Article ID: CBB791076306

The ‘Stronsay Beast’: Testimony, evidence and authority in early nineteenth-century natural history (2022)

unapi

When an unknown sea creature was washed ashore on the Orkney Islands in September 1808, the Edinburgh anatomist John Barclay declared that this was the first solid scientific evidence for the existence of the ‘great sea snake’. The testimony of witnesses along with some of its preserved body parts were examined by both the Wernerian Natural History Society in Edinburgh and the surgeon and anatomist Everard Home in London. Contradicting Barclay's opinion, Home identified the creature as a decomposing basking shark. While Barclay took the testimony of the local witnesses largely on trust and accepted their interpretation of the Beast, Home discounted it and instead asserted his own expert authority to correctly interpret the evidence. Both made use of the preserved physical remains of parts of the creature in strikingly different ways: Barclay to support the accounts of the witnesses, Home to undermine them. The debate between the two anatomists has much to tell us about the uses of evidence and testimony in early nineteenth-century natural history, but also has broader resonances for the roles of evidence and authority in science that still remain relevant today.

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Authors & Contributors
Jenkins, Bill
Allen, David Elliston
Bayer, Ronald
Dyck, Erika
Hogan, Andrew J.
Mason, Julia M.
Journals
Archives of Natural History
Journal for the History of Astronomy
Ambix: Journal of the Society for the History of Alchemy and Chemistry
Annals of Science: The History of Science and Technology
Archives Internationales d'Histoire des Sciences
British Journal for the History of Science
Publishers
Columbia University
Ashgate Publishing
Johns Hopkins University Press
Concepts
Natural history
Authorities; experts
Experience; witness
Amateurs
Observation
Evidence
People
Jameson, Robert
Audubon, John James
Forbes, Edward
Home, Everard
Knox, Robert
MacGillivray, William
Time Periods
19th century
18th century
20th century, late
21st century
Medieval
15th century
Places
Edinburgh (Scotland)
Scotland
Great Britain
Europe
Russia
Spain
Institutions
University of Edinburgh
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