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    relacionado a: Gideon Mantell
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  1. Mantell, G.A. 1848: On the structure of the jaws and teeth of the Iguanodon. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London 138: 183–202. Mantell, G.A. 1850: On the Pelorosaurus : an undescribed gigantic terrestrial reptile, whose remains are associated with those of the Iguanodon and other saurians in the strata of Tilgate Forest, in Sussex.

  2. 24 de dez. de 2020 · Gideon Mantell (1790–1852) was an English physician and geologist best known for pioneering the scientific study of dinosaurs. After an apprenticeship to a local surgeon in Sussex, Mantell became a member of the Royal College of Surgeons in 1811.

  3. The Fossils of the South Downs is a survey of the paleontological discoveries made by the geologist Gideon Mantell and his wife Mary Ann Woohouse at Tilgate Quarry near Cuckfield. The Mantells had discovered fossilised fish and bones that were larger than those uncovered by William Buckland in Oxfordshire. While preparing this book for publication in 1822, Mary Ann discovered fossilised teeth ...

  4. Gideon Mantell was an English obstetrician from Lewes, Sussex, a few miles north of Brighton, the son of a shoemaker. He was drawn to the exciting new science of paleontology, and had been collecting fossil bones and fragments from the South Downs for several years when, in 1822, he (or possibly his wife) came across an unusual fossilized tooth.

  5. 25 de ago. de 2021 · Gideon Mantell (1790–1852) was an English physician and geologist best known for pioneering the scientific study of dinosaurs. After an apprenticeship to a local surgeon in Sussex, Mantell became a member of the Royal College of Surgeons in 1811.

  6. In 1822 Gideon Mantell, a doctor from Lewes, East Sussex, described a fossil tooth which his wife had found by the side of the road in Cuckfield, West Sussex. This tooth was the first dinosaur fossil in the world ever to be identified. For the very first time people began to realise that creatures as large as dinosaurs had once existed.

  7. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › IguanodonIguanodon - Wikipedia

    The story goes that Gideon Mantell's wife, Mary Ann, discovered the first teeth of an Iguanodon in the strata of Tilgate Forest in Whitemans Green, Cuckfield, Sussex, England, in 1822 while her husband was visiting a patient. However, there is no evidence that Mantell took his wife with him while seeing patients.