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- <text id=90TT2405>
- <title>
- Sep. 10, 1990: Profile:Jack Horner
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
- Sep. 10, 1990 Playing Cat And Mouse
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- PROFILE, Page 76
- Head Man In the Boneyard
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>No one knows more about how dinosaurs lived than Jack Horner,
- so why are so many six-year-olds mad at the paleontologist?
- </p>
- <p>By Richard Conniff
- </p>
- <p> Somewhere in eastern Montana, in the rolling, eroded hills
- known as the Hell Creek formation, paleontologist Jack Horner
- sips a beer and looks down at the most complete Tyrannosaurus
- rex ever unearthed. It lies on its left side, its neck twisted
- back pitiably. Horner's crew has just exposed a section of
- pelvic bone to its first sunset in 65 million years, and
- someone remarks on the redness of the bone, like smoked bacon.
- </p>
- <p> "It's the comet," says Horner, with a deep nod.
- </p>
- <p> "That's why it's smoked," his crew chief says.
- </p>
- <p> Well, O.K., maybe not. Have a beer, sit down in the gray
- sandstone grit, but do not attempt to reopen the great debate
- over whether the dinosaurs were wiped out at the end of the
- Cretaceous period by a huge comet or a vast cloud of volcanic
- dust or any of 80-odd other proposed killers, all of which
- Horner spurns. He has a rubber stamp that says, WHO GIVES A
- S---WHAT KILLED THE DINOSAURS? Horner cares about how they
- lived.
- </p>
- <p> Over the past decade, his ideas on this subject, based on
- a series of extraordinary finds, have helped rescue dinosaurs
- from the abstract realm of monsters, enabling people to view
- them for the first time as real animals. These theories have
- earned such respect in the scientific community that Horner,
- who flunked out of college seven times and was driving a truck
- in the family gravel business only 15 years ago, now heads the
- largest dinosaur research team in the country. Supported in
- part by the National Science Foundation and a MacArthur
- Foundation "genius award," Horner oversees a staff of seven and
- six students. At the same time, his concepts of the social and
- family lives of dinosaurs have made him the bane of
- bloody-minded six-year-olds everywhere.
- </p>
- <p> Horner has demonstrated that some dinosaurs were nurturing
- parents, raising their young in large nesting colonies and
- bringing their offspring berries and green vegetation, much as
- do birds. He has shown that the young in such species were
- neotenous--or cute, as Horner puts it more plainly; until
- maturity they were gawky, with such vulnerable traits as
- enlarged heads, big eyes and shortened snouts, which theorists
- of animal behavior believe elicit the nurturing response in
- humans and other child-rearing species.
- </p>
- <p> In place of the familiar panoramas of flesh-ripping
- Godzillas, Horner describes the most common dinosaurs as "the
- cows of the Mesozoic." He has found the remnants of one
- dinosaur herd--an estimated 10,000 waddling, plant-eating
- duckbills. Even Tyrannosaurus rex seems less terrible in his
- revisionist view. Horner believes it followed herds of
- triceratops, scavenging carcasses and occasionally preying on
- weak individuals, much as hyenas follow wildebeests in Africa.
- Artists' renderings of pitched battles in which a triceratops
- tries to gore a tyrannosaurus in the belly are misleading.
- Triceratops was more likely to use its horns as a modern deer
- uses its antlers, not mainly for battle but to establish
- dominance in the herd and attract a mate.
- </p>
- <p> If the viewpoint is unconventional, so is the man. Horner,
- 44, teaches at Montana State University and is curator of
- paleontology at the Museum of the Rockies in Bozeman, but he
- has no knack for academic decorum (administrators at the museum
- wish the rubber stamp could say, I DON'T GIVE A DARN WHAT
- KILLED THE DINOSAURS). He disdains intellectual showboating,
- describing his own tyrannosaurus as a "media specimen,"
- valuable mainly because it will bring the fang-and-claw set
- into the museum to see really important stuff, like duckbills
- tending their offspring. His manner is casual and laconic,
- which fits with the scraggly beard, the sneakers and the bush
- hat. But when a volunteer presents some fossils he has
- gathered, Horner handles them attentively. Then he peers from
- under his domed brow, and through a veil of smoke rising from
- the cigarette at the corner of his mouth, he inquires, "What
- else did you find out there?" There is about him something of
- the disguised intensity of a gold prospector. He smokes each
- cigarette down to the filter.
