No, it was pretty bad. Even then, they knew that birds were the descendants of dinosaurs. So why would they use amphibians? It makes no sense. I also doubt that amphibians could provide appropriate DNA.
I thought The Core was pretty much a modern re-invention of Journey to the Center of the Earth. As far as the original story goes, it was pretty corny and the science was far out, even for what was understood back then. I'm reading it right now, and the science doesn't hold up at all, as far as rivers and storms and animals appearing deep inside the earth.
Actually Jules Verne was a rigorous hard-SF writer by the standards of his day. He looked scornfully on H. G. Wells's flights of fancy and strove only to write about scenarios that he actually considered possible based on his era's best understanding of science. If they seem absurd today, that's merely a testament to how far science has advanced since then. Probably a lot of our most scientifically accurate hard SF today will seem just as silly to people 150 years from now.
I thought The Core was pretty much a modern re-invention of Journey to the Center of the Earth. As far as the original story goes, it was pretty corny and the science was far out, even for what was understood back then. I'm reading it right now, and the science doesn't hold up at all, as far as rivers and storms and animals appearing deep inside the earth.
Actually Jules Verne was a rigorous hard-SF writer by the standards of his day. He looked scornfully on H. G. Wells's flights of fancy and strove only to write about scenarios that he actually considered possible based on his era's best understanding of science. If they seem absurd today, that's merely a testament to how far science has advanced since then. Probably a lot of our most scientifically accurate hard SF today will seem just as silly to people 150 years from now.
Don't know about his other works, but Verne's description of how the Nautilius worked was detailed, effective and tied together concepts that would be put to use in real world subs as well as combining technology that was know at the time (1870).
Of course then along comes Disney and has it nuclear powered.
Superman IV - Lacy breathing in space.
Huxley, a contemporary of Darwin, was one of the first to suggest that birds came from dinosaurs.
Again, the movie acknowledges that birds are dinosaurs.
Huxley, a contemporary of Darwin, was one of the first to suggest that birds came from dinosaurs.
Again, the movie acknowledges that birds are dinosaurs.
Regardless of what Huxley said years before Jurassic Park was made, I do remember the idea that birds evolved from dinosaurs was considered a crazy idea. Around the time the movie came out I remember discussing it with one of my teachers who said it was a ridiculous notion that a creature that had existed for so long with scales would suddenly shrink in size and grow feathers.
Well, there's his problem. Might as well compare them to tigers or something.He was probably referring to the pterodactyl in regards to size.
I'm not sure about the 1950s, but I know post-computerization it would utterly ruin the world economy. I'm relatively certain it would have cost the equivalent of several hundred billion dollars even back then as machines that depended on an uninterrupted electrical flow ground to a halt and possibly broke down as a result.What about the day the earth stood still? I think I remember reading somewhere that if that were to actually happen we'd basically be screwed.
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