. But as you hinted out there, deep time, it doesn't end with the end of the dinosaurs.
Obviously, it continues. There are millions of years before the first humans in North
America. So far, you've given the sense that it's almost layer upon layer upon layer,
and then you get to the dinosaurs.
But then you mentioned there that some dinosaur bones were at the surface.
So what about the animals that follow the dinosaurs?
How easy were they to discover as well?
What do we know about their story in the 19th century of discoveries?
Yeah.
Well, again, taking us into the American Midwest in the dry landscape of the Dakotas of Nebraska,
sort of the upper Midwest, right under Canada.
Americans begin to build the transcontinental railroads
in the decades after the Civil War.
We can imagine it as a kind of zipper
relinking the continent that had been shorn
into by the Civil War,
that in order to build the railroads,
you need to bring the geologists,
and the geologists, of course,
are gonna find bones of various kinds, especially the Badlands of the Dakotas,
where you have these deep gullies you find on top of the dinosaur bones. Suddenly,
the dinosaurs are gone, vanished, and you have a new kind of creature which turns out to be mammals. And they find these
enormous crazy mammals like giant rhinoceroses on drugs, things the size of rhinos, but with
crazy horns all over their skulls. They find tiny little monkeys and every kind of creature in between. So being Victorians,
everything is the age of this and the reign of that, so they christen this the Age of Mammals.
And they realized that the Age of the Dinosaurs had ceded to the Age of Mammals, and that they
were going to show the world once again that American mammals were bigger than any other
mammals around the world, but also that significantly some of the mammals like the horse that had been
associated with the European conquest of the world had in fact originated in the Americas. So they find the little Io hippos, the dawn horse, Io means
dawn in Greek, the first camels, all of these various ungulates, animals of the plains,
kind of the steps that circled the globe 50 million years ago. They had their birthplace
in the Americas. Now, this was so important for Americans to claim because one of the things
that Europeans loved to say was that the New World was inferior because its land was not fertile.
Why would God have wasted fertility on the New World? And Americans could say,
but no, in fact, some of the great civilization bearing animals that we know today like the horse originated in the Americas,
migrated westward over the bearing straits which had been dry and into Asia. And so Europe in some
sense was a colony of America. That was such a great moment for the Americans. I'm sure it was, but that also hints at an important point. No
matter what era we're talking about, Jurassic, Cretaceous, and of course there are changes in the
shape of the continent and geology and all of that. But you've got the Bering Strait, there's a clear
water divide between Asia and America. But back then, before the ice sheets come down, it was possible for animals, long before
humans, to venture westwards into Asia and then Europe that way.
Yeah.
You can get on a flight from San Francisco to Tokyo today.
All these little horses and camels and various other early mammals had sprung from nothing
in the Americas because of the great fertility
that was imagined and that on some early geological formation
that was later erased by time,
they migrated first into Asia and then finally into Europe.
And then they went extinct in the Americas.
So by the time the Spaniards arrived in North America
in the 1500s, you know, Cortes and others,
they were bringing their horses,
but it was really the return of the horse
to its native land in much bigger form.
So that was an exciting time.
The final layer, of course, was humans.
And this created an extraordinary dilemma because
the oldest fossil humans that were found were in fact being found in Europe. Around 1870,
1880, the word prehistory is invented to begin to talk about a time in human history that predates written records.
So history is written records,
Herodotus, Thucydides, that's history,
because it's written.
But now they were finding evidence of human beings
before there was writing.
So cave paintings, Neanderthals, how to talk about those.
Well, they're prehistoric, they're human, but they
don't write. Now, the trouble for North Americans was that those fossils were not being found in
North America. So what white Americans did essentially was to adopt European human fossils
as their own and to create human family trees that attributed the wonderful cave paintings at places like Lascaux
that they were discovering to white Caucasian peoples who then were thought to live in New
York City today. So they were basically saying white Americans have nothing to do with Native Americans,
their cultural origins are in Europe, and Europeans, many thousands of years ago, were
already creating beautiful cave paintings, and those are our people.
