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Dusting Off the Remains of a Hoax

November 4 2003 at 9:28 AM
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http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A54672-2003Nov2.html

Dusting Off the Remains of a Hoax

Piltdown Man Comes Out of Storage, but Perpetrator of the Original Fraud Is Still a Mystery
By Guy Gugliotta
Washington Post Staff Writer
Monday, November 3, 2003; Page A08


As scientific hoaxes go, few have matched it. Sometime early in the 20th century, someone -- it is still unclear who -- "salted" a gravel pit near the town of Piltdown, England, with what were purported to be the 500,000-year-old fossil remains of a human ancestor -- half human, half ape.

The timing couldn't have been better. Darwin's "Origin of Species" was barely 50 years old, the French and Germans had found Neanderthals, and the race was on to discover the storied "missing link" in the evolution from apes to humans.

"In Britain we had some early modern humans, but nothing really old," paleoanthropologist Chris Stringer said in a telephone interview from his office in Britain's Natural History Museum. "There were stone tools, though, so there was almost a national expectation that we should have something."

And suddenly, there it was. Piltdown man made his appearance in 1912 and held a place of honor in the museum until Nov. 21, 1953, when a new generation of scientists announced that the famous fossil was a fraud.

Modern dating techniques established that the skull came from a modern human and the jawbone was an orangutan's. The ape teeth had been filed with a rasp to match the human teeth above them.

This month, the museum will take the Piltdown remains out of storage and put them on display during the Pfizer Annual Science Forum to commemorate the 50th anniversary of the fraud's discovery.

But who did it? The prime suspect has always been Charles Dawson, the lawyer and amateur paleontologist who "discovered" the fossil in the gravel pit, but over the years virtually everyone connected with it has come under suspicion, either as a lone actor or as part of a conspiracy.

The list also includes outsiders, among them Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, an ardent spiritualist whose disdain for evolutionary theory stood in stark contrast to the cold logic practiced by his fictional hero, Sherlock Holmes.

And why did it take half a century to figure out that Piltdown man was a phony? "The people who believed in it were very powerful," Stringer said, especially Arthur Smith Woodward, the museum's leading geologist at the time of the discovery. "You had to be very cautious about taking after people like this."

U.S. scholars had no such compunctions, however, and expressed early skepticism over the find. Smithsonian mammologist Gerrit Smith Miller even suggested the possibility of a forgery.

"But then came World War I," Stringer said. People had other things to think about, "and when it was over, the agenda moved on."

And finally, suggests James Randi, a retired magician who has made a successful second career calling attention to the shortcomings of pseudoscience and claims of the supernatural, the story of Piltdown man was simply too good to check.

"Britain always wanted to be the source of all life and culture, but they needed an early artifact that the public was willing to accept," Randi said in a telephone interview from Plantation, Fla. "They needed it to be true."

Such a hoax is hard to kill, he added. "People go to healers and say, 'Praise Jesus, I can walk!' but when you see them after the service, they're still in a wheelchair," Randi said. "They tell you the devil's interfering, and they're still happy even when the paramedics take them home in an ambulance."

As the years passed, Piltdown man lost favor among paleontologists and came to be ignored in scholarly texts. An increasingly multi-branched evolutionary tree no longer accommodated the presence of a single missing link.

And with the advent of modern dating techniques after World War II, Piltdown's days were numbered. In 1953 a team of scientists at the British Museum's Natural History Branch (which would become the Natural History Museum) announced that fluorine-based tests showed that the skull was that of a modern human approximately 50,000 years old. Later tests would show the skull was less than 1,000 years old.

The orangutan jaw, the 1953 team said, was probably new when the fossil was found. The hoaxer had stained it with potassium dichromate to make it look older. The museum -- keepers of the Piltdown flame for half a century -- had extinguished it.

In retrospect, the fraud seemed obvious. Stringer said all the animal bones accompanying the remains were recognizable and "diagnostic" in pinpointing the age of the find. "We know now that that never happens," he said. "Half the stuff you find in a fossil bed, you don't know what it is."

Still, he added, "some people say it was very amateurish, but given the time, I thought they did a pretty good job." He acknowledged that investigators had failed for decades to notice the filed teeth, "but nobody ever looked."

Randi suggested the culprit was an outsider such as Conan Doyle, who lived close to Dawson and may have wanted to discredit him. "It would have been a tremendous satisfaction to him to know that it was a hoax," Randi said. "He would never have to say anything ."

But Stringer argued against an outsider: "If your motive is enmity, you want to expose the discovery" as a fraud in order to expose the discoverer as a charlatan. But by 1953 almost everyone -- including Conan Doyle -- was long dead.

Stringer said Dawson is still "my prime candidate," a paleontology wannabe who probably perpetrated the fraud, perhaps with an accomplice, to enhance his academic credentials. Dawson died suddenly in 1916, taking his secrets to the grave.

