Around Christmastime, 1910, New Yorkers
were beset by a case of dinosaur fever. The New York Times kicked things off on
December 21 of that year, in a front-page article that began, “The well-preserved
skeleton of what appears to have been a dinosaur, 30 to 40 feet long and 15 to
18 feet in
height, has been found in the Palisades opposite West 155th Street.”
The bones had been discovered some months
earlier that year by a group of Columbia University students out “geologizing”
along the western banks of the Hudson, collecting rock specimens from beneath the
Palisades. Upon finding what appeared to be ancient bone fragments, the students contacted the American Museum of Natural History, whose curators of
paleontology
investigated the site, concluding, according to the Times, “that embedded in
the rock was the complete skeleton of a prehistoric monster of the dinosaur class
something of a cross between a crocodile and an ostrich on a greatly exaggerated
scale,” and having “lived probably 10,000,000 years ago.” The find was thus
probably the oldest and largest fossil remains so far found in this region.
Following the initial discovery had been
months of negotiations between the museum and the owners of the property for the right to
acquire the bonesthe find was made just south of the Interstate Parks boundary
in Edgewater, about half a mile from where the George Washington Bridge would be
builtand then the delicate work of extracting the bones to bring them across the
river to the museum. The bones were embedded in a layer of softer shale beneath the
cliffs, right along the rivers edge, and the entire block of stone in which they
were embedded, weighing about 5,000 pounds, needed to be cut from the surrounding rock and
transported whole, so that it could be dried out before an attempt to cut around the
individual bones could be made.
The Times
followed up with a
full-page Christmas-day article entitled, “When The Giant Dinosaur Walked Down
Broadway.” The paper suggested that the animal, “which would frighten out of his
wits any sane man not a paleontologist,” was probably a “great herbivorous
dinosaur” known as an “iguanodon.” This beast, which “antedated
Father Knickerbocker some ten million years,” if seen one evening by a modern
partygoer, would, the Times winked, cause him to “anchor himself on the water
wagon for evermore
”
If we seem to be making light of the
Times’
coverage in 1910 of what truly was a remarkable find, it is only because we in
fact share the writer’s enthusiasm for the subject of dinosaurs, in full
agreement that “the imagination runs riot with all kinds of speculations as to
the nature of this strange primitive beast which once roamed at will along
what are now the banks of the Hudson…” In that spirit, we recently
took
a trip
to the museum, just to visit our old friend, known as AMNH 4991.
AMNH 4991 is on display in the
museums Hall of Vertebrate Origins, as a group of bones like a scattering of
pick-up-sticks, still partially embedded in the block of stone in which it was found.
Reconstructions of skeletons and skulls from similar animals are alongside it. The bones
in 4991 represent, in essence, the hindquarters of the animal. One of the most fascinating
things about such collections of bones, of course, is how scientists are able to
determine, with fairly high degrees of certainty, the full nature of the beast that left
them. It is believed today that 4991 was not an “iguanodon”or even,
properly speaking, a “dinosaur”but rather a creature of the genus
Phytosaurus,
a group of aquatic, crocodile-like reptiles with long-toothed snouts, long, flattened
tails, and eyes and nostrils set on top of their heads. (The classification system for
phytosaurs gets somewhat complicated, and has changed numerous times over the years, but
4991s present designation is Clepsysaurus manhattanensis.) The dating of the
animal has been pushed back a bit, tooby around 200 million years, placing it in the
late Triassic Age, some 210 million years ago.
It is still considered one of the most
significant fossil finds in this region, the first solid proof that dinosaurs (or
dinosaur-like creatures) once inhabited the New York region. Until then, ancient fossils
were associated with more far-flung areas, whether the American Southwest or the distant
Gobi Desert.
In 1963, the skull of a similar creature
was unearthed in an old quarry several miles away, in North Bergen. Other fossil finds
along the Palisades have included a number of coelacanth fishes and one of the earliest
winged reptiles, called Icarosaurus. Like 4991, these finds date back to the
Triassic Age, when the great, subterranean intrusion of magma that would become the
Palisades occurred. These stones into which the magma flowed had been deposited over many
millions of years, along with the occasional skeleton. The flow of molten rock would bake
these softer sandstones and shale beneath it, metamorphosing them, and when conditions
allowed, occasionally preserving one of the ancient skeletons to be found eons later.
The thought of these
“monsters”
here in New Jersey is still exciting, as is the thought that other fossils
undoubtedly wait to be found. Right here, in our own “Triassic Park.”
Sources:
New York Times: Dec., 21, 1910,
and
Dec. 25, 1910.
American Museum of Natural History
Novitates: 1913, Article XV: “A New Phytosaur from the Palisades Near New York,” Friederich von Huene.
1965, No. 2230: “A Phytosaur from North Bergen, New
Jersey,” Edwin H. Colbert.
The Wild Palisades of the Hudson
by
John Serrao (1986: Lind Publications).
EN