(print
version) pdf
Dinosaur
Myths and Legends
Long before we knew anything about dinosaurs, people found
their fossilized remains. Many ancient cultures have myths,
stories and legends about strange beasts – some of these
could be based on the fossilized bones of dinosaurs and other
prehistoric creatures. Many of these legends and myths persist
through regular sightings of aquatic monsters in lakes such
as Loch Ness and Okanagan.
Some of
the earliest references to dinosaurs can be found in Chinese
medical texts. For thousands of years, Chinese people have
collected “dragon bones” and used them in medicines.
They called them Long Gu (dragon’s bones) and Long Ya
(dragon’s teeth). Bones and teeth could be ground up
into a powder and added to tea as a cure for a variety
of ailments, including fever, dysentery, convulsions, ulcers,
paralysis and illnesses of pregnant women. A fifth-century
historian, Lei Hiao, instructed people where to find the bones
and how to measure their quality; he also advised practitioners
to be careful not to use bones collected by women!
The
ancient Greeks may have used fossilized dinosaur bones as
the basis for a mythical beast. Some scholars think that Greek
historian Herodotus was referring to fossilized dinosaur skeletons
and eggs when he described griffins guarding their nests in
central Asia in the fifth century B.C. A griffin is a legendary
beast that was part eagle and part lion. The remains of lion-sized
beaked dinosaurs called Protoceratops found in Mongolia near
the ancient gold fields of Central Asia – an important
source of gold for the Greeks – may have provided the
inspiration for the legendary griffins. The dinosaur’s
beak and frilled collar could have been interpreted as the
griffin’s eagle-like beak and wings.
The earliest
“modern” discovery of a dinosaur fossil was the
knee end of a Megalosaurus thigh bone found in 1676 in Oxfordshire,
England. The man who dug up the bone, Robert Plot, was not
a biologist but a chemist, and he thought that the massive
femur had once belonged to a giant human. Plot published an
illustration of the bone in his book The
Natural History of Oxfordshire (1677). Despite the incorrect
identification, this drawing appears to be the first published
record of a dinosaur in the West.
Today,
myths and legends of dinosaur-like creatures continue. Sightings
of sea and lake monsters are common. Canada’s most famous
water monster is Ogopogo, a mysterious beast that many believe
haunts the depths of Lake Okanagan in British Columbia’s
southern interior. Long before the creature was known as Ogopogo,
local First Nations referred to the creature as N’ha-a-itk.
Today, organizations like the British Columbia Scientific
Cryptozoology Club search for conclusive evidence that Ogopogo
and other such beasts exist. It is important to know that
scientists have never found any remains of aquatic dinosaurs
– ichthyosaurs and elasmosaurs were huge marine reptiles,
not dinosaurs.
Dinosaurs
have fascinated humans for centuries and continue to do so
today. We may never see a living dinosaur, but myths, legends
and our imaginations keep dinosaurs alive. The desire to find
a living example of a dinosaur, or a creature from the same
period, is so great that many believe they might find one
if they look in just the right place. |