
The World in Time / Lapham’s Quarterly Adrienne Mayor on Geomyths
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Apr 24, 2026 Adrienne Mayor, folklorist and historian of ancient science known for her work on geomyths and fossil legends, explores how natural events shape myth. She links oarfish strandings to sea‑serpent art, traces singing sand dunes and whirlpools to real physics, and shows how legends can preserve memories of tsunamis, meteors, and earthquakes.
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Geomyths Preserve Real Geological Knowledge
- Geomyths embed real geological knowledge despite poetic or supernatural language.
- Scientists in volcanology and seismology find accurate observational details and memories of catastrophes in oral legends worldwide.
Discovering Fossils On A Greek Island
- Adrienne Mayor began studying fossils after seeing farmers casually bring huge bones to a tiny museum on Samos in 1979.
- Greeks interpreted oversized bones as giants or heroes and recognized deep time because fossils looked organic and ancient.
Ancients Saw Shells As Proof Of Ancient Seas
- Ancient observers recognized marine shells on mountains as evidence land was once underwater.
- Because shells changed little over eons, Greeks in the fifth century BC inferred past oceans from familiar shell forms.




