Edward Cope's reconstruction of Laelaps aquilunguis. This work was on display in the original exhibition as item 11. Image source: Cope, Edward Drinker. "The fossil reptiles of New Jersey," in: American Naturalist, vol. 3 (1869), pp. 84-91, pl. 2.

Paper Dinosaurs 1824-1969

An Exhibition of Original Publications from the Collections of the Linda Hall Library

Popular Perceptions of Dinosaurs

Sprinting Iguanodon, 1927

Restoration of Compsognathus by Gerhard Heilmann. This work was on display in the original exhibition as item 44. Image source: Heilmann, Gerhard. The Origin of Birds. New York, D. Appleton & Company, 1927, p. 168.

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Gerhard Heilmann wrote The Origin of Birds to offer evidence against Huxley's thesis that dinosaurs evolved from birds (see item 15). Heilmann's primary argument was that the birdlike dinosaurs lacked any evidence of a wishbone or of collar bones, and collar bones are the presumed antecedents of avian wishbones. The book proved very persuasive, and the dinosaur-bird connection was abandoned for many years until it was revived in the 1970s.

But his thesis didn't keep Heilmann, a talented artist, from representing dinosaurs in very active, birdlike poses. His drawings of Compsognathus, running flat-out with its head down (right), and of a pair of sprinting Iguanodon (below), have become classics, since they seem to embody so well the concept of the active dinosaur.

Most of the illustrations are pen and ink drawings, but the book also includes a double-page wash drawing of the Berlin Archaeopteryx that is absolutely stunning, and is too rarely reproduced. 

Restoration of Iguanodon by Gerhard Heilmann. This work was on display in the original exhibition as item 44. Image source: Heilmann, Gerhard. The Origin of Birds. New York, D. Appleton & Company, 1927, p. 157.

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Struthiomimus and Gorgosaurus, 1927

Restoration of Struthiomimus. This work was on display in the original exhibition as item 44. Image source: Heilmann, Gerhard. The Origin of Birds. New York, D. Appleton & Company, 1927, p. 184.

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There are 142 figures in Heilmann’s book, all drawn by Heilmann himself, but only six of these are restorations of dinosaurs (his book, after all, is about birds, which he did not think were related to dinosaurs).

In addition to Iguanodon and Compsognathus, he also depicted Struthiomimus (right) and Gorgosaurus (below). Struthiomimus was named in 1916 by Henry Fairfield Osborn (see item 35), from a specimen discovered by Barnum Brown in 1914. Gorgosaurus was discovered by Charles H. Sternberg in 1913 and named and described by Lawrence Lambe in 1914. Some consider it to be an Albertosaurus; others prefer to retain Gorgosaurus as a separate genus.

Gorgosaurs at the carcase of a Trachodon. This work was on display in the original exhibition as item 44. Image source: Heilmann, Gerhard. The Origin of Birds. New York, D. Appleton & Company, 1927, p. 172.

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Heilmann's Archaeopteryx, 1927

Drawing of Archaeopteryx restoration made by Heilmann. This work was on display in the original exhibition as item 44. Image source: Heilmann, Gerhard. The Origin of Birds. New York, D. Appleton & Company, 1927, fig. 2.

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Although Heilmann’s dinosaur restorations are justly renowned today, because he showed dinosaurs in such active poses, those are relatively small images, set right into the text. For his representation of the Berlin Archaeopteryx, Heilmann chose to use a large, double-page, folding plate. In what appears to be a photolithograph, Heilmann reproduced a life-size drawing that he himself had made from the actual specimen in Berlin. The reproduction shows his drawing at one-half size. Although the plate is mounted in the book with the head at the top, it is apparent from the signature that Heilmann drew it with the head at the left, as has always been the convention with this specimen, and we therefore show it here in the conventional position.

For other images of the Berlin Archaeopteryxsee item 16.