Before the early 1800s, no one knew that dinosaurs existed. When Robert Plot, an English antiquarian, found a huge, unusual bone in a Cornwall quarry, he didn’t know what it was. When he published a drawing of it, in 1676, he said it was probably the bone of an elephant, brought to Britain by the Romans. Examining the drawing today, scientists believe the bone was most likely part of a Megalosaurus femur.
When Mary Anning Mantell (or her husband, Dr. Gideon Mantell) "discovered" the first dinosaur tooth in 1822, and William Buckland found a fossilized jaw (with teeth still in place), the word "dinosaur" had not been coined.
The tooth, allegedly found by the side of the road in the English village of Cuckfield, was similar to other teeth Gideon would later discover in the "Sandstone of Tilgate Forest in Sussex." They belonged to a creature Dr. Mantell named Iguanodon (literally "iguana tooth").
During the ensuing years, other fossilized Iguanodon remains were found:
- A "horn" (initially thought to be part of the creature’s nose but later proven to be a "thumb spike"
- A 3-toed foot which matched fossilized footprints Samuel Beckles (here at the Swanage "mammal pit") found on the Isle of Wight;
- Many bones found in a Maidstone quarry (which Gideon Mantell arranged on a single slab
now owned by the British Museum); and
- By 1844, enough remains to create an actual skeletal mount.
The first rendering of an Iguanodon in its likely environment, The Country of the Iguanadon, was painted by John Martin in 1838.
Meanwhile the jaw, which William Buckland had found in a quarry near Oxford, was about to gain its own fame. It was featured in Buckland’s 1824 paper which describes, for the first time, a class of creatures we now know as dinosaurs. Buckland named his find Megalosaurus (literally, "great lizard").
Nearly two decades later, when Sir Richard Owens coined the name Dinosauria (meaning the "terrible lizards"), paleontology was not the science it is now. Since then, the subject of dinosaurs has become a passion for both professionals and amateurs.
As it happens, however, popular culture has strayed from scientific evidence on the topic of Jurassic-era dinosaurs.