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Although more usually used to describe the common [[earthworm]] the word "worm" derives from [[Old Norse]] ''orm'' and [[Anglo-Saxon]] '''wyrm'', meaning "serpent" or "dragon". Such legends have persisted for over a millennium and form the basis of a host of modern fictional representations of similar beasts, including works by [[Terry Pratchett]], [[Stephen R Donaldson]] and [[Frank Herbert]].
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The "worm" is usually depicted as a scaled, wingless creature. It resembles a giant snake but often has poisonous breath, as opposed to fire breathing, winged and four legged [[dragons]]. It sometimes is given the property of being able to reassemble itself when cut into pieces. They were often associated with the guarding of treasure or [[maiden]]s and sacred [[Water well|wells]], hills, [[caves]] and [[spring (hydrosphere)|springs]].
{{fiction}}

Although more usually used to describe the common [[earthworm]] the word "worm" derives from [[Old Norse]] ''orm'' and [[Anglo-Saxon]] '''wyrm'', meaning "serpent" or "dragon".<ref name=rME>{{citation |url=http://books.google.co.uk/books?id=BXRTMwCKDAcC&pg=PA86 |title=The real Middle-Earth: exploring the magic and mystery of the Middle Ages, J.R.R. Tolkien and "The Lord of the Rings |author=Brian Bates |year=2003}}</ref> The synonymous usage of worm and dragon in English lessened during the following centuries. [[Samuel Johnson]]'s dictionary drew a distinction between worms and dragons (while retaining the word serpent as a definition of worm) and the last synonymous usage of worm and dragon as noted in the [[Oxford English Dictionary]] dates to the 17th century.<ref>{{cite book|url=http://books.google.com/books?id=DZ77QVDOacAC&pg=PA75&dq=worm+dragon+oed&hl=en&ei=tfgXTKf7KJKmnQehqOWlCg&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=1&ved=0CC4Q6AEwAA#v=onepage&q=worm%20dragon%20oed&f=false|title=The ends of allegory|author=Sayre N. Greenfield|publisher=[[University of Delaware]] Press|year=1998|page=75|ISBN=9780874136708}}</ref>
These multihued dragons were sometimes "seen" streaking across the sky, particularly in thunderstorms, although [[ball lightning]] may be a more scientific explanation of their manifestation.


[[Nidhogg]] (the 'Dread Biter') and Midgard's Worm were two of the most famous "Worms" in Viking mythology. At the 'still point of the turning world' the Vikings believed the ash tree [[Yggdrasil]] bore the weight of the universe. One of its three roots stretched over the underworld [[Niflheim]] where the dragon Nidhogg gnawed at it in an attempt to destroy creation – hence its name 'The Dread Biter'. This legend was later used by fantasy writer [[Terry Pratchett]].
[[Nidhogg]] (the 'Dread Biter') and Midgard's Worm were two of the most famous "Worms" in Viking mythology. At the 'still point of the turning world' the Vikings believed the ash tree [[Yggdrasil]] bore the weight of the universe. One of its three roots stretched over the underworld [[Niflheim]] where the dragon Nidhogg gnawed at it in an attempt to destroy creation – hence its name 'The Dread Biter'. This legend was later used by fantasy writer [[Terry Pratchett]].


[[Jörmungandr|Midgard's Worm]] or [[Jorungard's Worm]] lay in the sea with its tail in its mouth, encircling the lands of the world and creating the oceans. If the Worm's tail was ever removed from its mouth disaster would befall the earth and in legend Midgard's Worm met its end at [[Ragnarok]] when it dies fighting, and killing, the thunder god [[Thor]]. This story forms the basis of a novel, "The Worm of the World's End", by [[Stephen R Donaldson]]. The Midgard Worm is also known as the [[World Serpent]].
[[Jörmungandr|Midgard's Worm]] or [[Jorungard's Worm]] lay in the sea with its tail in its mouth, encircling the lands of the world and creating the oceans.<ref name=rME/> If the Worm's tail was ever removed from its mouth disaster would befall the earth and in legend Midgard's Worm met its end at [[Ragnarok]] when it dies fighting, and killing, the thunder god [[Thor]]. This story forms the basis of a novel, "The Worm of the World's End", by [[Stephen R Donaldson]]. The Midgard Worm is also known as the [[World Serpent]].


