<SPAN name="startofbook"></SPAN>
<div class='tnotes covernote'>
<p class='c000'><strong>Transcriber’s Note:</strong></p>
<p class='c000'>The cover image was created by the transcriber and is placed in the public domain.</p>
</div>
<div id='Frontispiece' class='figcenter id001'>
<ANTIMG src='images/i_001.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
<div class='ic001'>
<p><span class='sc'>Charles H. Sternberg.</span></p>
</div>
</div>
<div class='nf-center-c1'>
<div class='nf-center'>
<div>American Nature Series</div>
<div class='c001'>Group IV. Working with Nature</div>
</div></div>
<div>
<h1 class='c002'><span class='xlarge'>THE LIFE<br/> OF A</span><br/> FOSSIL HUNTER</h1></div>
<div class='nf-center-c1'>
<div class='nf-center c001'>
<div>BY</div>
<div class='c001'><span class='large'>CHARLES H. STERNBERG</span></div>
<div class='c001'><span class='small'>WITH AN INTRODUCTION</span></div>
<div class='c001'><span class='small'>BY</span></div>
<div class='c001'><span class='large'>HENRY FAIRFIELD OSBORN</span></div>
<div class='c001'><i>ILLUSTRATED</i></div>
</div></div>
<div class='figcenter id002'>
<ANTIMG src='images/i_002.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' /></div>
<div class='nf-center-c1'>
<div class='nf-center'>
<div>NEW YORK</div>
<div class='c001'><span class='large'>HENRY HOLT AND COMPANY</span></div>
<div class='c001'>1909</div>
</div></div>
<div class='nf-center-c1'>
<div class='nf-center c003'>
<div>Copyright, 1909,</div>
<div class='c001'>BY</div>
<div class='c001'>HENRY HOLT AND COMPANY</div>
<div class='c001'><i>Published, February, 1909</i></div>
<div class='c004'>THE QUINN & BODEN CO. PRESS</div>
<div class='c001'>RAHWAY, N. J.</div>
</div></div>
<div class='pbb'>
<hr class='pb c001' /></div>
<div class='chapter'>
<span class='pageno' id='Page_iii'>iii</span>
<h2 class='c005'>PREFACE</h2></div>
<p class='c006'>I wish to call the attention of the reader of my
story “The Life of a Fossil Hunter” to the fact
that I am under obligations especially to Prof.
Henry Fairfield Osborn, President and Curator of
Paleontology of the American Museum of Natural
History in New York. He has supplied me with
many of the most beautiful of the illustrations that
illumine these pages and has assisted the work in
many ways.</p>
<p class='c000'>I would also express my gratitude to Miss Margaret
Wagenalls of New York, who edited the
manuscript; to Prof. Dunlap of the Kansas State
University, for his kindly criticisms; and to Dr. W.
K. Gregory, Lecturer on Zoology at Columbia University,
whose untiring efforts have brought the
book to its present form.</p>
<p class='c000'>I hope it may awaken a wide interest in the
study of ancient life, and I thank my friends everywhere
who are contributing to that end.</p>
<div class='c007'><span class='sc'>Charles H. Sternberg.</span></div>
<div class='lg-container-l'>
<div class='linegroup'>
<div class='group'>
<div class='line'><span class='sc'>Lawrence, Kansas</span>,</div>
<div class='line in6'><i>January, 1909</i>.</div>
</div></div>
</div>
<div class='chapter'>
<span class='pageno' id='Page_v'>v</span>
<h2 class='c005'>CONTENTS</h2></div>
<table class='table0' summary='CONTENTS'>
<tr>
<th class='c008'>CHAPTER</th>
<th class='c009'> </th>
<th class='c010'>PAGE</th>
</tr>
<tr><td> </td></tr>
<tr>
<td class='c008'> </td>
<td class='c009'><span class='sc'>Introduction by Professor Henry Fairfield Osborn</span></td>
<td class='c010'><SPAN href='#Page_xi'>xi</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr><td> </td></tr>
<tr>
<td class='c008'>I.</td>
<td class='c009'><span class='sc'>Early Days and Work in the Dakota Group of the Cretaceous</span></td>
<td class='c010'><SPAN href='#Page_1'>1</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr><td> </td></tr>
<tr>
<td class='c008'>II.</td>
<td class='c009'><span class='sc'>First Expedition to the Kansas Chalk (1876)</span></td>
<td class='c010'><SPAN href='#Page_32'>32</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr><td> </td></tr>
<tr>
<td class='c008'>III.</td>
<td class='c009'><span class='sc'>Expedition with Professor Cope to the Bad Lands of the Upper Cretaceous (1876)</span></td>
<td class='c010'><SPAN href='#Page_61'>61</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr><td> </td></tr>
<tr>
<td class='c008'>IV.</td>
<td class='c009'><span class='sc'>Further Work in the Kansas Chalk (1877)</span></td>
<td class='c010'><SPAN href='#Page_99'>99</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr><td> </td></tr>
<tr>
<td class='c008'>V.</td>
<td class='c009'><span class='sc'>Discovery of the Loup Fork Beds of Kansas and Subsequent Work There (1877, 1882–1884)</span></td>
<td class='c010'><SPAN href='#Page_120'>120</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr><td> </td></tr>
<tr>
<td class='c008'>VI.</td>
<td class='c009'><span class='sc'>Expedition to the Oregon Desert in 1877</span></td>
<td class='c010'><SPAN href='#Page_144'>144</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr><td> </td></tr>
<tr>
<td class='c008'>VII.</td>
<td class='c009'><span class='sc'>Expedition to the John Day River in 1878</span></td>
<td class='c010'><SPAN href='#Page_170'>170</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr><td> </td></tr>
<tr>
<td class='c008'>VIII.</td>
<td class='c009'><span class='sc'>First Expedition to the Permian of Texas in 1882</span></td>
<td class='c010'><SPAN href='#Page_205'>205</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr><td> </td></tr>
<tr>
<td class='c008'>IX.</td>
<td class='c009'><span class='sc'>Expeditions in the Permian of Texas for Professor Cope (1895–1897)</span></td>
<td class='c010'><SPAN href='#Page_230'>230</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr><td> </td></tr>
<tr>
<td class='c008'>X.</td>
<td class='c009'><span class='sc'>In the Red Beds of Texas for the Royal Museum of Munich (1901)</span></td>
<td class='c010'><SPAN href='#Page_244'>244</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr><td> </td></tr>
<tr>
<td class='c008'>XI.</td>
<td class='c009'><span class='sc'>Conclusion</span></td>
<td class='c010'><SPAN href='#Page_265'>265</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr><td> </td></tr>
<tr>
<td class='c008'>INDEX</td>
<td class='c009'> </td>
<td class='c010'><SPAN href='#Page_283'>283</SPAN></td>
</tr>
</table>
<div class='chapter'>
<span class='pageno' id='Page_vii'>vii</span>
