Samuel Beckles
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Samuel H. Beckles, born 1814 died 1890, was an English 19th century dinosaur hunter, who collected remains in Sussex and the Isle of Wight. In 1854 he described bird-like trackways that he thought could have been made by dinosaurs, which he later identified as probably those of an Iguanodon in 1862.[1][2] In 1857, following the discovery of a mammal jaw at Durlston Bay, he directed a major excavation that became known as 'Beckles' Pit', removing 16 m of overburden over a 600 square metre area, one of the largest ever scientific excavations. The collection of mammal fossils that resulted is now held at the Natural History Museum.[3] He discovered the small herbivorous dinosaur Echinodon. The only known species Echinodon becklesii and the dinosaur Becklespinax were named in his honour.
[edit] References
- ^ Beckles, Samuel H. (1854). "On the ornithoidichnites of the Wealden". Quarterly Journal of the Geological Society of London 10: 456–464.
- ^ Beckles, S.H. 1862. On some Natural Casts of Reptilian Footprints in the Wealden Beds of the Isle of Wight and of Swanage, Quarterly Journal of the Geological Society, 18; issue.1-2; p. 443-447
- ^ Purbeck: The Mammal Beds, Jurassic Coast website

