<h2><SPAN name="X"></SPAN>X</h2>
<p class="h3">THE MAMMOTH</p>
<div class="inset22">
<p>"<i>His legs were as thick as the bole of the beech,</i><br/>
<span class="in1"><i>His tusks as the buttonwood white,</i></span><br/>
<i>While his lithe trunk wound like a sapling around</i><br/>
<span class="in1"><i>An oak in the whirlwind's might."</i></span><br/></p>
</div>
<blockquote><p><i>In the October number of McClure's Magazine for 1899
was published a short story, "The Killing of the Mammoth,"
by "H. Tukeman," which, to the amazement of the editors, was
taken by many readers not as fiction, but as a contribution to
natural history. Immediately after the appearance of that
number of the magazine, the authorities of the Smithsonian Institution,
in which the author had located the remains of the
beast of his fancy, were beset with visitors to see the stuffed
mammoth, and the daily mail of the Magazine, as well as that
of the Smithsonian Institution, was filled with inquiries for
more information and for requests to settle wagers as to whether
it was a true story or not. The contribution in question was
printed purely as fiction, with no idea of misleading the public,
and was entitled a story in the table of contents. We doubt if
any writer of realistic fiction ever had a more general and convincing
proof of success.</i></p>
</blockquote>
<p>About three centuries ago, in 1696, a Russian,
one Ludloff by name, described some bones
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_178">[178]</SPAN></span>
belonging to what the Tartars called "Mamantu";
later on, Blumenbach pressed the common
name into scientific use as "Mammut,"
and Cuvier gallicized this into "Mammouth,"
whence by an easy transition we get our familiar
mammoth. We are so accustomed to
use the word to describe anything of remarkable
size that it would be only natural to suppose
that the name Mammoth was given to
the extinct elephant because of its extraordinary
bulk. Exactly the reverse of this is true,
however, for the word came to have its present
meaning because the original possessor of the
name was a huge animal. The Siberian peasants
called the creature "Mamantu," or
"ground-dweller," because they believed it to
be a gigantic mole, passing its life beneath the
ground and perishing when by any accident it
saw the light. The reasoning that led to this
belief was very simple and the logic very good;
no one had ever seen a live Mamantu, but
there were plenty of its bones lying at or near
the surface; consequently if the animal did not
live above the ground, it must dwell below.</p>
<p>To-day, nearly every one knows that the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_179">[179]</SPAN></span>
mammoth was a sort of big, hairy elephant,
now extinct, and nearly every one has a general
idea that it lived in the North. There is
some uncertainty as to whether the mammoth
was a mastodon, or the mastodon a mammoth,
and there is a great deal of misconception as
to the size and abundance of this big beast. It
may be said in passing that the mastodon is
only a second or third cousin of the mammoth,
but that the existing elephant of Asia is a very
near relative, certainly as near as a first cousin,
possibly a very great grandson. Popularly, the
mammoth is supposed to have been a colossus
somewhere from twelve to twenty feet in
height, beside whom modern elephants would
seem insignificant; but as "trout lose much in
dressing," so mammoths shrink in measuring,
and while there were doubtless Jumbos among
them in the way of individuals of exceptional
magnitude, the majority were decidedly under
Jumbo's size. The only mounted mammoth
skeleton in this country, that in the Chicago
Academy of Sciences, is one of the largest, the
thigh-bone measuring five feet one inch in
length, or a foot more than that of Jumbo;<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_180">[180]</SPAN></span>
and as Jumbo stood eleven feet high, the rule
of three applied to this thigh-bone would give
the living animal a height of thirteen feet
eight inches. The height of this specimen is
given as thirteen feet in its bones, with an estimate
of fourteen feet in its clothes; but as the
skeleton is obviously mounted altogether too
high, it is pretty safe to say that thirteen feet
is a good, fair allowance for the height of this
animal when alive. As for the majority of
mammoths, they would not average more than
nine or ten feet high. Sir Samuel Baker tells
us that he has seen plenty of wild African elephants
that would exceed Jumbo by a foot or
more, and while this must be accepted with
caution, since unfortunately he neglected to
put a tape-line on them, yet Mr. Thomas
Baines did measure a specimen twelve feet
high. This, coupled with Sir Samuel's statement,
indicates that there is not so much difference
between the mammoth and the elephant
as there might be. This applies to the
mammoth <i>par excellence</i>, the species known
scientifically as <i>Elephas primigenius</i>, whose
remains are found in many parts of the Northern<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_181">[181]</SPAN></span>
Hemisphere and occur abundantly in Siberia
and Alaska. There were other elephants
than the mammoth, and some that exceeded
him in size, notably <i>Elephas meridionalis</i> of
southern Europe, and <i>Elephas columbi</i> of our
Southern and Western States, but even the
largest cannot positively be asserted to have
exceeded a height of thirteen feet. Tusks
offer convenient terms of comparison, and
those of an average fully grown mammoth
are from eight to ten feet in length; those of
the famous St. Petersburg specimen and those
of the huge specimen in Chicago measuring
respectively nine feet three inches, and nine
feet eight inches. So far as the writer is
aware, the largest tusks actually measured are
two from Alaska, one twelve feet ten inches
long, weighing 190 pounds, reported by Mr.