- </p>
- <p> Growing up in Shelby, Mont., Horner collected his first
- dinosaur fossil at the age of eight, and he set out in high
- school to become either a paleontologist or the next Wernher
- Von Braun. His schoolwork was wretched, but he excelled at
- science projects. One, presented to a small group of bored
- adults at the local airport, was an experiment to track the
- flight of a homemade rocket. It went up 15,000 ft. at a
- velocity of 800 m.p.h., and the memory of his gaping elders
- still gratifies Horner, who scraped through high school with
- a D average.
- </p>
- <p> By managing to worsen his academic record in college, he
- soon found employment doing reconnaissance for the Marines in
- Vietnam. Then he began a renewed assault on college. The
- theoretical character of rocketry frustrated him, but fossils
- were something he could get his hands on, and he put in a total
- of seven years pursuing courses in paleontology without earning
- a degree. He describes himself then as "driven" and says, "I
- didn't want to seem like just another idiot." Horner went into
- the family's gravel business, but he continued to hunt for a
- job in the dinosaur line, finally landing one in 1975 as an
- assistant in paleontology at Princeton University, where his
- first assignment was to straighten bent nails. There, at the age
- of 31, he discovered that his academic problem was not
- stupidity but dyslexia.
- </p>
- <p> Starting out early one recent morning in Hell Creek, Horner
- points to a black line in the layer cake of geologic deposits.
- "That's the Tertiary-Cretaceous boundary," he advises a
- newcomer. "There's nothing above there but a lot of old
- mammals. Gives dinosaur people nosebleeds to go up that high."
- Farther down, at the tyrannosaurus site, his crew of graduate
- students and preparators are already chinking and clanging into
- the sandstone with jackhammers, pickaxes, shovels, chisels and
- ice picks. The workers are at it from 7:30 to 4:30, six days
- a week, with a fine gray dust accumulating in the folds of their
- ears and eyes. Then, after dinner, they prowl the hills for
- new finds. They are bivouacked 55 miles from the nearest shower
- stall, in Jordan. "I give 'em lots of beer," Horner explains.
- "And I find good things for them to dig up."
- </p>
- <p> In the latter cause, Horner heads out each day with his
- fossil hunter's pick in one hand and a cigarette in the other.
- The hillsides are pocked with deep sinkholes and covered with
- bentonite, a loose mudstone that gives the sensation of walking
- on popcorn. When Horner slips, he drives the pick in up to its
- haft and hangs on as it plows a neat furrow 30 feet down a
- hillside without catching on anything solid. If this were an
- Indiana Jones movie, he would smash into something wonderful
- at the bottom--the skull of a Pachycephalosaurus, say. In
- real life, all Horner gets is a banged-up human knee.
- </p>
- <p> Triceratopses can be had cheap hereabouts. Horner picks his
- way through the litter ("Rib city," he remarks, dismissively)
- with an eye for the shape of the land as it was in the
- Cretaceous, when rivers from the Rockies flowed through eastern
- Montana into a vast central seaway. At one point he kneels and
- works at some potentially good thing with a car mechanic's
- gasket scraper, then sweeps off the debris with a whisk broom.
- A visitor asks what he has found. "I haven't got a clue," he
- says, wrapping the pieces of bone in toilet paper. "That's why
- I'm taking it." Elsewhere he stops at an unusual fossil spotted
- the night before by a graduate student out fishing, who
- excavated it part way with a daredevil spoon intended for
- catching bass, not dinosaurs. "It's a metatarsal," Horner says,
- completing the job. "Ornithomimid. And a darn nice one at
- that."
