The Discovery of the Dinosaurs

In 1822, Mary Mantell was looking at rocks alongside a country lane in Sussex, England.

She noticed something odd in the rocks.

Two of the first Iguanodon teeth ever found

Her husband, Doctor Gideon Mantell, was visiting a patient nearby, and they took the rocks home.


Gideon and Mary Mantell

The teeth Mary Mantell had found were like those of an iguana, a well-known lizard, but much larger.

Doctor Mantell chose the name Iguanodon for the animal which had once owned the teeth.

Over the next twenty years various other ancient bones and teeth were linked to giant land-living reptiles.

In 1842 Richard Owen, superintendent of the Natural History Museum in London, called these animals dinosaurs.

At first, not many full skeletons were found, so rebuilding dinosaurs was difficult.

Richard Owen thought Iguanodon looked like this model, made in the 1850s.




Lots of fossils have been found since, which makes it easier to see a better idea of this amazing animal.



Popular posts from this blog

Climate Change - The link with mass extinctions

Climate Change - The Greenhouse Effect

Climate Change - Coal and carbon dioxide