Jay Beach; and another eleven feet long,
weighing 200 pounds, noted by Mr. T. L.
Brevig. Compared with these we have the
big tusk that used to stand on Fulton Street,
New York, just an inch under nine feet long,
and weighing 184 pounds, or the largest shown
at Chicago in 1893, which was seven feet six<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_182">[182]</SPAN></span>
inches long, and weighed 176 pounds. The
largest, most beautiful tusks, probably, ever
seen in this country were a pair brought from
Zanzibar and displayed by Messrs. Tiffany &
Company in 1900. The measurements and
weights of these were as follows: length along
outer curve, ten feet and three-fourths of an
inch, circumference one foot, eleven inches,
weight, 224 pounds; length along outer curve,
ten feet, three and one-half inches, circumference
two feet and one-fourth of an inch, weight,
239 pounds.</p>
<p>For our knowledge of the external appearance
of the mammoth we are indebted to the
more or less entire examples which have been
found at various times in Siberia, but mainly
to the noted specimen found in 1799 near the
Lena, embedded in the ice, where it had been
reposing, so geologists tell us, anywhere from
10,000 to 50,000 years. How the creature
gradually thawed out of its icy tomb, and the
tusks were taken by the discoverer and sold
for ivory; how the dogs fed upon the flesh in
summer, while bears and wolves feasted upon
it in winter; how the animal was within an<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_183">[183]</SPAN></span>
ace of being utterly lost to science when, at
the last moment, the mutilated remains were
rescued by Mr. Adams, is an old story, often
told and retold. Suffice it to say that, besides
the bones, enough of the beast was preserved
to tell us exactly what was the covering of this<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_184">[184]</SPAN></span>
ancient elephant, and to show that it was a
creature adapted to withstand the northern
cold and fitted for living on the branches of
the birch and hemlock.</p>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG src="images/i_236.jpg" width-obs="400" height-obs="281" alt="" /> Fig. 36.—Skeleton of the Mammoth in the Royal Museum of St. Petersburg.</div>
<p>The exact birthplace of the mammoth is as
uncertain as that of many other great characters;
but his earliest known resting-place is in
the Cromer Forest Beds of England, a country
inhabited by him at a time when the German
Ocean was dry land and Great Britain part of
a peninsula. Here his remains are found to-day,
while from the depths of the North Sea
the hardy trawlers have dredged hundreds, aye
thousands, of mammoth teeth in company with
soles and turbot. If, then, the mammoth originated
in western Europe, and not in that great
graveyard of fossil elephants, northern India,
eastward he went spreading over all Europe
north of the Pyrenees and Alps, save only
Scandinavia, whose glaciers offered no attractions,
scattering his bones abundantly by the
wayside to serve as marvels for future ages.
