The 'Bone Wars' were an infamous period in the history of
paleontology when the two pre-eminent paleontologists of the time,
Edward Drinker Cope and
Othniel Charles Marsh, competed to see who could find the most, and more sensational, new species of
dinosaur. This competition was marred by bribery, politics, violations of
American Indian territories and virulent personal attacks.
History
The Bone Wars were triggered by the
1858 discovery of the
holotype specimen of ''
Hadrosaurus foulkii'' by
William Parker Foulke in the
marl pits of
Haddonfield, New Jersey. It was the first nearly-complete skeleton of a dinosaur ever found, and sparked great interest in the new field of paleontology. The skeleton was sent to the
Academy of Natural Sciences in
Philadelphia, where it was named and described in 1858 by
Joseph Leidy, who was perhaps the leading paleontologist of the time.

Othniel Charles Marsh
Edward Drinker Cope worked for Leidy, and soon was working in the
marl pits of southwest
New Jersey. Together they made a number of discoveries, including the second almost-complete skeleton of a dinosaur, a carnivorous ''
Dryptosaurus aquilunguis''. They made arrangements for the companies digging up the marl, which was being used as a fertilizer, to contact them whenever any
fossilized bones were unearthed. Cope moved to Haddonfield to be near the discoveries, and soon rivaled his mentor in fame.
At the time, Marsh was a professor at
Yale University (which was still called Yale College), in
New Haven, Connecticut, studying fossilized dinosaur tracks in the Connecticut Valley. As the first American professor of paleontology, the discoveries in New Jersey were of intense interest. He visited Cope, whom he knew from the
University of Berlin, and was given a tour of the discovery sites. Together they unearthed some new partial skeletons, but the rivalry started soon after when Cope learned that Marsh had secretly returned and bribed the marl company managers to report any new finds directly to him.
[''The Dinosaurs!: Flesh on the Bones'' -Part 2/4 of the PBS 1994 Documentary]
In 1870, the attention shifted west, and in 1877, specifically to the
Morrison Formation in
Kansas,
Nebraska, and
Colorado, which during the
Cretaceous was on the shore of a great sea. Since both were wealthy — Cope was the scion of a wealthy
Quaker family, and Marsh was the nephew of
George Peabody, for whom Yale's museum is named — they used their own personal wealth to fund expeditions each summer, and then spent the winter publishing their discoveries. Small armies of fossil hunters in mule-drawn wagons were soon sending quite literally tons of fossils back East.

Edward Drinker Cope
But their discoveries were accompanied by sensational accusations of spying, stealing workers, stealing fossils, and bribery. Among other things Cope repeatedly accused Marsh of stealing fossils, and was so angry that he stole a train full of Marsh's fossils, and had it sent to Philadelphia. Marsh, in turn, was so determined that he stole skulls from
American Indian burial platforms and violated treaties by trespassing on their land. He was also so protective of his fossil sites that he even used dynamite on one to prevent it from falling into Cope's hands.
They also tried to ruin each other's professional credibility. When Cope made a simple error, and attached the head of an ''
Elasmosaurus'' to the wrong end of the animal (the tail, instead of the neck), he tried to cover up his mistake. He even went so far as to purchase every copy he could find of the journal it was published in; but Marsh, who pointed out the error in the first place, made sure to publicize the story. Marsh was no more infallible, however. He made a similar error, and put the wrong head on the skeleton of an ''
Apatosaurus'' (which was still being called the ''Brontosaurus''). But his error was not discovered for more than a hundred years. In 1981, the
Peabody Museum of Natural History finally acknowledged the mistake, and exhibits around the world had to be redone.
Legacy
By most standards, Marsh won the Bone Wars. Both made finds of incredible scientific value, but while Marsh discovered a total of 86 new species, due in part to his discovery of the
Como Bluff site, near
Medicine Bow, Wyoming (one of the richest sources of fossils known), Cope only discovered 56. Many of the fossils Cope unearthed were of species that had already been named, or were of uncertain identification. While the species Marsh discovered include household names, like ''
Triceratops'', ''
Allosaurus'', ''
Diplodocus'', and ''
Stegosaurus'', even Cope's most famous discoveries, like the ''
Dimetrodon'', ''
Camarasaurus'', ''
Coelophysis'', and ''
Monoclonius'' were more obscure. But their cumulative finds defined the field of paleontology; at the start of the Bone Wars, there were only nine named species of dinosaur in North America; after the Bone Wars, there were around 150 species. Furthermore, some of their theories — like Marsh's argument that birds are descended from dinosaurs; or "
Cope's law", which states that over time species tend to get larger — are still referred to today.
Cope is widely regarded as the more brilliant scientist, but more brash and careless. He was so prolific, publishing more than 1,200 scientific papers, that he set a record he still holds to this day. Marsh in turn was colder and more methodical but he was the better
politician. He moved easily among the members of high society, including
President Ulysses S. Grant and the
Rothschilds. He even befriended
Buffalo Bill Cody and the
Lakota Indian chief
Red Cloud.
Their rivalry lasted until Cope's death in 1897, but by that time they had both run out of money. Marsh got Cope's federal funding cut off (including his funding from the
U.S. Geological Survey), and Cope had to sell part of his collection. Marsh in turn had to mortgage his home, and ask Yale for a salary to live on. Cope nonetheless issued a final challenge at his death; he had his skull donated to science so that his brain could be measured, hoping that his brain would be larger than his adversary; at the time, it was thought brain size was the true measure of intelligence. Marsh never rose to the challenge, but Cope's skull is still preserved.
While their collective discoveries helped define the budding new field of study, the race also had some negative effects. Their animosity and public behavior harmed the reputation of American paleontology in Europe for decades. Furthermore, the use of dynamite and sabotage by employees of both men destroyed hundreds of potentially critical fossil remains. It will never be known how much their rivalry has damaged our understanding of life forms in the regions which they worked.
There have been books written about the Bone Wars. Two notable examples are "The gilded dinosaur : the fossil war between E.D. Cope and O.C. Marsh and the rise of American science" by Mark Jaffe and "The Bonehunters' Revenge, Dinosaurs, Greed, and the Greatest Scientific Feud of the Gilded Age" by David Rains Wallace.
Recently the Bone Wars has been the subject of a
graphic novel, ''
Bone Sharps, Cowboys, and Thunder Lizards'', by Joe Ottoviani. It is not quite true to fact; the events have been randomized in order that the story reads more like a TV script. There is also a
card game, "", by
James L. Cambias and Diane Kelly. The Bone Wars was also featured, in more fantastical form, in the book ''
Bone Wars'' by
Brett Davis, which includes aliens also interested in the bones.
[1]
External links
★ Illustrated
article on the Bone Wars.
★ Another
article on the Bone Wars.
★
Article on the Haddonfield, NJ site.
★ The
Bone Cabin, build entirely from fossilized bones recovered from the Como Bluff site.
★
References
1. http://palaeo-electronica.org/1999_2/books/bone_wars.htm