<h2 class='c005'>ILLUSTRATIONS</h2></div>
<table class='table0' summary='ILLUSTRATIONS'>
<tr>
<th class='c009'></th>
<th class='c010'>PAGE</th>
</tr>
<tr><td> </td></tr>
<tr>
<td class='c009'><span class='sc'>Charles H. Sternberg</span></td>
<td class='c010'><SPAN href='#Frontispiece'>Frontispiece</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr><td> </td></tr>
<tr>
<td class='c009'><span class='sc'>Rocks of Laramie Beds on South Schneider Creek, Converse Co., Wyoming</span></td>
<td class='c010'><SPAN href='#fig_01'>16</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr><td> </td></tr>
<tr>
<td class='c009'><span class='sc'>Weathered Rocks and Laramie Beds near South Schneider Creek</span></td>
<td class='c010'><SPAN href='#fig_02'>16</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr><td> </td></tr>
<tr>
<td class='c009'><span class='sc'>Mushroom-like Concretion Known as Pulpit Rock</span></td>
<td class='c010'><SPAN href='#fig_03'>17</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr><td> </td></tr>
<tr>
<td class='c009'><span class='sc'>Fossil Leaves of</span> <i>Sassafras dissectum</i>. (After Lesquereux.)</td>
<td class='c010'><SPAN href='#fig_04'>20</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr><td> </td></tr>
<tr>
<td class='c009'><span class='sc'>Fossil Leaves.</span> <i>a</i>, <span class='sc'>Unopened Leaf Nodule</span>. <i>b</i>, <span class='sc'>Nodule opened to show fossil leaf</span>. <i>c, d, e, f</i>, <span class='sc'>Various forms of fossil leaves</span></td>
<td class='c010'><SPAN href='#fig_05'>21</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr><td> </td></tr>
<tr>
<td class='c009'><span class='sc'>Facsimile of letter from Dr. Lesquereux to the author</span></td>
<td class='c010'><SPAN href='#Page_24'>24</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr><td> </td></tr>
<tr>
<td class='c009'><span class='sc'>Skull and Front Limb of</span> <i>Clidastes tortor</i></td>
<td class='c010'><SPAN href='#fig_06'>44</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr><td> </td></tr>
<tr>
<td class='c009'><span class='sc'>Skeleton of</span> <i>Clidastes tortor</i></td>
<td class='c010'><SPAN href='#fig_07'>45</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr><td> </td></tr>
<tr>
<td class='c009'><span class='sc'>Skeleton of Ram-nosed Tylosaur</span>, <i>Tylosaurus dyspelor</i></td>
<td class='c010'><SPAN href='#fig_08'>45</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr><td> </td></tr>
<tr>
<td class='c009'><span class='sc'>Ram-nosed Tylosaur</span>, <i>Tylosaurus dyspelor</i>. Restoration by Osborn and Knight</td>
<td class='c010'><SPAN href='#fig_09'>50</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr><td> </td></tr>
<tr>
<td class='c009'><span class='sc'>Skull of the Flat-wristed Mosasaur</span>, <i>Platecarpus coryphæus</i></td>
<td class='c010'><SPAN href='#fig_10'>51</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr><td> </td></tr>
<tr>
<td class='c009'><span class='sc'>Restoration of Kansas Cretaceous Animals.</span> (From drawing by S. Prentice, after Williston.) <i>a</i>, <i>Unitacrinus socialis</i>; <i>b</i>, <i>Clidastes velox</i>; <i>c</i>, <i>Ornithostoma ingens</i></td>
<td class='c010'><SPAN href='#fig_11'>56</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr><td> </td></tr>
<tr>
<td class='c009'><span class='sc'>Giant Cretaceous Fish</span>, <i>Portheus molossus</i> (above), <span class='sc'>compared with a six-foot modern Tarpon</span> (below)</td>
<td class='c010'><SPAN href='#fig_12'>57</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr><td> </td></tr>
<tr>
<td class='c009'><span class='sc'>Lower jaw of</span> <i>Trachodon marginatus</i>, <span class='fss'>SHOWING SUCCESSIVE LAYERS OF TEETH</span>. <span class='sc'>Top and side views of a tooth of</span> <i>Myledaphus bipartitus</i>. (After Osborn and Lambe.)</td>
<td class='c010'><SPAN href='#fig_13'>76</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr><td> </td></tr>
<tr>
<td class='c009'><span class='sc'>Skull of a Duck-billed Dinosaur</span>, <i>Diclonius</i>, <span class='fss'>FOUR FEET IN LENGTH</span></td>
<td class='c010'><SPAN href='#fig_14'>77</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr><td> </td></tr>
<tr>
<td class='c009'><span class='pageno' id='Page_viii'>viii</span><span class='sc'>Professor E. D. Cope</span></td>
<td class='c010'><SPAN href='#fig_15'>78</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr><td> </td></tr>
<tr>
<td class='c009'><span class='sc'>Brontosaurus or Thunder Lizard.</span> Restoration by Osborn and Knight</td>
<td class='c010'><SPAN href='#fig_16'>79</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr><td> </td></tr>
<tr>
<td class='c009'><span class='sc'>Fossil shells</span>, <i>Haploscapha grandis</i>. (After Cope.)</td>
<td class='c010'><SPAN href='#fig_17'>108</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr><td> </td></tr>
<tr>
<td class='c009'><span class='sc'>Charles Sternberg and son taking up a large slab of fossils from a chalk bed in Gove Co., Kansas</span></td>
<td class='c010'><SPAN href='#fig_18'>109</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr><td> </td></tr>
<tr>
<td class='c009'><span class='sc'>Camp and Wagon of the fossil hunters on Grasswood Creek, Converse Co., Wyoming</span></td>
<td class='c010'><SPAN href='#fig_19'>109</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr><td> </td></tr>
<tr>
<td class='c009'><span class='sc'>Skeleton of the Plesiosaur</span>, <i>Dolichorhynchus osborni</i>. (After Williston.)</td>
<td class='c010'><SPAN href='#fig_20'>114</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr><td> </td></tr>
<tr>
<td class='c009'><span class='sc'>Fossil limb bones of the Giant Sea Tortoise</span>, <i>Protostega gigas</i></td>
<td class='c010'><SPAN href='#fig_21'>115</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr><td> </td></tr>
<tr>
<td class='c009'><span class='sc'>Fossil shell of Giant Land Turtle</span>, <i>Testudo orthopygia</i></td>
<td class='c010'><SPAN href='#fig_22'>122</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr><td> </td></tr>
<tr>
<td class='c009'><span class='sc'>The Snake-necked Elasmosaurus</span>, <i>Elasmosaurus platyurus</i>. Restoration by Osborn and Knight</td>
<td class='c010'><SPAN href='#fig_23'>123</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr><td> </td></tr>
<tr>
