The Piltdown hoax is one of the biggest frauds known in
scientific history. It took place in a small village called Piltdown in the
town of Lewes located in Southern England in the year 1912. An amateur archeologist
from Sussex England named Charles Dawson had received a primitive skull from
one of his laborers who had discovered it. Dawson was already building a
reputation for himself within the scientific community and became an
opportunist when he realized that the ancient skull that the laborer had found
could catapult him to elite status within the academic society. He was very
enthusiastic about making spectacular discoveries and he would go to any length
to accomplish doing so even if he had to fool the world in the process. Dawson
had forged the skull found at Piltdown and claimed that it was the so called
missing link that would connect humans and apes, and in the process put Britain
on the map in regards to having ancient hominid history His hoax went
undiscovered for forty years until scientific technology improved ..
Scientist are well respected individuals and scholars and a
hoax played on the scientific world by one of their own would be the last thing
you expect a scientist to do. Scientist were outraged because of the amount of attention paid to evolution regarding the Piltdown find. It was covetousness and greed that drove Charles
Dawson to deceive his colleagues they proclaimed. For forty years people believed that prehistoric
man had existed in England and more importantly they believed that the skull
was the missing link between humans and apes. Fortunately with the aid of new
technology, Dawson’s hoax was exposed in 1953 by a professor named Kenneth
Oakley of the British Museum. By using a technique called fluorine analysis,
professor Oakley was able to prove that the jaw of the skull that Dawson
presented was much younger than the rest of the skull because they contained
different levels of fluorine and the amounts of fluorine the skeletal remains
had from seepage of groundwater should have been the same considering that they
were found at the same site.
Unfortunately it isn’t possible to remove the human factor
from science so that such a hoax will never happen again. Human intervention
with science is not a bad thing though considering it is us who come up with
all the hypothesis, theories, and technologies that continue to advance science
as we know it. A lesson to be learned from the Piltdown hoax is never trust
anyone’s biased opinions based on their title or academic status and also take
heed to any doubt that may surface no matter how small.