Dragons were dinosaurs (Talk.Origins)

Claim CH712:


 * Legends about dragons are really actual accounts of man meeting up with dinosaurs.

Source: Taylor, Paul S., 1998. The Great Dinosaur Mystery and the Bible.

CreationWiki response:

The simple fact is that such legends would be a natural result of real encounters with dinosaurs. Many of these legends are part of the local history of the area where a given legend is found, such as The Dragons of the British Isles.

While folklore does not require a physical basis, the comparison of dragons to dinosaurs suggests a connection in this case.

When one looks at the standard picture of a dragon, it turns out to be an amalgam of various kinds of dinosaurs. It has the general body shape of a sauropod like diplodocus, the wings and tail of a pterodactyl, the teeth of a Tyrannosaurus rex, the claws of a raptor, and the plates of a Stegosaurus. This is what one would expect if people had seen the animals we call dinosaurs, and over time the numerous verbal descriptions got mixed together to form a combined description from several different kinds of animals.

In addition, dragon legends are not restricted to any particular culture. Nearly every culture has dragon legends. If nearly every culture had leprechaun legends, for example, Talk.Origins would have a point. But the fact that nearly every culture has dragon legends suggests that there is some basis in fact. In addition, many reports of dinosaurs are not fantastic accounts, but instead fairly standard reporting of facts.

This is based purely on the evolutionary theoretical system and as such this response amounts to "your theory does not work under my theory, so your theory must be wrong."

This statement is also in conflict with the sentiments expressed near the end of the Talk.Origins response to claims of living dinosaurs in the Congo.

This does not mean that the bones inspired the legends; it could mean only that people finding these bones drew their conclusion from the legends.

These theories are based on the assumption that neither set of legends is based on real animals.

For example, stories of griffins could have been based on real living Protoceratops instead of just their fossils. The bones attributed to river monsters in Lakota myth may actually have been the bones of recently living sauropods. At the very least the legend would have inspired the interpretation of the bones rather than the other way around.

It is only the evolutionary theoretical system that leads to the assumption that these can't be based on living dinosaurs.

Once again, there is no evidence that the fossils were not interpreted based on preexisting legends, rather than inspiring their creation.