<td class='c009'><span class='sc'>Three-toed Horse</span>, <i>Hypohippus</i>. (After Gidley.)</td>
<td class='c010'><SPAN href='#fig_24'>132</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr><td> </td></tr>
<tr>
<td class='c009'><span class='sc'>Fossil Rhinoceros</span>, <i>Teleoceras fossiger</i>. (After Osborn.)</td>
<td class='c010'><SPAN href='#fig_25'>133</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr><td> </td></tr>
<tr>
<td class='c009'><span class='sc'>Skull and tusks of Imperial Mammoth</span>, <i>Elephas imperator</i></td>
<td class='c010'><SPAN href='#fig_26'>178</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr><td> </td></tr>
<tr>
<td class='c009'><span class='sc'>Fossil-bearing Cliffs.</span> (After Merriam.) <span class='sc'>Upper John Day exposure</span></td>
<td class='c010'><SPAN href='#fig_27'>179</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr><td> </td></tr>
<tr>
<td class='c009'><span class='sc'>Fossil-bearing Cliffs.</span> (After Merriam.) <span class='sc'>Middle John Day exposure</span></td>
<td class='c010'><SPAN href='#fig_28'>179</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr><td> </td></tr>
<tr>
<td class='c009'><span class='sc'>Fossil-bearing Cliffs.</span> (After Merriam.) <span class='sc'>Mascall Formation</span></td>
<td class='c010'><SPAN href='#fig_29'>202</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr><td> </td></tr>
<tr>
<td class='c009'><span class='sc'>Fossil-bearing Cliffs.</span> (After Merriam.) <span class='sc'>Clarno Formation</span></td>
<td class='c010'><SPAN href='#fig_30'>202</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr><td> </td></tr>
<tr>
<td class='c009'><span class='sc'>Skull of Great Saber-toothed Tiger</span>, <i>Pogonodon platycopis</i>. (After Cope.)</td>
<td class='c010'><SPAN href='#fig_31'>203</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr><td> </td></tr>
<tr>
<td class='c009'><span class='sc'>Skeleton of Fin-backed Lizard</span>, <i>Naosaurus claviger</i></td>
<td class='c010'><SPAN href='#fig_32'>234</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr><td> </td></tr>
<tr>
<td class='c009'><span class='sc'>Fin-backed Lizard</span>, <i>Naosaurus claviger</i>. Restoration by Osborn and Knight</td>
<td class='c010'><SPAN href='#fig_33'>235</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr><td> </td></tr>
<tr>
<td class='c009'><span class='sc'>Facsimile of letter from Prof. E. D. Cope to the author</span></td>
<td class='c010'><SPAN href='#Page_238'>238</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr><td> </td></tr>
<tr>
<td class='c009'><span class='sc'>Fossil skull of Giant Salamander</span>, <i>Diplocaulus magnicornis</i>. (After Broili.)</td>
<td class='c010'><SPAN href='#fig_34'>240</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr><td> </td></tr>
<tr>
<td class='c009'><span class='sc'>Professor Henry Fairfield Osborn</span></td>
<td class='c010'><SPAN href='#fig_35'>241</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr><td> </td></tr>
<tr>
<td class='c009'><span class='sc'>Facsimile of letter from Dr. Karl von Zittel to the author</span></td>
<td class='c010'><SPAN href='#Page_246'>246</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr><td> </td></tr>
<tr>
<td class='c009'><span class='pageno' id='Page_ix'>ix</span><span class='sc'>Dr. Karl von Zittel</span></td>
<td class='c010'><SPAN href='#fig_36'>256</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr><td> </td></tr>
<tr>
<td class='c009'><span class='sc'>Shell of</span> <i>Toxochelys bauri?</i></td>
<td class='c010'><SPAN href='#fig_37'>257</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr><td> </td></tr>
<tr>
<td class='c009'><span class='sc'>Niobrara Group, Cretaceous chalk with cap rock of Loup Fork Tertiary, Known as Castle Rock, Gove Co., Kansas</span></td>
<td class='c010'><SPAN href='#fig_38'>262</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr><td> </td></tr>
<tr>
<td class='c009'><span class='sc'>Chalk of Kansas, known as the Coffee Mill.</span> Hell Creek</td>
<td class='c010'><SPAN href='#fig_39'>262</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr><td> </td></tr>
<tr>
<td class='c009'><span class='sc'>Bones of</span> <i>Platecarpus coryphæus</i></td>
<td class='c010'><SPAN href='#fig_40'>263</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr><td> </td></tr>
<tr>
<td class='c009'><span class='sc'>Skeleton of</span> <i>Hesperornis regalis</i>, <span class='sc'>the Giant-toothed Bird of the Kansas Cretaceous</span></td>
<td class='c010'><SPAN href='#fig_41'>266</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr><td> </td></tr>
<tr>
<td class='c009'><span class='sc'>Slab of Fossil Crinoids</span>, <i>Uintacrinus socialis</i>, <span class='fss'>CONTAINING 160 CALYCES, COVERING FOUR BY SEVEN FEET</span></td>
<td class='c010'><SPAN href='#fig_42'>267</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr><td> </td></tr>
<tr>
<td class='c009'><span class='sc'>Skull and Horns of Giant Bison from Hoxie, Kansas. Spread of horn cores six feet, one inch; length along curve, eight feet</span></td>
<td class='c010'><SPAN href='#fig_43'>268</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr><td> </td></tr>
<tr>
<td class='c009'><span class='sc'>Jaw of Columbian Mammoth</span>, <i>Elephas columbi</i></td>
<td class='c010'><SPAN href='#fig_44'>269</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr><td> </td></tr>
<tr>
<td class='c009'><span class='sc'>Three-horned Dinosaur</span>, <i>Triceratops sp.</i> Restoration by Osborn and Knight</td>
<td class='c010'><SPAN href='#fig_45'>270</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr><td> </td></tr>
<tr>
<td class='c009'><span class='sc'>Duck-billed Dinosaur</span>, <i>Trachodon mirabilis</i>. Restoration by Osborn and Knight</td>
<td class='c010'><SPAN href='#fig_46'>271</SPAN></td>
</tr>
</table>
<div class='chapter'>
<span class='pageno' id='Page_xi'>xi</span>
<h2 class='c005'>INTRODUCTION</h2></div>
<div class='nf-center-c1'>
<div class='nf-center c004'>
<div><i>By</i> <span class='sc'>Henry Fairfield Osborn</span>,</div>
<div class='c001'><i>President and Curator of Vertebrate Paleontology of the American Museum of Natural History, New York</i></div>
</div></div>
<p class='c000'>Our bookshelves contain the lives or narratives of
adventure of many hunters of living game, but the
life of a fossil hunter has never been written before.
