Having moved to Dorset earlier this year, I spent my 50th
Birthday at the Dinosaur museum in Dorchester, apparently the only UK museum
dedicated totally to the subject. We went to entertain my young nephew and
niece but I came away totally absorbed by the discovery of the dinosaurs and
how big an impact this must have had at the time on religion in particular in the
early C19th. I was also surprised that a woman, a poor woman, had succeeded in
being a pioneer. ‘She sells sea shells on the seashore’ is a lot better known
than Mary Anning, who is thought to be the source of the tongue twister. It
presumably refers to the ammonites she and her family collected to sell to tourists
to keep them from starvation although these were often referred to as snake
stones in her day. They actually remind me far more of sea horses which
frequent the other end of the Dorset coast. The ammonites lead to far greater
things and not one but several complete fossilized dinosaur skeletons. Most of
us involved in scientific research can only dream of a dinosaur moment but
should rest assured discovering an ammonite still requires great skill and can
make an important and very satisfying find.
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