- </p>
- <p> One day in 1977, while fossil hunting with his father in
- Montana's Two Medicine formation, Horner picked up a rock that
- resembled a squashed turtle. It turned out to be one of the
- first intact dinosaur eggs ever found in the western
- hemisphere, and Horner's work at Princeton thus came to focus
- on one of paleontology's great mysteries: the almost complete
- absence of juvenile dinosaurs, especially babies, from the
- fossil record. He went back to Montana the following summer,
- with the idea of spending his vacation searching for babies in
- some likely shales, in the company of a beer-drinking,
- fossil-hunting pal named Bob Makela. They wound up one Sunday
- morning helping the owner of a rock shop in Bynum identify some
- of her fossils. Among them was a coffee can full of bones from
- a recent dig, including a fragment of a thumb-size femur.
- "You're not going to believe this," Horner remarked to Makela
- when he picked it up.
- </p>
- <p> The femur and a collection of other bones back at the house
- were from baby duckbills. The shop owner took the two
- paleontologists to a ranch near Choteau where she had found the
- fragments, and during the next few weeks the scientists
- unearthed an entire nest 6 ft. in diameter, separating out the
- fossils with a garden hose and a window screen. To
- nonpaleontologists, Horner writes in his recent book, Digging
- Dinosaurs (Workman Publishing; $17.95), the fossils resembled
- "a bunch of black, sticklike rocks--jumbled and inscrutable,
- the way much of modern art seems to me." But to Horner, they
- were the remains of 15 duckbill babies, almost ready to leave
- the nest. Nearby he also found the adults that had apparently
- reared their offspring to this stage. From such evidence as the
- worn teeth and incompletely formed bones of the nestlings,
- Horner inferred that the parents were sharing food with them
- and, from their growth rate, that they were warm blooded.
- </p>
- <p> Such parenting behavior is unknown in modern reptiles and
- had been unsuspected in dinosaurs, leading Horner to name this
- new genus Maiasaura, or "good mother" dinosaurs. Later he found
- a cluster of such nests, separated from one another by about
- 25 ft., the length of an adult maiasaur. He argued that they
- dated from a single breeding season 80 million years ago and
- that dinosaurs returned to this breeding ground yearly, like
- migratory birds.
- </p>
- <p> Horner devotes much of his time to presenting dinosaurs as
- they lived day by day. At the Museum of the Rockies on Sept.
- 15, he will open a new dinosaur hall in which, risking heresy,
- there will be nothing scary. An orodromeus scratches its jaw
- with a hind leg, and a maiasaur sits like a huge, impassive
- camel. In a corner a pterosaur stands on the ground, looking
- like an Audubon heron in a fun-house mirror. "I wanted the
- exhibits to portray animals," says Horner, "not just single
- events of aggression."
- </p>
- <p> Going against the custom of mounting the most spectacular
- dinosaur bones on steel, which can reduce their scientific
- value, he aims to put only a bronze cast of his tyrannosaurus
- outside the museum. The bones will go on display much as his
- crew found them. The idea is to let ordinary museumgoers see
- the evidence from which paleontologists make their leaps of
- reasoning and imagination. They will be able to argue, for
- instance, over the only tyrannosaurus arm ever found. It is
- about as long as a human arm--too short, in Horner's view, to
- be much use in predation, but far more muscular than previously
- thought, having been capable of curling 400 lbs. Horner seems
- to relish arguing such questions imaginatively far more than
- actually proving himself right. In Horner's undogmatic
- approach, the museum's fleshed-out dioramas are designed to
- evolve every few years as our view of dinosaurs advances.
- </p>
- <p> His dyslexia, which still sometimes causes him to puzzle for
- half an hour over a single word, has predisposed Horner against
- academic overcomplication and rigidity. He isn't the type to
- stake out an intellectual claim and spend his life footnoting
- it and fending off critics. For Horner, what matters is getting
- into the field, finding more bones and listening to what his
- hands have to say about them. Early one morning on a roadside
- somewhere north of Jordan, he pulls on a backpack loaded with
- water bottles, tools, a can of sardines for lunch. He has about
- him an air of understated excitement. "Let's go look for some
- damned dinosaurs," he says. Then he heads out once again to the
- bone-rich hills of Hell Creek.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-