Several places in [[Great Britain]], once occupied by [[Viking]] raiders, owe their names to the supposed resemblance they bore to this fictional beast. [[Worm's Head]] on the [[Gower Peninsula]] in [[Wales]] was thought to resemble a sleeping dragon [http://www.fookes.com/gallery/gower03.html]. There are many legends in the north east of England relating to gigantic 'worms' which terrorised the local area before being slain by a hero. The [[Lambton Worm]], [[Sockburn Worm]] and [[Worm of Linton]] are among the best known of these. The North East was raided and occupied by the Vikings for centuries during the Dark Ages and these legends may refer to heroes fighting the invaders, personified as monsterous Viking worm dragons. The Durham historian Hutchinson believed the legend of the Sockburn worm, for example, referred to a Viking raider who plundered the Tees valley before being repulsed. The notion of the Sockburn worm itself was used by [[Lewis Carroll]] as the basis of his nonsense rhyme `Jabberwocky'.
Several places in [[Great Britain]], once occupied by [[Viking]] raiders, owe their names to the supposed resemblance they bore to this fictional beast.<ref name=rME/> [[Worm's Head]] on the [[Gower Peninsula]] in [[Wales]] was thought to resemble a sleeping dragon [http://www.fookes.com/gallery/gower03.html]. There are many legends in the north east of England relating to gigantic 'worms' which terrorised the local area before being slain by a hero. The [[Lambton Worm]], [[Sockburn Worm]] and [[Worm of Linton]] are among the best known of these. The North East was raided and occupied by the Vikings for centuries during the Dark Ages and these legends may refer to heroes fighting the invaders, personified as monsterous Viking worm dragons. The Durham historian Hutchinson believed the legend of the Sockburn worm, for example, referred to a Viking raider who plundered the Tees valley before being repulsed. The notion of the Sockburn worm itself was used by [[Lewis Carroll]] as the basis of his nonsense rhyme `Jabberwocky'.

The current usage of ''worm'' as a type of [[Computer worm|malicious Internet software]] is derived from a 1975 science fiction novel, ''[[Shockwave Rider]]''.<ref>{{cite book|title=|url=http://books.google.com/books?id=swfZIwWZepYC&pg=PA38&dq=worms+fiction&hl=en&ei=VOQXTMuxIsuTnQeTgN2lCg&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=3&ved=0CDEQ6AEwAjge#v=onepage&q=worms%20fiction&f=false|title=Defense and detection strategies against Internet worms|author=Jose Nazario|year=2004|page=38|ISBN=9781580535373|publisher=Artech House}}</ref>


Other worms, based on the concept of the friendly '[[bookworm (insect)|bookworm]]' or mutated forms of the common earthworm are also found in many books, especially those written for children.
Other worms, based on the concept of the friendly '[[bookworm (insect)|bookworm]]' or mutated forms of the common earthworm are also found in many books, especially those written for children.


==Legends==
==Worms in popular culture==

=== Legends ===
*The [[Lambton Worm]], of 15th-century [[England|English]] legend, also made into an opera by [[Robert Sherlaw Johnson]]
*The [[Lambton Worm]], of 15th-century [[England|English]] legend, also made into an opera by [[Robert Sherlaw Johnson]]


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*The [[Mongolian Death Worm]], a cryptozoological creature reported to exist in the Gobi Desert.
*The [[Mongolian Death Worm]], a cryptozoological creature reported to exist in the Gobi Desert.


==Literature==
===Giant worms in books, television, music and film===


* An antagonist in ''[[Beowulf]]'' is alternately described as a worm or as a dragon.<ref>{{cite book|title=|url=http://books.google.com/books?id=JkTfoYAELVYC&pg=PA74&dq=worm+beowulf&hl=en&ei=xvIXTOuFBY6DnQf2s6muCg&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=1&ved=0CCEQ6AEwADgU#v=onepage&q=worm%20beowulf&f=false|title=Beowulf: the oldest English epic|author=Charles William Kennedy|publisher=[[Oxford University Press]]|year=1978|page=74|ISBN=9780195024357}}</ref>
*''[[The Lair of the White Worm]]'' is a 1911 novel by [[Bram Stoker]], made into a 1988 film by director [[Ken Russell]].


