Composite photograph of Charles Dawson (left) during excavation work and the lower right canine of Piltdown Man Eoanthropus dawsoni. Dawson (1864- 191


Composite photograph of Charles Dawson (left) during excavation work and the lower right canine of Piltdown Man Eoanthropus dawsoni. Dawson (1864- 1916) an amateur geologist, discovered fragments of a skull near Piltdown, Sussex, which was described in 1912, & became known as Piltdown Man. A reconstruction was made by Arthur Smith Woodward, a leading palaeontologist of the day. Piltdown was presented as the link between modern man and his distant ancestor the ape, combining the large brain of man with an ape-like jaw. In 1953 Piltdown Man was shown to be a fraud. The skull fragment's were human & the jaw belonged to an ape; they were not from the same individual.


Size: 5167px × 3425px
Photo credit: © JOHN READER/SCIENCE PHOTO LIBRARY / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No

Keywords: biology, charles, dawson, dawsoni, eoanthropus, evolution, evolutionary, fraud, fraudster, human, man, palaeoanthropology, paleoanthropology, piltdown, portraits, surname