Strange indeed have been some of the tales to
which these and other elephantine remains
have given rise when they came to light in the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_185">[185]</SPAN></span>
good old days when knowledge of anatomy
was small and credulity was great. The least
absurd theory concerning them was that they
were the bones of the elephants which Hannibal
brought from Africa. Occasionally they
were brought forward as irrefutable evidences
of the deluge; but usually they figured as the
bones of giants, the most famous of them being
known as Teutobochus, King of the Cimbri, a
lusty warrior said to have had a height of nineteen
feet. Somewhat smaller, but still of respectable
height, fourteen feet, was "Littell
Johne" of Scotland, whereof Hector Boece
wrote, concluding, in a moralizing tone, "Be
quilk (which) it appears how extravegant and
squaire pepill grew in oure regioun afore they
were effeminat with lust and intemperance of
mouth." More than this, these bones have
been venerated in Greece and Rome as the remains
of pagan heroes, and later on worshipped
as relics of Christian saints. Did not the
church of Valencia possess an elephant tooth
which did duty as that of St. Christopher,
and, so late as 1789, was not a thigh-bone, figuring
as the arm-bone of a saint, carried in<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_186">[186]</SPAN></span>
procession through the streets in order to
bring rain?</p>
<p>Out of Europe eastward into Asia the mammoth
took his way, and having peopled that
vast region, took advantage of a land connection
then existing between Asia and North
America and walked over into Alaska, in company
with the forerunners of the bison and the
ancestors of the mountain sheep and Alaskan
brown bear. Still eastward and southward he
went, until he came to the Atlantic coast, the
latitude of southern New York roughly marking
the southern boundary of the broad domain
over which the mammoth roamed undisturbed.<SPAN name="FNanchor_15_15"></SPAN><SPAN href="#Footnote_15_15" class="fnanchor">[15]</SPAN>
Not that of necessity all this vast area
was occupied at one time; but this was the
range of the mammoth during Pleistocene
time, for over all this region his bones and
teeth are found in greater or less abundance
and in varying conditions of preservation. In
regions like parts of Siberia and Alaska, where
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_187">[187]</SPAN></span>the bones are entombed in a wet and cold,
often icy, soil, the bones and tusks are almost
as perfectly preserved as though they had been
deposited but a score of years ago, while remains
so situated that they have been subjected
to varying conditions of dryness and
moisture are always in a fragmentary state.
As previously noted, several more or less entire
carcasses of the mammoth have been discovered
in Siberia, only to be lost; and, while no
entire animal has so far been found in Alaska,
some day one may yet come to light. That
there is some possibility of this is shown by the
discovery, recorded by Mr. Dall, of the partial
skeleton of a mammoth in the bank of the
Yukon with some of the fat still present, and
although this had been partially converted into
adipocere, it was fresh enough to be used by
the natives for greasing, not their boots, but
their boats. And up to the present time this
is the nearest approach to finding a live mammoth
in Alaska.</p>
<div class="footnote"><p><SPAN name="Footnote_15_15"></SPAN><SPAN href="#FNanchor_15_15"><span class="label">[15]</span></SPAN> <i>This must be taken as a very general statement, as the distinction
between and habitats of Elephas primigenius and Elephas
columbi, the southern mammoth, are not satisfactorily
determined; moreover, the two species overlap through a wide
area of the West and Northwest.</i></p>
</div>
<p>As to why the mammoth became extinct,
we <i>know</i> absolutely nothing, although various
theories, some much more ingenious than plausible,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_188">[188]</SPAN></span>
have been advanced to account for their
extermination—they perished of starvation;
they were overtaken by floods on their supposed
migrations and drowned in detachments;
they fell through the ice, equally in detachments,
and were swept out to sea. But all
we can safely say is that long ages ago
the last one perished off the face of the earth.
Strange it is, too, that these mighty beasts,
whose bulk was ample to protect them against
four-footed foes, and whose woolly coat was
proof against the cold, should have utterly vanished.