* "[[The Conqueror Worm]]", an 1845 poem by [[Edgar Allen Poe]], concludes with the lines "The play is the tragedy, 'Man',/ and its hero the Conquerer Worm."<ref>{{cite book|last=Carlson|first=Eric|title=A companion to Poe studies|year=1996|publisher=Greenwood Publishing Group|isbn=9780313265068|page=92}}</ref>
*''The Coming of the White Worm'' is a 1941 short story by [[Clark Ashton Smith]].

*[[Jabberwocky]] by [[Lewis Carroll]] is a 'nonsense' poem telling the tale of a giant worm like monster.

* [[Arthur Conan Doyle]], writing of an unrecorded case taken on by [[Sherlock Holmes]], mentions a "remarkable worm said to be unknown to science."[http://books.google.com/books?id=VGUBSxIvZSEC&pg=PA582&dq=worm+unknown+to+science+holmes&hl=en&ei=UwUYTP3zC8KEnQeWwdy2Cg&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=3&ved=0CDIQ6AEwAg#v=onepage&q=worm%20unknown%20to%20science%20holmes&f=false]

*''[[The Lair of the White Worm]]'' is a 1911 novel by [[Bram Stoker]], made into a 1988 film by director [[Ken Russell]].<ref name=Gw>{{citation |url=http://books.google.co.uk/books?id=3JXnz9x9sO4C&pg=PA729 |title=The Greenwood encyclopedia of science fiction and fantasy |volume=2 |author=Trent Walters |chapter=Snakes and Worms |isbn=9780313329500 |year=2005 |page=729}}</ref>

* [[Fafnir]], a beast slain during the course of the [[Völsungasaga]], is a worm in [[William Morris]]'s rendition.<ref>{{cite book|title=The collected works of William Morris, Volume 7|author=[[William Morris]]|year=1911|url=http://books.google.com/books?id=ZQNHAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA328&lpg=PA328&dq=fafnir+worm+william+morris&source=bl&ots=ODIZj0hRK5&sig=hAIz0KFhQW39b6THvYbeVWtiRtY&hl=en&ei=hMwYTJfmD8f7nAfqvMC7Cg&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=1&ved=0CAUQ6AEwAA#v=onepage&q&f=false|publisher=Longmans, Green and company|page=328|ISBN=}}</ref>

* ''[[The Worm Ouroboros]]'', a 1922 fantasy novel by [[Eric Rücker Eddison]], invokes an ancient myth of a legless creature that eats its own tail.

*''The Coming of the White Worm'' is a 1941 short story by [[Clark Ashton Smith]].<ref name=Gw/>

* [[J.R.R. Tolkien]] refers to his creation [[Glaurung]] as 'The Great Worm'. This term was adopted by hackers to describe the [[Morris Worm]].<ref>{{cite book|last=Drout|first=Michael D. C.|title=J.R.R. Tolkien encyclopedia: scholarship and critical assessment|url=http://books.google.com/books?id=B0loOBA3ejIC&pg=PA636&lpg=PA636&dq=great+worm+tolkien+internet&source=bl&ots=hgIFcC6h1e&sig=5wLR0oqMobTBP3l7oYN4BkHJdTw&hl=en&ei=u-wYTIyIHoG-nAeZyfy2Cg&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=7&ved=0CBgQ6AEwBg#v=onepage&q=great%20worm%20tolkien%20internet&f=false|year=2007|publisher=CRC Press|isbn=9780415969420|page=636}}</ref>


*''In the House of the Worm'' is a 1976 short story by [[George R. R. Martin]].
*''In the House of the Worm'' is a 1976 short story by [[George R. R. Martin]].
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*The Worm of the World's End, whose body underlies the lands and ocean and whose thrashings will destroy the world when it awakes, in [[The One Tree]], the second book of the second trilogy of [[The Chronicles of Thomas Covenant, the Unbeliever]] fantasy series written by [[Stephen R. Donaldson]].
*The Worm of the World's End, whose body underlies the lands and ocean and whose thrashings will destroy the world when it awakes, in [[The One Tree]], the second book of the second trilogy of [[The Chronicles of Thomas Covenant, the Unbeliever]] fantasy series written by [[Stephen R. Donaldson]].