Both are in the closest touch with nature and, therefore,
full of interest. The one is as full of adventure,
excitement and depression, hope and failure,
as the other, yet there is ever the great difference
that the hunter of live game, thorough sportsman
though he may be, is always bringing live animals
nearer to death and extinction, whereas the fossil
hunter is always seeking to bring extinct animals
back to life. This revivification of the past, of the
forms which once graced the forests and plains, and
rivers and seas, is attended with as great fascination
as the quest of live game, and to my mind is a still
more honorable and noble pursuit.</p>
<p class='c000'>The richness of the great American fossil fields,
<span class='pageno' id='Page_xii'>xii</span>which extend over the vast arid and semi-arid area
of the West, scattered over both the great plains
region and the great mountain region, has resulted
in the creation of a distinctively American profession:
that of fossil hunting. The fossil hunter must
first of all be a scientific enthusiast. He must be
willing to endure all kinds of hardships, to suffer
cold in the early spring and the late autumn and
early winter months, to suffer intense heat and the
glare of the sun in summer months, and he must
be prepared to drink alkali water, and in some regions
to fight off the attack of the mosquito and
other pests. He must be something of an engineer
in order to be able to handle large masses of stone
and transport them over roadless wastes of desert
to the nearest shipping point; he must have a delicate
and skilful touch to preserve the least fragments
of bone when fractured; he must be content
with very plain living, because the profession is seldom,
if ever, remunerative, and he is almost invariably
underpaid; he must find his chief reward and
stimulus in the sense of discovery and in the despatching
of specimens to museums which he has
never seen for the benefit of a public which has little
knowledge or appreciation of the self-sacrifices
which the fossil hunter has made.</p>
<p class='c000'>The fossil fields of America have fortunately attracted
a number of such devoted explorers, and one
<span class='pageno' id='Page_xiii'>xiii</span>of the pioneers on the honorable list is the author of
this work, who by his untiring energy has contributed
some of the finest specimens which now
adorn the shelves and cases of many of the great
museums of America and Europe.</p>
<p class='c000'>Although special explorations have been described,
sometimes in considerable detail, this is the first time
that the “life of a fossil hunter” has been written,
and it is fitting that it comes from the pen of the
oldest living representative of this distinctively
American profession. The name of Charles H.
Sternberg is attached to discoveries in many parts
of the West; discoveries which have formed distinct
contributions to science, to the advance of paleontology,
to our knowledge of the wonderful ancient
life of North America. His is a career full of adventure,
of self-sacrifice, worthy of lasting record
and recognition by all lovers of nature.</p>
<div class='pbb'>
<hr class='pb c001' /></div>
<div class='ph1'>
<div class='nf-center-c1'>
<div class='nf-center c003'>
<div>THE LIFE OF A FOSSIL HUNTER</div>
</div></div>
</div>
<div class='chapter'>
<span class='pageno' id='Page_1'>1</span>
<h2 class='c005'>CHAPTER I<br/> <span class='large'>EARLY DAYS AND WORK IN THE DAKOTA GROUP OF THE CRETACEOUS</span></h2></div>
<div class='c006'>
<ANTIMG class='drop-capi' src='images/i_016.jpg' width-obs='100' alt='' /></div>
<p class='drop-capi_8'>
I do not remember when I first began
collecting fossils, but I have always loved
nature.</p>
<p class='c000'>Fifteen years of my early life were
spent in Otsego County, New York, at dear old
Hartwick Seminary, where my father, the Rev. Dr.
Levi Sternberg, was principal for fourteen years,
and my grandfather, Dr. George B. Miller, a much-loved,
devout man, professor of theology for thirty-five.
The lovely valley of the Susquehanna, in which
it stands, lies five miles below Cooperstown, the
birthplace of the Walter Scott of America, James
Fenimore Cooper, and my boyhood was spent among
scenes which he has made famous. Often my companions
and I have gone picnicking on Otsego
Lake, shouting to call up the echo, and spreading
<span class='pageno' id='Page_2'>2</span>our tablecloth on shore beneath the very tree from
which the catamount was once about to spring upon
terrified Elizabeth Temple.</p>
<p class='c000'>My greatest pleasure in those early days and
best, was to live with a darling cousin in the woods.
There among the majestic trees,—maples, hickories,
pines, and hemlocks,—we used to build sylvan retreats,
weaving willow twigs in and out among the
poles which I cut for supports; and there, to those
great trees, I delivered my boy orations. We delighted
also to visit and explore Moss Pond, a body
of water on top of the hills across the river, surrounded
entirely by sponge moss. We could “teeter”
across the moss to a log that gave us support,
and catch blind bullheads, or eat our lunch in the
cool, dense hemlock woods that surrounded the
water, where the heavy branches, intertwined like
mighty arms, shut away the light, so that even at
midday the sun could barely pierce their shadows.</p>
<p class='c000'>How I loved flowers! I carried to my mother
the first crocus bloom that showed its head above
the melting snow, the trailing arbutus, and the tender
foliage of the wintergreen. Later in the season
I gathered for her the yellow cowslip and fragrant
water-lily; and when autumn frosts had tinged the
leaves with crimson and gold I filled her arms with
a glorious wealth of color.</p>
<p class='c000'>Even in those early days I used to cut out shells
<span class='pageno' id='Page_3'>3</span>from the limestone strata of the region with whatever
tools were at hand, but they were admired
chiefly as examples of the wonderful power of
running water to carve rocks into the semblance of
shells. Or if one of the more observant remarked
that these shells looked very much as if they had
been alive once, the only theory that would account
for their presence and yet sustain the belief that the
world was only six thousand years old, was that the
Almighty, who created the rocks, could easily, at
the same time, have created the ancient plants and
animals as fossils, just as they were found.</p>
<p class='c000'>I remember a rich find I made in the garret of an
uncle in Ames, New York,—a cradle filled with
fossil shells and crystals of quartz. They had been
collected by my uncle’s brother, who, fortunately,
as my uncle said, had died early, before bringing
disgrace upon the family by wasting his time wandering
over the hills and gathering stones. All the
large specimens he had collected had been thrown
away, and the smaller ones in the old cradle had
long been forgotten. I was welcome to all my
uncle’s buggy could carry when he took me home,
and I can never forget the joy of going over that
material again and again, selecting the specimens
that appealed most to my sense of the beautiful and
the wonderful. I labeled them all “From Uncle
James,” and it greatly astonished a dear aunt of
<span class='pageno' id='Page_4'>4</span>mine, to whom I gave them some years later when
we moved West, to find in the collection a lot of
baculites, labeled “Worms from Uncle James.”</p>
