You
know about the paleontologist Edward Drinker Cope. He was famous for
his feud with fellow paleontologist Othniel Charles Marsh. Cope revealed
how Marsh assembled a nonexistent dinosaur called Brontosaurus by mistakenly combining fossil bones of different species. Then Marsh revealed how Cope had erred by constructing an Elasmosaurus with its head on the wrong end.
Although both were prolific scientists, they are most remembered by the
general public for their highly publicized mistakes. But the story of
Edward Drinker Cope continued long after he died in 1897. He donated his
body to science, specifying that his skeleton be preserved, but not
exhibited.
Originally kept by the American
Anthropometric Society, a group with a fondness for measuring the brains
of famous men, Cope’s skull was passed in 1966 to the University of
Pennsylvania’s Museum of Anthropology, and that’s when things got a
little weird.
A distinguished anthropology professor by the name
of Loren Eiseley saw Cope’s name on a box and left a note that said,
“Gone to lunch—Edward Drinker Cope.” Eiseley took the bones back to his
office and laid them out on a conference table to make sure everything
was intact before placing them back into the box. Over the years, the
paleontologist's remains became a fixture in Eiseley’s office, and the
anthropologist toasted “Eddie” with sherry and even bought him a
birthday present of a skeleton-bedecked printing block. The office staff
also decorated Cope for Christmas.
That was just the
beginning of Cope’s postmortem adventures. Read about his
almost-burial, his road trips, and where he ended up, at mental_floss.
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