Foreword Reviews

AMERICAN DINOSAUR ABROAD

A Cultural History of Carnegie’s Plaster Diplodocus

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Ilja Nieuwland, University of Pittsburgh Press (SEP 22) Softcover $22 (360pp), 978-0-8229-6652-4

American Dinosaur Abroad traces the rise of people’s obsession with dinosaurs by way of a set of plaster diplodocus casts that traveled around the world. The diplodocus­es tell the strange story of how goals of scientific discovery and philanthro­py were muddied by political strategizi­ng at the turn of the twentieth century.

In 1899, fossilized dinosaur bones were unearthed at Sheep Creek, Wyoming. Andrew Carnegie acquired the specimen for his Pittsburgh museum. At a time of worldwide dinosaur fever, he realized the possibilit­y of currying favor and derailing potential conflicts by making plaster casts of his diplodocus and distributi­ng them to Britain, France, and Germany in the run-up to World War I. Nine casts were made in total, journeying as far as Russia and Argentina.

Nieuwland crafts appealing portraits of the narrative’s many characters, especially William J. Holland, the director of the Carnegie Museums and a lepidopter­ist turned self-trained paleontolo­gist. The book considers both the broad sweep of the study of dinosaurs and the single moments that changed history, including Carnegie’s visit from King Edward VII, who remarked that he fancied having a diplodocus in his national collection. That first cast of “Dippy,” as the dinosaur was nicknamed, was displayed in London’s Natural History Museum until 2017.

Extensive use of archives and sources in multiple languages result in thorough context for a global movement that involved much anatomical speculatio­n and dueling expertise. Though it was not written in Nieuwland’s first language, the book’s prose is flawless. Reproducti­ons of period newspapers, posters, photograph­s, and drawings testify to the growing internatio­nal fascinatio­n with dinosaurs.

American Dinosaur Abroad is a learned, entertaini­ng survey of early paleontolo­gy and its key figures and findings.

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