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THE SMUGGLING INCIDENT
NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC TV DECLINED TO COVER
Two documentaries called Dinosaur Dealers
have been broadcast on National Geographic TV. These dealt with the
trade in fossils and fossil smuggling, and described the adventures
of a paleontologist who followed in the tracks of a number of stolen
fossils, or fossils smuggled out of Australia. The trail was followed
detective-style, and the program showed the negotiations carried out
in order to trap the smugglers. In this way, the impression wasgiven
that National Geographic is an idealistic body, chasing hot
on the heels of smugglers and striving with all its might to destroy
this illegal trade. However, the TV channel failed to mention that
just a few years ago it too was involved in smuggling an Archaeoraptor
fossil (and the fraud that accompanied it). In fact, it said not a
word about it.
Let us recall the details of that smuggling
operation.
Archaeoraptor liaoningensis
was a forged dino-bird fossil. The remains of the creature, alleged
to be an evolutionary link between dinosaurs and birds, had apparently
been unearthed in the Liaoning area of China and were published
in the November 1999 edition of National Geographic magazine.
Thus, the Archaeoraptor fossil
is similar to the earlier Piltdown Man fraud committed by
evolutionists. Archaeoraptor was even described under the
headline "Piltdown Bird" in the well-known magazine New Scientist.
The report states that Archaeoraptor was formed by adding
the tail of a dromaeosaurus, a genuine dinosaur, to a bird
fossil, and that this was a fraud perpetrated in the name
of science.
1) Mix and match: Archaeoraptor seems to consist of the tail
of a dromaeosaur, glued to a fossil bird's body (above). |
Stephen Czerkas, an American museum
administrator, had bought the fossil from the Chinese for $80,000,
and then showed it to two scientists he had made contact with. Once
the expected confirmation had been received, he wrote a report about
the fossil. Yet Czerkas was no scientific researcher, nor did he
hold a doctorate of any sort. He submitted his report to two famous
scientific journals, Nature and Science, but they both
declined to publish it unless it was first vetted by an independent
commission of paleontologists.
Czerkas was determined to have this
fantastical discovery published, and he next knocked at the door
of National Geographic, known for its support of the theory
of evolution.
Under Chinese law it was definitely
forbidden to remove fossils unearthed within its borders from the
country, and fossil-smuggling could be severely punished, even by
death. Despite being well aware of this, National Geographic
accepted this fossil which had been smuggled out of China. The fossil
was presented to the media at a press conference staged in the National
Geographic headquarters in October 1999. An illustrated seven-page
article describing the dino-bird fairy tale formed the cover story
in the November edition of National Geographic magazine.
Moreover, the fossil was exhibited in the National Geographic museum,
where it was presented to millions of people as definitive proof
of the theory of evolution.
The truth emerged in March 2001: no
such intermediate species as Achaeoraptor had ever existed.
Computer tomography analyses of the fossil revealed that it consisted
of parts of at least two different species. Archaeoraptor
was thus dethroned, and took its place alongside all the other evolutionist
frauds in history. Darwinism-whose claims have never been empirically
verified in the past 150 years-was once more associated with specially
manufactured fossil forgeries.
As we have seen, National Geographic
was once party to that very fossil-smuggling which it now purports
to oppose. Naturally, the fact that in its latest documentaries
it devotes space to bringing fossil smuggling out into the open
may be regarded as a positive sign that it will not tolerate similar
abuses in the future. However, if the TV channel does oppose fossil-smuggling,
then it must also deal with such well-known smuggling incidents
as Archaeoraptor in its programs. No matter how much of
a violation of its Darwinist broadcasting policy it might be, admitting
its past mistakes and taking the side of the truth would be commendable
behavior in the sight of all its viewers.
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