They ranged from England eastward
to New York, almost around the world; from
the Alps to the Arctic Ocean; and in such
numbers that to-day their tusks are articles of
commerce, and fossil ivory has its price current
as well as wheat. Mr. Boyd Dawkins thinks
that the mammoth was actually exterminated
by early man, but, even granting that this
might be true for southern and western Europe,
it could not be true of the herds that inhabited
the wastes of Siberia, or of the thousands
that flourished in Alaska and the western
United States. So far as man is concerned,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_189">[189]</SPAN></span>
the mammoth might still be living in these localities,
where, before the discovery of gold
drew thousands of miners to Alaska, there were
vast stretches of wilderness wholly untrodden
by the foot of man. Neither could this theory
account for the disappearance of the mastodon
from North America, where that animal covered
so vast a stretch of territory that man,
unaided by nature, could have made little impression
on its numbers. That many were
swept out to sea by the flooded rivers of Siberia
is certain, for some of the low islands off
the coast are said to be formed of sand, ice,
and bones of the mammoth, and thence, for
hundreds of years, have come the tusks which
are sold in the market beside those of the
African and Indian elephants.</p>
<p>That man was contemporary with the mammoth
in southern Europe is fairly certain, for
not only are the remains of the mammoth and
man's flint weapons found together, but in a
few instances some primeval Landseer graved
on slate, ivory, or reindeer antler a sketchy
outline of the beast, somewhat impressionistic
perhaps, but still, like the work of a true artist,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_190">[190]</SPAN></span>
preserving the salient features. We see the
curved tusks, the snaky trunk, and the shaggy
coat that we know belonged to the mammoth,
and we may feel assured that if early man did
not conquer the clumsy creature with fire and
flint, he yet gazed upon him from the safe
vantage point of some lofty tree or inaccessible
rock, and then went home to tell his wife
and neighbors how the animal escaped because
his bow missed fire. That man and mammoth
lived together in North America is uncertain;
so far there is no evidence to show that they
did, although the absence of such evidence is
no proof that they did not. That any live
mammoth has for centuries been seen on the
Alaskan tundras is utterly improbable, and on
Mr. C. H. Townsend seems to rest the responsibility
of having, though quite unintentionally,
introduced the Alaskan Live Mammoth into
the columns of the daily press. It befell in this
wise: Among the varied duties of our revenue
marine is that of patrolling and exploring the
shores of arctic Alaska and the waters of the
adjoining sea, and it is not so many years ago
that the cutter <i>Corwin</i>, if memory serves<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_191">[191]</SPAN></span>
aright, held the record of farthest north on the
Pacific side. On one of these northern trips,
to the Kotzebue Sound region, famous for the
abundance of its deposits of mammoth bones,<SPAN name="FNanchor_16_16"></SPAN><SPAN href="#Footnote_16_16" class="fnanchor">[16]</SPAN>
the <i>Corwin</i> carried Mr. Townsend, then naturalist
to the United States Fish Commission.
At Cape Prince of Wales some natives came
on board bringing a few bones and tusks of
the mammoth, and upon being questioned as
to whether or not any of the animals to which
they pertained were living, promptly replied
that all were dead, inquiring in turn if the
white men had ever seen any, and if they
knew how these animals, so vastly larger than
a reindeer, looked.</p>
<div class="footnote"><p><SPAN name="Footnote_16_16"></SPAN><SPAN href="#FNanchor_16_16"><span class="label">[16]</span></SPAN> <i>Elephant Point, at the mouth of the Buckland River, is so
named from the numbers of mammoth bones which have accumulated
there.</i></p>
</div>
<p>Fortunately, or unfortunately, there was on
board a text-book of geology containing the
well-known cut of the St. Petersburg mammoth,
and this was brought forth, greatly to
the edification of the natives, who were delighted
at recognizing the curved tusks and
the bones they knew so well. Next the na<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_192">[192]</SPAN></span>tives
wished to know what the outside of the
creature looked like, and as Mr. Townsend
had been at Ward's establishment in Rochester
when the first copy of the Stuttgart restoration
was made, he rose to the emergency,
and made a sketch. This was taken ashore,
together with a copy of the cut of the skeleton
that was laboriously made by an Innuit
sprawled out at full length on the deck. Now
the Innuits, as Mr. Townsend tells us, are
great gadabouts, making long sledge journeys
in winter and equally long trips by boat in
summer, while each season they hold a regular
fair on Kotzebue Sound, where a thousand or
two natives gather to barter and gossip. On
these journeys and at these gatherings the
sketches were no doubt passed about, copied,
and recopied, until a large number of Innuits
had become well acquainted with the appearance
of the mammoth, a knowledge that naturally
they were well pleased to display to any
white visitors. Also, like the Celt, the Alaskan
native delights to give a "soft answer,"
and is always ready to furnish the kind of information
desired. Thus in due time the newspaper<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_193">[193]</SPAN></span>
man learned that the Alaskans could