* [[Sandworm (Dune)|Sandworms]] play a major role in the book ''[[Dune]]'' and in its film and TV adaptations ([[Dune universe]]).<ref name=Gw/>
*[[Jabberwocky]] by [[Lewis Carroll]] is a 'nonsense' poem telling the tale of a giant worm like monster.


* John Brunner's 1975 ''[[Shockwave Rider]]'' describes computer '[[tapeworm]]s' as capable of reproducing themselves as long as networked computers enable their survival.<ref>{{cite book|title=Computer security basics|url=http://books.google.com/books?id=fqCFfuAJ4uEC&pg=PA85&dq=worm++fiction+shockwave+rider&hl=en&ei=4-cXTPW2GISlnQf5s52iCg&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=3&ved=0CC8Q6AEwAg#v=onepage&q=worm%20%20fiction%20shockwave%20rider&f=false|year=2006|author=Rick Lehtinen, Deborah Russell, G. T. Gangemi|page=85|ISBN=9780596006693|publisher=O'Reilly}}</ref>
*One of the unrecorded cases of [[Sherlock Holmes]] involves a "worm unknown to science."


* [[Magical creatures (Harry Potter)|Flobberworms]] dull wormlike magical creatures in the ''[[Harry Potter]]'' universe.
* [[Magical creatures (Harry Potter)|Flobberworms]] are dull wormlike magical creatures in the ''[[Harry Potter]]'' universe.


* [[Lowly Worm]] is a fictional character that makes frequent appearances in [[Richard Scarry]]'s children's books.
*The '''[[Graboid]]s''' in the ''[[Tremors (film)|Tremors]]'' films and television series

* [[Gary Larson]] narrates the adventures of a nuclear worm family in his 1998 ''There's a Hair in My Dirt: A Worm's Story''.<ref>{{cite news|url=http://www.nytimes.com/1998/04/28/science/aficionado-of-science-gary-larson-an-amateur-of-biology-returns-to-his-easel.html?pagewanted=all|title=AFICIONADO OF SCIENCE: Gary Larson; An Amateur of Biology Returns to His Easel|last=Angier|first=Natalie|work=New York Times|accessdate=16 June 2010}}</ref>

==Television, music and film==

*The '''[[Graboid]]s''' in the ''[[Tremors (film)|Tremors]]'' films and television series.<ref name=Gw/>


*'''Jeff''', the giant subway worm in the film ''[[Men in Black II]]''
*'''Jeff''', the giant subway worm in the film ''[[Men in Black II]]''


*The ghost-eating '''sandworms''' in the film ''[[Beetlejuice]]''
*The ghost-eating '''sandworms''' in the film ''[[Beetlejuice]]''

*[[Sandworm (Dune)|Sandworms]] in the books, film and TV series ''[[Dune universe|Dune]]''


*A family of worms in [[Jim Davis (cartoonist)|Jim Davis]]' comic strip [[US Acres]]
*A family of worms in [[Jim Davis (cartoonist)|Jim Davis]]' comic strip [[US Acres]]


* [[Phish]] performed a version of the song "Swingtown" in Amsterdam, about giant worms in the city's sewers, known as "Wormtown".
* [[Phish]] performed a version of the song "Swingtown" in Amsterdam, about giant worms in the city's sewers, known as "Wormtown".

* [[Inchworm (song)|Inchworm]], a song first recorded by [[Danny Kaye]] and since covered by several other artists, asks an [[inchworm]] to appreciate the beauty of [[marigold]]s rather than measuring their length.


