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Henry Fairfield Osborn

Paleontologist Osborn, in 1890
Born August 8, 1857
Fairfield, Connecticut
Died November 6, 1935
Nationality American
Fields geology
paleontology
eugenics
Alma mater Princeton University
Influences Edward Drinker Cope

Henry Fairfield Osborn (August 8, 1857–November 6, 1935) was an American geologist, paleontologist, and eugenicist, "a first-rate science administrator and a third-rate scientist."[1]

Osborn was born in Fairfield, Connecticut, and studied at Princeton University. He was professor of comparative anatomy from 1883 to 1890 at Princeton. In 1891 he was hired jointly by Columbia University and the American Museum of Natural History, New York. He became professor of biology at Columbia University, becoming professor of zoology in 1896. At the museum he succeeded Morris K. Jesup as president in 1908, serving until 1933, during which time he accumulated one of the finest fossil collections in the world. He assembled a great team of fossil hunters and preparators, which included Roy Chapman Andrews, a gentleman allegedly a possible inspiration for the creation of the fictional archeologist Indiana Jones, and Charles R. Knight, who made murals of dinosaurs in their habitats and sculptures of the living creatures.

The AMNH scow Mary Jane in 1911. Left to right: Henry Fairfield Osborn (AMNH); Fred Saunders (cook from Stettler, Alberta) and Barnum Brown (AMNH)

He was mentored by the paleontologist Edward Drinker Cope, whom he met on a fossil-hunting expedition in Wyoming. The articulate Fairfield Osborn joined the US Geological Survey in 1900 and became senior vertebrate paleontologist in 1924. He led many fossil-hunting expeditions into the American Southwest, starting with his first to Colorado and Wyoming in 1877, when he met Cope. He described and named Ornitholestes in 1903, Tyrannosaurus rex in 1905, the Pentaceratops in 1923, and the Velociraptor in 1924.

Some of his contributions are less celebrated: Osborn's belief in the now-discredited idea of orthogenesis is one such contribution, his promotion of eugenics, another. Andrews' explorations in the Gobi Desert were in part set in action by Osborn's certainty that the origins of man were to be found in Asia. His unfortunate Man Rises to Parnassus, built on the misleading, but "almost miraculous" Piltdown Man hoax, reveals the deeply-imbedded racism of even the educated classes of his generation, supported on pseudoscience. His (not entirely accurate) description of Hyracotherium as "the size of a small Fox Terrier", has been uncritically copied into many elementary palaeontology textbooks.

His best known publication might be his two-volume work of 1936, The Proboscidea: A Monograph of the Discovery, Evolution, Migration and Extinction of the Mastodonts and Elephants of the World, in which he discussed the fossil history and evolution of elephants and their relatives. A second volume appeared in 1942, after his death. He published many papers on fossil proboscideans during his career.

Osborn wrote an influential textbook, The Age of Mammals in Asia, Europe and North America (1910). He also authored The Origin and Evolution of Life (1916).

He co-founded the Save-the-Redwoods League in 1918. He was long-time president of the New York Zoological Society.

He is also known for his theories on intelligence and racial differences, particularly his work The Evolution of Human Races.

He was the father of the conservationist and naturalist Henry Fairfield Osborn, Jr, whom he raised at Castle Rock, the Osborn family estate in Garrison, New York.

Notes

  1. ^ Reviewer in The American Historical Review 108.2 (April 2003) of the critical modern assessment of Osborn's racialist science, Brian Regal, Henry Fairfield Osborn: Race and the Search for the Origins of Man (Burlington, Vt.: Ashgate) 2002. Osborn as an administrator is discussed by Ronald Rainger, An Agenda for Antiquity: Henry Fairfield Osborn and Vertebrate Paleontology at the American Museum of Natural History, 1890–1935 (1991).

References

  • Rainger, R (1980), "The Henry Fairfield Osborn Papers at the American Museum of Natural History.", The Mendel newsletter; archival resources for the history of genetics & allied sciences (18): 8–13, 1980 Jun, PMID 11615816  
  • Angell (1942), "Unveiling of the Bust of Henry Fairfield Osborn at the American Museum of Natural History.", Science 95 (2471): 471–472, 1942 May 8, doi:10.1126/science.95.2471.471, PMID 17789121  
  • Gregory (1942), "Unveiling of the Bust of Henry Fairfield Osborn at the American Museum of Natural History.", Science 95 (2471): 470–471, 1942 May 8, doi:10.1126/science.95.2471.470, PMID 17789120  

External links


Quotes

Up to date as of January 14, 2010

From Wikiquote

Care for the race, even if the individual must suffer -- this must be the keynote of our future.

Henry Fairfield Osborn (August 8, 1857November 6, 1935) was an American geologist, paleontologist, and eugenicist. He described and named the Ornitholestes in 1903, Tyrannosaurus rex in 1905, the Pentaceratops in 1923, and the Velociraptor in 1924.

Sourced

  • But the voice of anatomy, like the voice of all nature, never reaches the mental ear of the Great Commoner. It is the novel province of anatomy to tell the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth about the structure, the origin and the history of man.
    • as stated in "Evolution and Religion in Education: Polemics of the Fundamentalist" on page 138, by Henry Fairfield Osborn, published in 1926. Also stagted in the "New York Times" on July 12 1925, page 1.
  • This chain of human ancestors was totally unknown to Darwin. He could not have even dreamed of such a flood of proof and truth.
    • as quoted in "Summer for the Gods" on page 7, by Edward J. Larson, published in 2006. Originally stated in "Evolution and Religion in Education" (1926), page 41.
  • Care for the race, even if the individual must suffer -- this must be the keynote of our future. This was the guiding principle which underlay all the discussions of the Second International Congress of Eugenics in 1921. Not quantity but quality must be the aim in the development of each nation, to make men fit to maintain their places in the struggle for existence. We must be concerned above all with racial values; every race must seek out and develop and improve its own racial characteristics. Racial consciousness is not pride of race, but proper respect for the Purity of race is today found in but one nation -- the Scandinavian.
    • as stated in "The World's Work: A History of Our Time" on page 253, by Walter Hines Page and Arthur Wilson Page, published in 1924. Also stated in "Man Rises to Parnassus" (1928), pages 220-221
  • We have to be reminded over and over again that Nature is full of paradoxes.
    • as stated in "The Evolution Deceit: The Scientific Collapse of Darwinism" on page 84 by Hârun Yahya, published 2001.
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