"It's possible, though, that there's a more complex scenario," Stringer added, suggesting that a series of analytical articles written in 1981 for New Scientist magazine by L. Harrison Matthews, a British biologist, may hold some clues.

In this reconstruction, Dawson plants the phony artifacts and then convinces his friend Woodward of their authenticity. Two young museum researchers, Pierre Teilhard de Chardin and Martin A.C. Hinton, think Piltdown man is a fraud but are afraid to risk Woodward's disfavor by contradicting him.

Instead, they decide to salt the Piltdown site themselves, hoping to expose the hoax by planting preposterous fossils, including an elephant bone known as "the cricket bat," a fitting tool for "the first Englishman." To their horror, however, their artifacts are accepted as authentic, effectively silencing them as unwitting abettors of the fraud.

Stringer noted that everyone in the story has been accused elsewhere of being the primary hoaxer, but he said that Woodward, at least, was probably a true believer. "He retired near Piltdown and spent time digging there," Stringer said. "He never found anything."

 
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Fifty Years Since Piltdown Meltdown

November 6 2003, 8:26 AM 

http://www.family.org/cforum/fnif/news/a0028727.cfm

November 4, 2003

Fifty Years Since Piltdown Meltdown
by Keith Peters, Washington, D.C., correspondent


Hoax was designed to prove the theory of evolution.

This month is an important anniversary for evolutionists, but not one they want to remember. It's been 50 years since a hoax that tells us a lot about the lengths many will go to validate a worldview.

It was advertised as one of the links that proved evolution, a discovery of a man-ape called the Piltdown man because he was found in a gravel pit near Piltdown, England. He was displayed proudly in Britain's Natural History Museum for 41 years. But in 1953, scientists announced he was a fraud.

"Somebody had taken the skull of a human, the jaw of an orangutan, filed down the teeth of the orangutan jaw and stained everything to make it look old," explained Ken Ham, president of the creation-science ministry Answers in Genesis.

Dr. Duane Gish, a biological scientist in residence at the Institute for Creation Research, predicts there will be more frauds of this type as society becomes increasingly secularized. He offered advice to anyone who hears reports about new evolutionary discoveries.

"Be completely skeptical of accounts of that kind," he said. "We know that man was not created in the image of an ape. He was created in the image of God, and the overwhelming evidence will certainly support creation."

 
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Revealed: The Solicitor Who Fooled Science

November 13 2003, 8:01 AM 

http://news.independent.co.uk/world/science_medical/story.jsp?story=463224

Revealed: the solicitor who fooled science with fossils of 'ancient' Piltdown Man
By Steve Connor, Science Editor
13 November 2003


Fifty years after one of the great fossil frauds was exposed, two academics believe they may have answered a question which has intrigued science: who faked Piltdown Man?

When the remains of an ancient man were found in a quarry in Sussex in 1911-12, scientists believed that they had found the "missing link" between humans and apes.

It was only in 1953 that dating evidence proved that Piltdown Man was not an ape-like human who lived more than 500,000 years ago. "He" had been made out of a medieval human skull and the jawbone of a modern ape.

In a public lecture to be given at the museum later this month, Professor Chris Stringer and Andy Currant will explain why they think the hoax of Piltdown Man was actually two frauds committed by two sets of people.

And they will name the man they believe was behind the original fraud - Charles Dawson, the solicitor and respected amateur geologist who found the skull and jawbone.

"We don't have the smoking gun, but we come close to reconstructing the sequence of events pretty well," Professor Stringer said. "Dawson found the first pieces and he was present when all the major finds were made at Piltdown. After he died, no more stuff turned up so for me Dawson was the prime suspect, although we don't know whether he did everything or whether he worked alone." Dawson presented his findings to the Geological Society in London in December 1912 with Arthur Smith Woodward, the keeper of geology at the Natural History Museum.

In Britain the scientific establishment backed the claims and Piltdown Man became a sensation.

In the same year that the fossil went on display at the Natural History Museum, a young priest called Teilhard de Chardin made another important find at Piltdown - a canine tooth that matched the original jawbone. The tooth fulfilled important predictions about the half-human, half-ape nature of the creature.

But then another highly unusual fossil was found. "It was a big piece of bone, it had obviously been well doctored, it was definitely deliberately stained and it had been chopped in a crude way," said Dr Currant. The artefact appeared to be a flat tool fashioned by Stone Age man from elephant bone. In fact, although it was a fossil, the cuts were made with a metal tool, Dr Currant said.

"Chris and I both believe that this was planted by somebody else. This was nothing to do with the original forgery. The only way of interpreting this is that this is somebody in the know saying, 'OK, we've rumbled you,'" he said.

 
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