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Description
They used dynamite, bribes, and spies to hunt the past. The true story of the two scientists who found the dinosaurs by trying to destroy each other. In the late 19th century, two wealthy scientists, Othniel Charles Marsh and Edward Drinker Cope, engaged in a ruthless competition to find the most dinosaur fossils in the American West. Historian Felix Harper narrates "The Bone Wars," a tale of science, sabotage, and obsession.Harper details how the rivalry escalated from academic debate to open warfare. They bribed each other's workers, stole shipments, and even used dynamite to destroy fossil beds so the other couldn't study them. Despite their childish and destructive behavior, their competition led to the discovery of over 130 species, including the Triceratops and Stegosaurus.The book explores the cost of this feud: both men died broke and socially isolated, having destroyed their own reputations in an attempt to destroy the other. It is a tragicomic look at the Gilded Age of science, proving that the drive for discovery is often fueled by the petty desire to beat a rival.