<p class='c000'>When I was ten years old, I met with an accident
from which I have never completely recovered. I
remember the wild chase I was making after an
older boy, over the hay-mows and piles of shocked
grain in my father’s barn. On the floor below, an
old-fashioned thresher, one of the first of its kind,
was making an ear-splitting noise, while outside the
two horses, hitched to an inclined plane, climbed
incessantly, but never reached the top.</p>
<p class='c000'>The boy climbed a shock of oats on the scaffold
in the peak of the barn, and “Charley-boy,” as my
mother called me, following him, slipped through a
hole in the top of the ladder which had been covered
by the settling oats, and fell twenty feet to the
floor below. The older boy climbed swiftly down
and carried me home insensible to my mother.</p>
<p class='c000'>Our family physician thought that only a sprain
was the result, and bandaged the injured limb; but,
as a matter of fact, the fibula of the left leg had
been dislocated, so that there was much suffering
and a little crippled boy going about among the
hills on crutches.</p>
<p class='c000'>The leg never grew quite strong again, and some
years later gave me a good deal of trouble. In
1872 I was in charge of a ranch in Kansas, and during
<span class='pageno' id='Page_5'>5</span>November of that year a great sleet storm covered
the whole central part of the state. In order
to water my cattle, which were scattered over a
range of several thousand acres on Elm Creek, I
was obliged to follow around small bands of them
to their accustomed watering-places and cut the ice
for them. The water that splashed over my clothing
froze solid, and the result was that inflammatory
rheumatism settled in the lame leg. I sat in a
leathern chair all winter close to a boxwood stove,
tended by my dear mother, who never left me day
or night.</p>
<p class='c000'>When the inflammation subsided, the knee joint
had become ankylosed, and in order to avoid going
on crutches all my life, I lay in the hospital at Fort
Riley for three months, all alone in a great ward,
and had the limb straightened by a special machine.
So skilfully did the army surgeon do this work
that I threw away crutches and cane, and, although
the leg has always been stiff, I have since walked
thousands of miles among the fossiliferous beds in
the desolate fields of the West.</p>
<p class='c000'>In 1865, when I was fifteen years old, my father
accepted the principalship of the Iowa Lutheran
College at Albion, Marshall County, and the broken
hill country of my boyhood days was replaced by
the plains and water courses of the Middle West.</p>
<p class='c000'>Two years later my twin brother and I emigrated
<span class='pageno' id='Page_6'>6</span>to an older brother’s ranch in Ellsworth County,
Kansas, two and a half miles south of Fort Harker,
now known as Kanopolis. This post was at that
time the terminus of the Kansas Division of the
Union Pacific, and almost daily train-load after
train-load of prairie schooners, drawn by oxen,
burros, or mules, pulled out from it over the old
Butterfield and Santa Fé trails, the one leading up
the Smoky Hill, the other through the valley of the
Arkansas to Denver and the Southwest.</p>
<p class='c000'>In spring great herds of buffalo followed the tender
grass northward, returning to the South in the
fall; and one bright day my brother and I started
out on our first buffalo hunt. Driving a team of
Indian ponies hitched to a light spring wagon, we
soon left the few settlements behind, and reached
the level prairie to the southwest, near old Fort
Zaro, a deserted one-company post on the Santa Fé
Trail. At this time it had been appropriated by a
cattleman who had a small herd grazing in the
vicinity.</p>
<p class='c000'>When within a few miles of this post, we saw a
large herd of buffalo lying down a mile away. It
was no easy matter to crawl toward them over the
plain, pushing myself along without raising my body
above the short grass, but after strenuous efforts I
got within shooting distance without disturbing
them, and was resting for a shot, when the rancher
<span class='pageno' id='Page_7'>7</span>rode through the herd and sent them all off at a
lope. Much angered and almost tempted to turn
my gun on the man, I returned to the wagon, and
we drove on across country that had been cropped
as if by a great herd of sheep by the thousands of
buffalo that had passed that way on their journey
south.</p>
<p class='c000'>Anxious to find picketing-ground and water, we
reached the Arkansas River, where in a swale covered
with grass and willows were paths cut by the
buffalo. I lay down in one of these, and bringing
my gun to my shoulder, was just drawing bead,
when a large animal rushed across my line of vision
at right angles to the trail. I pulled the trigger,
and down went the brown mass in a heap on the
ground.</p>
<p class='c000'>Swinging my gun above my head, I rushed forward
shouting, “I’ve killed a buffalo!”—to find
that I had shot a Texas cow. Terrified at the
thought of its owner’s anger, we rushed back to
the wagon, and, whipping up the ponies, sped away
as if the furies were after us. But cooler second
thoughts led us to the conclusion that the cow had
come north with the buffalo, and was as much our
prey as the buffalo themselves.</p>
<p class='c000'>Just before sunset we reached a part of the country
through which the buffalo had not passed, where
a rich carpet of grass, covering all the plain, offered
<span class='pageno' id='Page_8'>8</span>plenty of food for our tired ponies. Here we were
delighted to find, standing in a ravine, an old bull
buffalo, which had been driven out of the herd to
die. Concealing ourselves behind the carcass of a
cow, we opened fire upon him from our Spencer
carbines, and continued to riddle his poor old body
with leaden slugs until his struggles ceased. Even
then, when he had lain down to rise no more, we
crawled up behind him and threw stones at him,
to make sure that he was dead. We found his flesh
too tough for food; but it was an exciting event to
us two boys to kill this massive beast, in earlier days
perhaps the leader of the herd.</p>
<p class='c000'>In this connection I might tell of a chase I had
several years later, while living on a ranch in eastern
Ellsworth County. I saw a huge buffalo bull
come loping along from the hills, headed for a section
of land that was inclosed by a wire fence. On
the other side of this section there was a piece of
timber-land, and fearing that if he got into the dense
timber I should lose him, I rode after him at the top
of my speed.</p>
<p class='c000'>When his lowered head struck the wire fence it
flew up like a spring gate and immediately closed
down behind him. In order to follow, I had either
to cut the wire or go out of my way to a gate half
a mile to the south. I decided on the latter course,
and applied quirt and spur to my horse, but upon
<span class='pageno' id='Page_9'>9</span>reaching the gate, discovered my escaping quarry
already halfway across the section. I got just near
enough to put a bullet into his rump as he passed
through the fence on the other side, and disappeared
in the dense woods beyond.</p>
<p class='c000'>In my excitement I shouted to my pony, and, dismounting
and standing on the wire to hold it down,
yelled at him to come across. But a sudden fit of
obstinacy had seized him, and he would not come.
