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Un Cuvier moderne en Beaujolais - 1912

Voir mercipourlacarte.com/picture?/104...

Collection Lamarsalle, Villefranche

#Beaujolais #chai #cuves #cuvier #élaborationduvin #Mémoireduvin #ouvriersdechai #patrimoineindustriel #pressesàvis #viniculture #wagonnets #winemaking #wineproduction

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THE GREAT FINGER FIASCO: HERMANN AND CUVIER --- Johann Hermann's _Pterodactylus_ , 1800 In the grand annals of science, few discoveries have flapped into history with quite as much confusion as the poor _Pterodactylus_. It began, as many great scientific mix-ups do, with an enthusiastic man, a misplaced fossil, and a few patriotic misunderstandings. Back in March of 1800, Johann Hermann — a German-slash-French scientist (depending on which invading army was in town that week) — became convinced that an odd fossil described by Collini held the key to something extraordinary. Without actually _seeing_ the specimen, Hermann took a bold scientific leap: he announced that the animal used its absurdly long fourth finger to support a wing membrane. This, in hindsight, was rather brilliant — and also rather lucky. Hermann mailed off a letter (and a sketch) to the great French naturalist Georges Cuvier, suggesting that the fossil might even have been war booty, plundered by Napoleon’s scientifically curious troops and whisked off to Paris. After all, France’s armies were busily collecting everything from priceless art to interesting bones at the time — science’s version of a clearance sale. In his letter, Hermann proposed that this mysterious creature was a mammal. Yes, a furry, bat-like, possibly adorable flying thing. He imagined it with soft pelage, wings stretching elegantly from its fourth finger to its ankle, and a fashionable membrane connecting neck to wrist — the very portrait of prehistoric glamour. Cuvier, intrigued and perhaps unwilling to admit he didn’t have the fossil in question, agreed with the wing idea but drew the line at “fuzzy mammal.” In December 1800, he published a short note, adopting Hermann’s winged interpretation but firmly declaring, “ _Non, monsieur — this thing is definitely a reptile._ ” Meanwhile, the fossil — allegedly stolen, possibly missing, and definitely not in Paris — turned up safe and sound in Munich. It had been spared confiscation thanks to one Baron von Moll, who managed to secure an “exemption from French enthusiasm.” By 1809, Cuvier revisited the mystery, producing a longer and more confident description. He called it _Petro-Dactyle_ (a typo he later fixed to _Ptéro-Dactyle_), thereby cementing both his reputation and a new spelling headache for future generations of palaeontologists. He also took the time to dunk on his colleague Johann Friedrich Blumenbach, who had suggested the fossil might belong to a shore bird. Cuvier’s rebuttal was deliciously dry: > “It is not possible to doubt that the long finger served to support a membrane that, by lengthening the anterior extremity of this animal, formed a good wing.” And with that, science had its first flying reptile — a creature born not only from stone but from a glorious mix of imagination, rivalry, and a few well-placed postal misunderstandings. If you ever feel unqualified to make a bold scientific claim, remember Johann Hermann — who identified a whole new order of life _without even seeing the fossil_. Sometimes, a good guess (and a long finger) can take you far as history shows here in the The Great Finger Fiasco: How Johann Hermann and Georges Cuvier Accidentally Invented the Flying Reptile.

THE GREAT FINGER FIASCO: HERMANN AND CUVIER

#cuvier #funny #hermann #HISTORY #paleontology #pterodactylus #stories

Origin | Interest | Match

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En retournant la règle, Berthout arrive à présenter comme une «perte» de 5.000m² de logements ce qui est une création de 15.000m² à #Jussieu à #Paris5 (gain net: +10.000m² au maximum pour se loger à Paris5), dans la barre #Cassan le long de la rue #Cuvier. Bigre! (🧵)

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XIX° débuts #paléontologie #science nvlle
#Cuvier #Buckland #Mantell @editionsflblb.bsky.social
Bel ex. démarche #scientifique couple #scientifiques passionnés quand Église n’aimait pas qu’on conteste ses idées
#BD #actualité en ces temps connaissance scientifique rejetée
tinyurl.com/25mcwx8g

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One of the most enjoyable books I've read in a while. The discovery of the earth's antiquity framed within and against the Victorian metaphysic. #edwarddolnick #antiquity ##maryanning #cuvier

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They had a #Cuvier on display today - one of the founding fathers of Paleontology and a legend of natural sciences 🤘 #RockAndRollScience

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Le séminaire "Muséum, objet d’histoire" (Muséum national d'histoire naturelle) recevra le jeudi 16 mai (17h30, amphi Rouelle) Mme Anne-Louise Le Cossec (IHMC UMR8066) pour une communication : "Frédéric #Cuvier (1773-1838), observateur des animaux et des hommes"
objethistoire.hypotheses.org/2453

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