Gould, Stephen Jay;
The Lying Stones of Marrakech: Penultimate Reflections in Natural History
Harmony Books, 2000, 372 pages
ISBN 0609601423, 9780609601426
topics: | biology | evolution | paleontology | genetics
Ninth volume of essays based on his Natural History columns - "This View of
Life,". 23 essays.
From the title story, which deals with a forgery in paleontology:
But fakery can also become a serious and truly tragic business,
warping (or even destroying) the lives of thousands, and misdirecting
entire professions into sterility for generations. Scoundrels may
find the matrix of temptation irresistible, for immediate gains in
money and power can be so great, while human gullibility grants the
skillful forger an apparently limitless field of operation. The van
Gogh Sunflowers bought in 1987 by a Japanese insurance company for
nearly 40 million dollars - then a record price for a painting - may
well be a forged copy made in about 1900 by the stockbroker and
artist manque Emile Schuffenecker. The phony Piltdown Man, artlessly
confected from the jaw of an orangutan and a modern human cranium,
derailed the profession of paleoanthropology for forty years until
exposed as a fake in the early 1950s.
Earlier examples cast an even longer and broader net of
disappointment. A large body of medieval and Renaissance scholarship
depended upon the documents of Hermes Trismegistus (Thrice-Great
Hermes), a body of work attributed to Thoth, the Egyptian God of
Wisdom, and once viewed as equal in insight (not to mention
antiquity) to biblical and classical sources - until exposed as a set
of forgeries compiled largely in the third century A.D.
In 1726, Johann Bartholomew Adam Beringer, an insufferably
pompous and dilettantish professor and physician from the town of
Wurzburg, published a volume, the Lithographiae Wirceburgensis (or
Wurzburg lithography), documenting in copious words and twenty-one
plates a remarkable series of fossils that he had found on a mountain
adjacent to the city. These fossils displayed a great array of
objects, all nearly exposed in three-dimensional relief on the
surface of flattened stones. The great majority depicted organisms,
nearly all complete and including remarkable features of behavior and
soft anatomy that would never be preserved in conventional fossils -
lizards in their skins, birds complete with beak and eyes, spiders
with their webs, bees feeding on flowers, snails next to their eggs,
and frogs copulating. But others showed heavenly objects - comets
with tails, the crescent Moon with rays, and the Sun all effulgent
with a glowing central face of human form. Still others depicted
Hebrew letters, nearly all spelling out the Tetragrammaton, the
ineffable name of God - YHWH, usually transliterated by Christian
Europe as Jehovah.... Alas, after publishing his book and trumpeting
the contents, Beringer found out that he had indeed been duped,
presumably by his students playing a prank.
The main story tells how Gould makes a trip to Morocco - after observing,
over several years, the virtual takeover of rock shops throughout the world
with striking fossils from Morocco - primarily straight-shelled nautiloids
(much older relatives of the coiled and modern chambered nautilus)
preserved in black marbles and limestones and usually sold as large,
beautifully polished slabs intended for table or dresser tops.
I discovered that most of these fossils come from quarries in the
rocky deserts, well and due east of Marrakech, and not from the
intervening mountains. ... Moroccan
rock shops dot the landscape in limitless variety; there are young
boys hawking a specimen or two at every hairpin turn on the mountain
roads... but the majority of items offered for sale are either
entirely phony or at least strongly "enhanced." My focus of interest
shifted dramatically from worrying about sources and limits to
studying the ranges and differential expertise of a major industry
dedicated to the manufacture of fake fossils.
Discusses several fakes - mostly "plaster casts, often remarkably well done".
Contents
1. EPISODES IN THE BIRTH OF PALEONTOLOGY
The Nature of Fossils and the History of the Earth
1. The Lying Stones of Marrakech: the power of forgery to
2. The Sharp-Eyed Lynx, Outfoxed by Nature
3. How the Vulva Stone Became a Brachiopod
2. PRESENT AT THE CREATION
How France's Three Finest Scientists Established Natural History in an
Age of Revolution
4. Inventing Natural History in Style
5. The Proof of Lavoisier's Plates [1]
6. A Tree Grows in Paris: Lamark's Division of Worms and Revision of
Nature [2]
3. DARWIN'S CENTURY—AND OURS
Lessons from Britain's Four Greatest Victorian Naturalists
7. Lyell's Pillars of Wisdom [3]
8. A Sly Dullard Named Darwin: Recognizing the Multiple Facets of
Genius
9. An Awful Terrible dinosaurian Irony
10. Second-Guessing the Future
4. SIX LITTLE PIECES ON THE MEANING AND LOCATION OF EXCELLENCE
Substrate and Accomplishment
11. Drink Deep, or Taste Not the Pierian Spring
12. Requiem Eternal
13. More Power to Him
De Mortuis When Truly Bonum
14. Bright Star Among Billions
15. The Glory of His Time and Ours
16. This Was a Man
5. SCIENCE IN SOCIETY
17. A tale of two work sites
18. The Internal Brand of the Scarlet W
19. Dolly's Fashion and Louis's Passion
20. Above All, Do No Harm
6. EVOLUTION AT ALL SCALES
21. Of Embryos and Ancestors
22. The Paradox of the Visibly Irrelevant
23. Room of One's Own