I had to let the fence up while I thrashed him, and
then as soon as I got it under my feet again, he
pulled back as before. We repeated this performance
until I was exhausted and gave up the struggle.</p>
<p class='c000'>But upon casting a look of despair in the direction
of the vanished buffalo, I was both astonished
and ashamed to see him standing under an elm tree
not ten feet away, covered up all except his eyes
by a great wild grapevine, and gazing in mute
astonishment at the struggle between Nimrod and
his pony. I have always regretted that I took advantage
of the confidence he placed in me, for as
soon as I could control my jumping nerves, I shot
the noble beast behind the shoulder, and he fell.</p>
<p class='c000'>I saw my last herd of buffalo in Scott County,
Kansas, in 1877. Antelope, however, continued to
be abundant as late as 1884, and only two years ago
I saw a couple of them among some cattle near
Monument Rocks, in Gove County.</p>
<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_10'>10</span>In camp, during those early days, we were rarely
out of antelope meat, and even now my mouth
waters at the thought of the delicious tenderloin,
soaked first in salt water to season it and remove
the blood, then covered with cracker dust, and fried
in a skillet of boiling lard. In those days a hind
quarter could be hung up under the wagon in the
hottest part of summer, and not spoil. The wind
hermetically sealed it, and there were no blow-flies
then. The early settlers of a new country bring
with them, and protect, their enemies, and destroy
their friends, the skunks, badgers, wildcats, and
coyotes, as well as hawks, eagles, and snakes, because
they kill a chicken or two as a change from
their usual diet of prairie dogs and rabbits.</p>
<p class='c000'>In those pioneer days the Kiowas, Cheyennes,
Arapahoes, and other Indian tribes made constant
inroads upon the venturesome settler who, following
the advice of Horace Greeley, had come West to
grow up with the country.</p>
<p class='c000'>I remember when old Santante, a chief of the
Kiowas, came to the post in a government ambulance,
which he had captured on one of his raids.
In time of peace, the Indians belong to the Interior
Department of the government, so that all the
officer in command at the fort could do was to
extend the old chief the courtesy of the army and
care of himself and team. Once, at the old stone
<span class='pageno' id='Page_11'>11</span>sutler’s store, I heard him remark, after he had
filled himself well with whisky, “All the property on
the Smoky Hill is mine. I want it, and then I want
hair.”</p>
<p class='c000'>He got both the following year.</p>
<p class='c000'>In July, 1867, owing to the fear of an Indian
outrage, General A. J. Smith gave us at the ranch a
guard of ten colored soldiers under a colored sergeant,
and all the settlers gathered in the stockade,
a structure about twenty feet long and fourteen
wide, built by setting a row of cottonwood logs in
a trench and roofing them over with split logs,
brush, and earth. During the height of the excitement,
the women and children slept on one side of
the building in a long bed on the floor, and the men
on the other side.</p>
<p class='c000'>The night of the third of July was so sultry that
I concluded to sleep outside on a hay-covered shed.
At the first streak of dawn I was awakened by the
report of a Winchester, and, springing up, heard the
sergeant call to his men, who were scattered in rifle
pits around the building, to fall in line.</p>
<p class='c000'>As soon as he had them lined up, he ordered them
to fire across the river in the direction of some cottonwoods,
to which a band of Indians had retreated.
The whites came forward with guns in their
hands and offered to join in the fight, but the sergeant
commanded: “Let the citizens keep in the
<span class='pageno' id='Page_12'>12</span>rear.” This, indeed, they were very willing to do
when the order was given, “Fire at will!” and the
soldiers began sending leaden balls whizzing through
the air in every conceivable arc, but never in a
straight line, toward the enemy, who were supposed
to be lying on the ground.</p>
<p class='c000'>As soon as it was light my brother and I explored
the river and found a place where seven
braves, in their moccasined feet, had run across a
wet sandbar in the direction of the cottonwoods,
as the sergeant had said. Their pony trails could
be easily seen in the high, wet grass.</p>
<p class='c000'>The party in the stockade were not reassured
to hear the tramp of a large body of horsemen,
especially as the soldiers had fired away all their
ammunition; but the welcome clank of sabers and
jingle of spurs laid their fears to rest, and soon a
couple of troops of cavalry, with an officer in command,
rode up through the gloom.</p>
<p class='c000'>After the sergeant had been severely reprimanded
for wasting his ammunition, the scout Wild Bill was
ordered to explore the country for Indian signs.
But, although the tracks could not have been plainer,
his report was so reassuring that the whole command
returned to the Fort.</p>
<p class='c000'>Some hours later I spied this famous scout at the
sutler’s store, his chair tilted back against the stone
wall, his two ivory-mounted revolvers dangling at
<span class='pageno' id='Page_13'>13</span>his belt, the target of all eyes among the garrison
loafers. As I came up this gallant called out, “Well,
Sternberg, your boys were pretty well frightened
this morning by some buffalo that came down to
water.”</p>
<p class='c000'>“Buffalo!” I said; “that trail was made by our
old cows two weeks ago.”</p>
<p class='c000'>Later the general in command told me that they
had prepared for a big hop at the Fort on the night
of the fourth, and that Bill did not report the
Indian tracks because he did not want to be sent
off on a long scout just then.</p>
<p class='c000'>In the unsettled state of the country at this time
there were other dangers to be guarded against beside
that of Indians, as I learned to my cost.</p>
<p class='c000'>As a boy of seventeen, it was my duty on the
ranch to haul milk, butter, eggs, and vegetables to
Fort Harker for sale. I cared for my pony myself,
and in order to get the milk and other food to
the Fort in time for the soldiers’ five-o’clock breakfast,
I had to go without my own. One day I had
a number of bills to collect from the officers, but
as I was unusually tired, and the officers were not
out of bed when I called, I put the bills in my
inside pocket and started home.</p>
<p class='c000'>As was my custom, after leaving the garrison I
lay down on the wagon-seat and went to sleep, letting
my faithful horse carry me home of his own
<span class='pageno' id='Page_14'>14</span>accord. I have no recollection of what happened
afterwards, but when I reached the ranch my brothers
found me sitting up in the wagon moaning and
swinging my arms, with the blood flowing from a
slung-shot wound in my forehead. I had been
struck down in my sleep and robbed of all the money
I had on my person, as it happened only about five
dollars.</p>
<p class='c000'>Providentially our nearest neighbor, D. B. Long,
was a retired hospital steward, and the post surgeon,
Dr. B. F. Fryer, who was sent for immediately,