make pictures of the mammoth, and that they
had some knowledge of its size and habits; so
with inference and logic quite as good as that
of the Tungusian peasant, the reporter came
to the conclusion that somewhere in the frozen
wilderness the last survivor of the mammoths
must still be at large. And so, starting on
the Pacific coast, the Live Mammoth story
wandered from paper to paper, until it had
spread throughout the length and breadth of
the United States, when it was captured by
Mr. Tukeman, who with much artistic color
and some realistic touches, transferred it to
<i>McClure's Magazine</i>, and—unfortunately for
the officials thereof—to the Smithsonian Institution.</p>
<p>And now, once for all, it may be said that
<i>there is no mounted mammoth</i> to awe the visitor
to the national collections or to any other;
and yet there seems no good and conclusive
reason why there should not be. True, there
are no live mammoths to be had at any price;
neither are their carcasses to be had on demand;
still there is good reason to believe<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_194">[194]</SPAN></span>
that a much smaller sum than that said to
have been paid by Mr. Conradi for the mammoth
which is <i>not</i> in the Smithsonian Institution,
would place one there.<SPAN name="FNanchor_17_17"></SPAN><SPAN href="#Footnote_17_17" class="fnanchor">[17]</SPAN> It probably
could not be done in one year; it might not
be possible in five years; but should any man
of means wish to secure enduring fame by
showing the world the mammoth as it stood in
life, a hundred centuries ago, before the dawn
of even tradition, he could probably accomplish
the result by the expenditure of a far less sum
than it would cost to participate in an international
yacht race.</p>
<div class="footnote"><p><SPAN name="Footnote_17_17"></SPAN><SPAN href="#FNanchor_17_17"><span class="label">[17]</span></SPAN> <i>Since these lines were written another fine example of the
Mammoth has been discovered in Siberia and even now (Oct.,
1901) an expedition is on its way to secure the skin and skeleton
for the Academy of Natural Sciences at St. Petersburg.</i></p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_195">[195]</SPAN></span></p>
</div>
<h3><i>REFERENCES</i></h3>
<p><i>The mounted skeleton of the mammoth in the museum
of the Chicago Academy of Science is still the only one on
exhibition in the United States; this specimen is probably
the Southern Mammoth, Elephas columbi, a species, or
race, characterized by its great size and the coarse structure
of the teeth. Remains of the mammoth are common
enough but, save in Alaska, they are usually in a poor
state of preservation or consist of isolated bones or teeth.
A great many skeletons of mammoth have been found by
gold miners in Alaska, and with proper care some of
these could undoubtedly have been secured. Naturally,
however, the miners do not feel like taking the time and
trouble to exhume bones whose value is uncertain, while
the cost of transportation precludes the bringing out of
many specimens.</i></p>
<p><i>Some reports of mammoths have been based on the
bones of whales, including a skull that was figured in
the daily papers.</i></p>
<p><i>Almost every museum has on exhibition teeth of the
mammoth, and there is a skull, though from a small individual,
of the Southern Mammoth in the American
Museum of Natural History, New York.</i></p>
<p><i>The tusk obtained by Mr. Beach and mentioned in
the text still holds the record for mammoth tusks. The<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_196">[196]</SPAN></span>
greatest development of tusks occurred in Elephas ganesa,
a species found in Pliocene deposits of the Siwalik
Hills, India. This species appears not to have exceeded
the existing elephant in bulk, but the tusks are twelve feet
nine inches long, and two feet two inches in circumference.
How the animal ever carried them is a mystery,
both on account of their size and their enormous leverage.
As for teeth, an upper grinder of Elephas columbi in the
United States National Museum is ten and one-half
inches high, nine inches wide, the grinding face being
eight by five inches. This tooth, which is unusually perfect,
retaining the outer covering of cement, came from
Afton, Indian Territory, and weighs a little over fifteen
pounds. The lower tooth, shown in Fig. 38, is twelve
inches long, and the grinding face is nine by three and
one-half inches; this is also from Elephas columbi.
Grinders of the Northern Mammoth are smaller, and the
plates of enamel thinner, and closer to one another.
Mr. F. E. Andrews, of Gunsight, Texas, reports having
found a femur, or thigh-bone five feet four inches
long, and a humerus measuring four feet three inches,
these being the largest bones on record indicating an
animal fourteen feet high.</i></p>
<p><i>There is a vast amount of literature relating to the
mammoth, some of it very untrustworthy. A list of all
discoveries of specimens in the flesh is given by Nordens<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_197">[197]</SPAN></span>kiold
in "The Voyage of the Vega" and "The Mammoth
and the Flood" by Sir Henry Howorth, is a mine of information.
Mr. Townsend's "Alaska Live-Mammoth
Story" may be found in "Forest and Stream" for
August 14, 1897.</i></p>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG src="images/i_250.jpg" width-obs="400" height-obs="173" alt="" /> Fig. 37.—The Mammoth as Engraved by a Primitive Artist on a Piece of Mammoth Tusk.</div>
<hr class="chapter" />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_198">[198]</SPAN></span></p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />