ChatterBank6 mins ago
Dragons
6 Answers
Saw a picture in the Metro today of a new fossil that had been discovered (Darwinopterous), is it possible that these pterosaurs (if that's what it is) may have lived longer than we know.
I can't help but feel that they have a similarity in appearance to Chinese dragons like the fenghuang(?) phoenix.
Is it possible that these representations of their forms are borne from the fact that the early Chinese lived with these creatures in their environment?
I can't help but feel that they have a similarity in appearance to Chinese dragons like the fenghuang(?) phoenix.
Is it possible that these representations of their forms are borne from the fact that the early Chinese lived with these creatures in their environment?
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by 123everton. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.there are a lot of fossils found in China, and have been for centuries, but I'm not sure how well people long ago could have found a pterosaur's skeleton, say, and reconstructed a dragon around it.
Wikipedia suggests crocodiles may have beeen the source, especially if they'd subsequently died out and lingered on in folk memory.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chinese_dragons
Wikipedia suggests crocodiles may have beeen the source, especially if they'd subsequently died out and lingered on in folk memory.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chinese_dragons
I don't have much of an opinion on the subject, just chewing the fat.
Heathfield, the Chinese Shang dynasty is only now coming to light, many of it's practices were incorporated into the foundling empire of the Qin dynasty.
The book of odes (largely fake) relates to the Shang and earlier epochs, this period (about 5000 years ago) is too recent for fossilisation any such creature still around would be viewed as special, the whole carcass including the bones would've been used for traditional medicine.
No?
Heathfield, the Chinese Shang dynasty is only now coming to light, many of it's practices were incorporated into the foundling empire of the Qin dynasty.
The book of odes (largely fake) relates to the Shang and earlier epochs, this period (about 5000 years ago) is too recent for fossilisation any such creature still around would be viewed as special, the whole carcass including the bones would've been used for traditional medicine.
No?