was just ready to drive to town with his team of
fleet little black ponies. He reached the ranch in an
incredibly short time, and, although respiration had
ceased, those two faithful men kept up artificial
respiration for hours. My oldest brother, Dr. Sternberg,
for years Surgeon-General of the Army, was
also sent for, and I found him lying on a mattress
by my side when I regained consciousness two weeks
later.</p>
<p class='c000'>I might tell also of the ruffians who at one time
held Ellsworth City in a grip of iron, and how, until
they killed each other off or moved further west
with the railroad, the dead-cart used to pass down
the street every morning to pick up the bodies of
those who had been killed in the saloons the night
before, and thrown out on the pavement to be
hauled away.</p>
<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_15'>15</span>But, although I should like to recall more of the
incidents connected with the opening up of a new
country, time presses, and I must pass on to an account
of my work as a fossil hunter.</p>
<p class='c000'>I had not been long in this part of the country
before I found that the neighboring hills, topped
with red sandstone, contained, in isolated places,
from a few feet to a mile in diameter and scattered
through a wide expanse of country, the impressions
of leaves like those of our existing forests.</p>
<p class='c000'>The rocks consisted of red, white, and brown
sandstone, with interlaid beds of variously-colored
clays; while here and there, scattered through the
formation, were vast concretions of very hard flint-like
sandstone, often standing on softer rocks that
had been weathered away into columns, the whole
giving the effect of giant mushrooms, as seen in
the cuts (Figs. 1–3).</p>
<p class='c000'>This formation, resting unconformably on the upper
carboniferous rocks, belongs to the Dakota Group
of the Cretaceous Period. The sedimentary rocks
were laid down during the Cretaceous Period, the
closing period of the “Age of Reptiles,” in a great
ocean, whose shore line enters Kansas at the mouth
of Cow Creek on the Arkansas River, and extending
in a northwesterly direction in the vicinity of Beatrice,
Nebraska, touches Iowa, and passes on to
Greenland.</p>
<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_16'>16</span>I was carried away at this time by the thoughts
that had been surging through the hearts of men
since Darwin bade them turn to nature for the
answers to their problems concerning the plants and
animals of this earth.</p>
<p class='c000'>How often in imagination I have rolled back the
years and pictured central Kansas, now raised two
thousand feet above sea level, as a group of islands
scattered about in a semi-tropical sea! There are
no frosts and few insect pests to mar the foliage of
the great forests that grow along its shores, and the
ripe leaves fall gently into the sand, to be covered
up by the incoming tide and to form impressions and
counterparts of themselves as perfect as if a Divine
hand had stamped them in yielding wax.</p>
<p class='c000'>Go back with me, dear reader, and see the treeless
plains of to-day covered with forests. Here rises
the stately column of a redwood; there a magnolia
opens its fragrant blossoms; and yonder stands a
fig tree. There is no human hand to gather its
luscious fruit, but we can imagine that the Creator
walked among the trees in the cool of the evening,
inhaling the incense wafted to Him as a thank-offering
for their being. All His works magnify
Him. The cinnamon sends forth its perfume beside
the sassafras; linden and birch, sweet gum and persimmon,
wild cherry and poplar mingle with each
other. The five-lobed sarsaparilla vine encircles the
tree-trunks, and in the shade grows a pretty fern.
Many other beautiful plant forms grace the landscape,
but the glorious picture is only for him who
gathers the remains of these forests, and by the
power of his imagination puts life into them; for
it is some five million years, according to the great
Dana of my childhood days, since the trees of this
Kansas forest lifted their mighty trunks to the
sun.</p>
<div id='fig_01' class='figcenter id003'>
<ANTIMG src='images/fig_01.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
<div class='ic001'>
<p><span class='sc'>Fig. 1.—Rocks of Laramie Beds on South Schneider Creek, Converse County, Wyoming.</span></p>
</div>
</div>
<div id='fig_02' class='figcenter id003'>
<ANTIMG src='images/fig_02.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
<div class='ic001'>
<p><span class='sc'>Fig. 2.—Weathered Rocks and Laramie Beds near South Schneider Creek.</span></p>
</div>
</div>
<div id='fig_03' class='figcenter id001'>
<ANTIMG src='images/fig_03.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
<div class='ic001'>
<p><span class='sc'>Fig. 3.—Mushroom-like concretion known as Pulpit Rock.</span><br/><br/>Elm Creek, Kansas, near Sternberg’s ranch. (From Trans. Kan. Acad. Sci.)</p>
</div>
</div>
<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_17'>17</span>At the age of seventeen, therefore, I made up my
mind what part I should play in life, and determined
that whatever it might cost me in privation,
danger, and solitude, I would make it my business
to collect facts from the crust of the earth; that
thus men might learn more of “the introduction
and succession of life on our earth.”</p>
<p class='c000'>My father was unable to see the practical side
of the work. He told me that if I had been a rich
man’s son, it would doubtless be an enjoyable way
of passing my time, but as I should have to earn a
living, I ought to turn to some other business. I
say here, however, lest I forget it, that, although
my struggle for a livelihood has been hard, often,
indeed, bitter, I have always been financially better
off as a collector than when I have wasted, speaking
from the point of view of science, some of the most
precious days of my life attempting to make money
by farming or in some other business, so that I
<span class='pageno' id='Page_18'>18</span>might live at home and avoid the hardships and exposures
of camp life.</p>
<p class='c000'>With collecting-bag over my shoulder and pick in
hand, I wandered over the hills of Ellsworth
County. If I chanced upon a locality rich in fossil
leaves, thrilled with a joy that knows no comparison,
I walked on air as I carried my trophies home; while
if night overtook me with an empty bag, I could
scarcely drag my weary limbs along.</p>
<p class='c000'>Among the rich localities that I discovered was
one which I called “Sassafras Hollow,” because of
the countless sassafras leaves I quarried there. It
is situated about a mile southeast of the schoolhouse
on Thompson Creek, in the Hudson brothers’ neighborhood,
and lies at the head of a narrow ravine in
a ledge of sandstone, with a spring beneath. Here
too, the noted paleobotanist, Dr. Leo Lesquereux,
collected fossils in 1872, securing among other specimens
a large, beautiful leaf which he named in my
honor “<i>Protophyllum sternbergii</i>.”</p>
<p class='c000'>I have a vivid recollection of the discovery of
another locality. One night I dreamed that I was
on the river, where the Smoky Hill cuts into its
northern bank, three miles southeast of Fort Harker.