* The giant worm-demon in "[[Beneath You]]", a 7th season episode of [[Buffy the Vampire Slayer (TV series)|Buffy the Vampire Slayer]].
* The giant worm-demon in "[[Beneath You]]", a 7th season episode of [[Buffy the Vampire Slayer (TV series)|Buffy the Vampire Slayer]].
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*In [[Marilyn Manson]]'s ''[[Antichrist Superstar]]'' the protagonist turns into an entity called "The Worm" before turning into the [[Antichrist]].
*In [[Marilyn Manson]]'s ''[[Antichrist Superstar]]'' the protagonist turns into an entity called "The Worm" before turning into the [[Antichrist]].

===Other worms in media===


* Alaskan Bull Worm from the television show [[SpongeBob SquarePants]].
* Alaskan Bull Worm from the television show [[SpongeBob SquarePants]].
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*[[Slimey the Worm|Slimey]], pet of [[Sesame Street]]'s [[Oscar the Grouch]]
*[[Slimey the Worm|Slimey]], pet of [[Sesame Street]]'s [[Oscar the Grouch]]

*'''[[Lowly Worm]]''', from [[Richard Scarry]]'s ''[[Busytown]]''


*Lazy Jay Ranch's worms in [[Rocky and Bullwinkle]]
*Lazy Jay Ranch's worms in [[Rocky and Bullwinkle]]
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* Worm, being Pink's inner judge in [[Pink Floyd: The Wall]]
* Worm, being Pink's inner judge in [[Pink Floyd: The Wall]]


=== Role-playing games ===
== Role-playing games ==
* [[Purple worm]]s, from ''[[Dungeons & Dragons]]''
* [[Purple worm]]s, from ''[[Dungeons & Dragons]]''


=== Video games ===
== Video games ==
*Annelids, from ''[[System Shock 2]]''.
*Annelids, from ''[[System Shock 2]]''.
*Boreworms, from ''[[Splatterhouse]]''.
*Boreworms, from ''[[Splatterhouse]]''.
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* Rockworms and the Riftworm from ''[[Gears of War 2]]''.
* Rockworms and the Riftworm from ''[[Gears of War 2]]''.
* Molgera, a boss from ''[[The Legend of Zelda: The Wind Waker]]''.
* Molgera, a boss from ''[[The Legend of Zelda: The Wind Waker]]''.

==References==
{{reflist}}


[[Category:Fictional worms|*]]
[[Category:Fictional worms|*]]

Revision as of 21:28, 16 June 2010

Although more usually used to describe the common earthworm the word "worm" derives from Old Norse orm and Anglo-Saxon 'wyrm, meaning "serpent" or "dragon".[1] The synonymous usage of worm and dragon in English lessened during the following centuries. Samuel Johnson's dictionary drew a distinction between worms and dragons (while retaining the word serpent as a definition of worm) and the last synonymous usage of worm and dragon as noted in the Oxford English Dictionary dates to the 17th century.[2]

Nidhogg (the 'Dread Biter') and Midgard's Worm were two of the most famous "Worms" in Viking mythology. At the 'still point of the turning world' the Vikings believed the ash tree Yggdrasil bore the weight of the universe. One of its three roots stretched over the underworld Niflheim where the dragon Nidhogg gnawed at it in an attempt to destroy creation – hence its name 'The Dread Biter'. This legend was later used by fantasy writer Terry Pratchett.

Midgard's Worm or Jorungard's Worm lay in the sea with its tail in its mouth, encircling the lands of the world and creating the oceans.[1] If the Worm's tail was ever removed from its mouth disaster would befall the earth and in legend Midgard's Worm met its end at Ragnarok when it dies fighting, and killing, the thunder god Thor. This story forms the basis of a novel, "The Worm of the World's End", by Stephen R Donaldson. The Midgard Worm is also known as the World Serpent.

Several places in Great Britain, once occupied by Viking raiders, owe their names to the supposed resemblance they bore to this fictional beast.[1] Worm's Head on the Gower Peninsula in Wales was thought to resemble a sleeping dragon [1]. There are many legends in the north east of England relating to gigantic 'worms' which terrorised the local area before being slain by a hero. The Lambton Worm, Sockburn Worm and Worm of Linton are among the best known of these. The North East was raided and occupied by the Vikings for centuries during the Dark Ages and these legends may refer to heroes fighting the invaders, personified as monsterous Viking worm dragons. The Durham historian Hutchinson believed the legend of the Sockburn worm, for example, referred to a Viking raider who plundered the Tees valley before being repulsed. The notion of the Sockburn worm itself was used by Lewis Carroll as the basis of his nonsense rhyme `Jabberwocky'.

The current usage of worm as a type of malicious Internet software is derived from a 1975 science fiction novel, Shockwave Rider.[3]

Other worms, based on the concept of the friendly 'bookworm' or mutated forms of the common earthworm are also found in many books, especially those written for children.

Legends

Literature

  • An antagonist in Beowulf is alternately described as a worm or as a dragon.[4]
  • John Brunner's 1975 Shockwave Rider describes computer 'tapeworms' as capable of reproducing themselves as long as networked computers enable their survival.[9]
  • Gary Larson narrates the adventures of a nuclear worm family in his 1998 There's a Hair in My Dirt: A Worm's Story.[10]

Television, music and film

  • Phish performed a version of the song "Swingtown" in Amsterdam, about giant worms in the city's sewers, known as "Wormtown".
  • Inchworm, a song first recorded by Danny Kaye and since covered by several other artists, asks an inchworm to appreciate the beauty of marigolds rather than measuring their length.
  • The giant, autonomous space based doomsday weapon featured in the original Star Trek resembled a giant Norse Wurm. It was wingless, limbless and ingested whole planets in its ever gaping maw just as the Worm of Linton ate everything in its path.
  • In the 2005 film King Kong, a giant bloodworm-like predator called the carnictus lives in the rents and chasms of Skull Island. They grow to be 7–13 feet long, and they kill a character named Lumpy in the film.
  • In the AVP series, Alien Chestbursters are Xenomorph larvae that incubate within a human host and rip out of the chest cavity when partially mature.
  • The Giant flesh-eating worms from Pre-cambrian rimes in Primeval, this Worms life in sulphur gases which come from the anomaly, oxygen is poison for the Worms.
  • In the Worms Series, Boggy B, Spadge, and Clagnut are named characters who appear in title songs and the like.
  • The Bookworm, supporting character in Warner Brothers' Sniffles cartoons
  • The Bookworm, a character Spider-Man fought in an episode of The 1970s PBS TV series The Electric Company
  • The Bookworm character of various children's reading programs.
  • Boreworms an (unseen) animal used as an implement of torture in the movie Flash Gordon.
  • The Slurm Queen from Futurama, the only source of the Slurm brand of soda.

Role-playing games

Video games

References

  1. ^ a b c Brian Bates (2003), The real Middle-Earth: exploring the magic and mystery of the Middle Ages, J.R.R. Tolkien and "The Lord of the Rings
  2. ^ Sayre N. Greenfield (1998). The ends of allegory. University of Delaware Press. p. 75. ISBN 9780874136708.
  3. ^ Jose Nazario (2004). Defense and detection strategies against Internet worms. Artech House. p. 38. ISBN 9781580535373.
  4. ^ Charles William Kennedy (1978). Beowulf: the oldest English epic. Oxford University Press. p. 74. ISBN 9780195024357.
  5. ^ Carlson, Eric (1996). A companion to Poe studies. Greenwood Publishing Group. p. 92. ISBN 9780313265068.
  6. ^ a b c d Trent Walters (2005), "Snakes and Worms", The Greenwood encyclopedia of science fiction and fantasy, vol. 2, p. 729, ISBN 9780313329500
  7. ^ William Morris (1911). The collected works of William Morris, Volume 7. Longmans, Green and company. p. 328.
  8. ^ Drout, Michael D. C. (2007). J.R.R. Tolkien encyclopedia: scholarship and critical assessment. CRC Press. p. 636. ISBN 9780415969420.
  9. ^ Rick Lehtinen, Deborah Russell, G. T. Gangemi (2006). Computer security basics. O'Reilly. p. 85. ISBN 9780596006693.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  10. ^ Angier, Natalie. "AFICIONADO OF SCIENCE: Gary Larson; An Amateur of Biology Returns to His Easel". New York Times. Retrieved 16 June 2010.