So if you go to the American Museum of Natural History in New York City. It was founded in 1870 or so. There are reproductions
of European cave paintings to create a kind of cultural affinity between America's ruling classes
and the fine art of Europe. Let's go back to this age of the dinosaurs in America and these early discoveries and
focus on some particular discoveries and the people behind them. When are the earliest
dinosaur fossils discovered? What's the process behind the
discoveries? You mentioned plantations and stuff like that. Is it almost accidental by plantation
owners and then these things happen and they call someone or they come in? What's the story of the
discovery of these first fossils?
Steele So it tends to be accidental. People are not in search of fossils because they don't know
that they're weird and
interesting because fossil just means from the ground. It doesn't imply old until the late 19th
century. So they're just mining their own business. They're farming, they're digging for coal,
they're just going about their daily life in the 19th century. So for example, one of the first people to find fossils is Thomas Jefferson.
He's the great naturalist founder and he finds these mastodon bones. These are these ancient
elephants with tusks and he displays them at his house at Monticello. Part of the reason he sends
the Lewis and Clark expedition to the Pacific in 1804 is
to say, bring back one of those Macedons, but bring it back alive.
He imagines that there must still be a live Macedon roaming around the Earth because they're
just beginning to think through the idea of extinction.
That's another idea we take for granted today.
Extinction wasn't even formulated
until around the year 1800. And the reason is because they imagine this loving God who
creates all these creatures and then never uncreates them. So every fossil we find must
have some living analog around the earth because why would the loving creator god annihilate Tristan? He created Tristan. Why would he make you go extinct?
So the Macedons must have a living analog. So that is what they are thinking initially
about some of these ancient creatures that they're finding. But yeah, it's really the Industrial Revolution, digging very deep in the earth for coal and other
kinds of fuels that leads them into these weird lost worlds of trilobites and all kinds of things
that today many of them have British names like the Devonian and the Cambrian because the British
were doing the same thing. But I always say the Industrial Revolution and the dinosaurs went hand in hand because one would not have happened without the other.
Toby And who are some of the people in America
who then hear about this and then oversee the excavation of the dig, or almost kind
of a Jefferson-like figure who then hears about it and then sponsors groups of people
to go out and find more? And does it almost become a bit of a competition, a tournament with rival groups trying to find the next big monsters that have just been unveiled in
this area of America? CW. Yes. Definitely, science is baked from the beginning with competition
firmly within it. Scientists from the North, scientists from the South are all hearing about
these finds and they send out some of the first very
primordial scientific expeditions. So we shouldn't imagine 100-person expeditions like we might have today, but more like two or three people who are invited, for example, from Philadelphia,
which is the scientific Mecca of the United States in the 19th century. The founding fathers declined
to fund a scientific infrastructure, and so all of these museums are privately funded. The American Philosophical
Society is one. Anyway, Philadelphia is sort of the place. And so in one case, for example,
there's a plantation in Alabama that's really getting going in the 1820s. It sits right on
the edge of the Alabama River, which is this giant,
very wide artery, and the slaves keep digging up
these marine monsters.
And so the plantation owner writes to Philadelphia
and says, hey, could you send one of your guys down
and he can live on my plantation
and take some of the enslaved people on essentially geology
expeditions, which is what happens in the 1820s and 1830s. A guy comes down from Philadelphia and
finds an extraordinary trove of ammonites and mosasaurs and ships those back. They also find
human remains from Native Americans, past and and present because the Native Americans are now being
pushed off of this land in what are called the Indian Wars, peoples like the Natchez and others.
So all of this bony debris gets pulled out of the earth and sent to these sort of centers of collection and calculation on the East Coast. And even today,
the center of American academic and intellectual life is on the East Coast, and that's vestigial
from the 19th century age of fossil collecting. So if you want to see the extraordinary Midwest
fossils, don't go to the Midwest. Go to New York City,
go to Washington DC, to the Smithsonian. There they are.
ALICE Is it then that as they start digging deeper,
you said Cretaceous, then Jurassic, how long is it before you get people discovering things
like trilobites and then realizing that there's no more to it? How long does it take to go from
those top layers to
those earliest animal remains? Yeah, interestingly, it's the trilobites
that are discovered first, even though we know they're last because they're exposed at the top
of the Appalachians. They're not discovered in the order of chronology. Depending in some senses, depending on where you dig, different layers are exposed.
So the trilobites come to attention actually around 1815, 1820, and they haven't found any
dinosaurs yet. It's not until quite a bit, 1830s, 1840s that they begin to uncover the first
dinosaur. So everything is all sort of mixed up. And the neat and tidy geological
column that they eventually create was not in place until a little bit later. Everything is a
bit of a jumble. But to go back to the dinosaurs for a second, it's not obvious either. When we
think of Jurassic America, it's not immediately obvious that this had to be a bloodthirsty land of
gore and rapine, right? These creatures had teeth, but we have teeth and we're not gnashing our way
through forests, you and I normally. And so it was very much a product of the Victorian mindset that they imposed on an ancient time period the capitalist values of their
own day. This is the era of the robber barons and unfettered capitalism with no safety net and no
unions. But they wanted to think of themselves as civilized human beings. And so they thought that any ancient time period must have been a lawless era of blood and
gore. And the first paintings of T. Rex were very gore-filled. And so that's what they impose on the
Jurassic. And that's what we carry around with us today. We don't remember, we don't think about the
gentle parts of the Jurassic. There were gentle little creatures
in the Jurassic, but that wouldn't be any fun for us. So we populate it with these big scary
and fun dinosaurs. Don't give me a small boring vegetarian dinosaur. I want a big bloodthirsty
one. It is because we have inherited the Victorian dinosaurs of 150 years ago. So that's worth remembering.
Toby So by the early 20th century, just how different
have peoples, not just in America, but also in Europe and elsewhere, have people's perception
of North America? How significantly in that 100 years or so have mindsets, attitudes changed
towards North America because of that discovery of deep time?
KS Yeah, well, Europeans came around some of them to the idea that North America and then South
America had a legitimate place on the international stage of science. they were producing scientists and they were producing interesting
scientific finds. So it's a really a kind of declaration of independence for American science
as a result of deep time, even though Americans would never win on the stage of the Greek and
Roman high culture that we see in European museums. It was very significant
as a chapter in American history. Toby And lastly, seems very important and
timely to bring it up today. Is this rich prehistoric history of the North American continent and its
varying environments, is this part of the reason why North America is so rich in minerals and
fossil fuels today. Natural
resources that continue to be used are plenty in North America today. Revolution between 1800 and 1900 that the full realization of the industrial uses of the oil
and minerals of North America, all of that came into focus. We are sitting on this extraordinary
land that not only has great agricultural fertility in the form of these now dried seabeds that we have from Texas to Saskatchewan, right?
But the mineral wealth that is excavated just not only in the East Coast but flowing all the way to
the West Coast. And anybody who's visited the La Brea Tar Pits in Los Angeles, these kind of burping oil pits in the middle
of downtown Los Angeles where Ice Age mammals come bubbling to the surface. Those were discovered
and exploited because of the need to find oil in Los Angeles. So yeah, it cemented for Americans
it cemented for Americans what they suspected, which was that God had favored North America with a divine mission to lead the world to salvation and that he was going to show this,
this is called manifest destiny, right? He was going to show this not just through missionary campaigns and such, but by allowing white Americans to
uncover the mineral rocky wealth of the United States. And the second coming would come any
minute after they had found that. ALICE Caroline, this has been a fantastic
chat. Last but certainly not least, your book, All About This and More, it is called?
So yeah, my book is called How the New World Became Old. The subtitle is The Deep Time
Revolution in America. It was published last fall by Princeton University Press. If you
like dinosaur pictures, it's got over a hundred of them in color and black and white.
Trilobites, T-Rexes, it's all there because I'm hoping everyone
out there loves dinosaurs as much as I have since I was three.
Absolutely. From Trilobites to T-Rex, brilliant Caroline. This has been fantastic. It just goes
to me to say thank you so much for taking the time to come on the podcast today.
Thank you. It was a pleasure.
podcast today. Thank you. It was a pleasure.
Well there you go. There was Professor Caroline Winterer highlighting the story of deep time
America and how fossils uncovered in the 19th century began to reveal just how ancient America
really was. I hope you enjoyed the episode.
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