A perpendicular face in the colored clay impinges
on the stream, and just below this cliff is the mouth
of a shallow ravine that heads in the prairie half a
mile above.</p>
<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_19'>19</span>In my dream, I walked up this ravine and was at
once attracted by a large cone-shaped hill, separated
from a knoll to the south by a lateral ravine. On
either slope were many chunks of rock, which the
frost had loosened from the ledges above. The
spaces left vacant in these rocks by the decayed
leaves had accumulated moisture, and this moisture,
when it froze, had had enough expansive power to
split the rock apart and display the impressions of
the leaves.</p>
<p class='c000'>Other masses of rock had broken in such a way
that the spaces once filled by the midribs and stems
of the leaves admitted grass roots; and their rootlets,
seeking the tiny channels left by the ribs and
veins of the leaves, had, with the power of growing
plants, opened the doors of these prisoners, shut up
in the heart of the rock for millions of years.</p>
<p class='c000'>I went to the place and found everything just as
it had been in my dream.</p>
<p class='c000'>Two of the largest leaves known to the Dakota
Group were taken from this place. One, a great
three-lobed leaf, the stem passing through an ear-like
projection at its base, Dr. Lesquereux called
<i>Aspidophyllum trilobatum</i>; the other, equally large,—over
a foot in diameter,—and three-lobed too,
but indented with large teeth, he called <i>Sassafras
dissectum</i> (Fig. <SPAN href='#fig_04'>4</SPAN>).</p>
<p class='c000'>I believe I am the only fossil hunter who has
<span class='pageno' id='Page_20'>20</span>collected from this locality. Probably my eyes saw
the specimens while I was chasing an antelope or
stray cow and too much occupied with the work in
hand to take note of them consciously, until they
were revealed to me by the dream, the only one in
my experience that ever came true. I tell this story
to show how deeply I was interested in these fossils.</p>
<p class='c000'>My first collection, or rather the cream of it, was
sent to Professor Spencer F. Baird, of the Smithsonian
Institution. The following is the letter
which I received from him:</p>
<div class='nf-center-c1'>
<div class='nf-center c011'>
<div><span class='sc'>Smithsonian Institution</span>,</div>
</div></div>
<div class='c012'>Washington, June 8, 1870.</div>
<p class='c013'>Dear Sir:—We are duly in receipt of your letter
of May 28th, announcing the transmission of the
fossil plants collected by your brother and yourself,
and shall look forward with much interest to their
arrival. As soon as possible after they reach us,
we shall submit them to competent scientific investigation,
and report to you the result.</p>
<div class='lg-container-r c011'>
<div class='linegroup'>
<div class='group'>
<div class='line'>Very respectfully yours, etc.,</div>
<div class='line in16'><span class='sc'>Spencer F. Baird</span>,</div>
<div class='line in10'>Assistant Secretary in Charge.</div>
</div></div>
</div>
<p class='c000'>There was no money in fossils at that early day,
but I prized more highly than money the promise
in the letter that my specimens would be studied by
competent authority, and that I should receive credit
for my discoveries.</p>
<div id='fig_04' class='figcenter id001'>
<ANTIMG src='images/fig_04.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
<div class='ic001'>
<p><span class='sc'>Fig. 4.—Fossil leaves of</span> <i>Sassafras dissectum</i>.<br/><br/>(After Lesquereux.)</p>
</div>
</div>
<div id='fig_05' class='figcenter id004'>
<ANTIMG src='images/fig_05.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
<div class='ic001'>
<p><span class='sc'>Fig. 5.</span>—<i>a</i>, <span class='sc'>Unopened leaf nodule</span>; <i>b</i>, <span class='sc'>Nodule opened to show fossil leaf</span>; <i>c, d, e, f</i>, <span class='sc'>Various forms of fossil leaves</span>.</p>
</div>
</div>
<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_21'>21</span>The specimens were sent to Dr. John Strong
Newberry, professor in Columbia University and
State Geologist of Ohio. He did not find opportunity
at that time to publish the results, but long years
afterwards, in 1898, I received from Dr. Arthur
Hollick a copy of “Later Flora of North America,”
a posthumous work of Dr. Newberry’s. Turning
instantly to the magnificent plates, I recognized
some of my early specimens, the first I ever collected
that were of value to science.</p>
<p class='c000'>Although, owing to the long delay in publication,
I lost credit for them, and the duplicates which I
had given to a friend had been used by Lesquereux
to illustrate some new species accredited to that
friend instead of to their rightful discoverer, Dr.
Newberry kindly acknowledged my work on p.
133 of his book, where he says: “The leaf figured
on Plate X and that represented on Plate XI were
included in a collection made by Charles H. Sternberg,
and Lesquereux has done only justice to him
by attaching his name to the finest species contained
in the large collection of fossil plants he made
there,” that is, at Sassafras Hollow.</p>
<p class='c000'>In 1872, just before Lesquereux’s great work,
“The Cretaceous Flora,” appeared, I learned that
the famous botanist was a guest of Lieutenant
Benteen, the commander of Fort Harker. Fortunately,
I had retained rough sketches of the first
<span class='pageno' id='Page_22'>22</span>specimens I had sent to the Smithsonian Institution.
So with these I started for the Post, where I
found a reception in progress in honor of the
noted guest.</p>
<p class='c000'>I was introduced to the venerable botanist by his
own son, who spoke to him in French, as he was
almost deaf. When I displayed my sketches, he
took me to one side, and in a corner of the room I
told him the story of my discoveries. His eyes
shone when he examined the drawings. “This is
a new species,” he said, “and this, and this. Here
is one described and illustrated from poorer material.”</p>
<p class='c000'>I do not remember how long we talked. I only
know that the golden moments sped by all too
rapidly; and from that hour until his death in 1889
we were in constant correspondence.</p>
<p class='c000'>After this all my collections were sent to him for
description. Over four hundred species of plants
like those of our existing forests along the Mexican
Gulf, some beautiful vines, a few ferns, and even
the fruit of a fig, and a magnolia flower petal, the
only petal so far found in the coarse sandstone of
the Dakota Group, have rewarded my earnest efforts.
The fragrance of this lovely flower seems
wafted down to us through the myriads of ages
since it bloomed.</p>
<p class='c000'>Dr. Arthur Hollick, in his paper, “A Fossil Petal
<span class='pageno' id='Page_23'>23</span>and a Fruit from the Cretaceous (Dakota Group)
of Kansas,” in Contributions from the New York
Botanical Garden, No. 31, says, on page 102: “Included
in a collection of fossil-plant remains from
the Cretaceous (Dakota Group) of Kansas, recently
obtained by the New York Botanical Garden from
Charles H. Sternberg of Lawrence, Kansas, are
two exceedingly interesting specimens,—one representing
a large petal, the other a fleshy fruit. Petals
are exceedingly rare, and I am not acquainted with
any published figure of anything of the kind which
can compare with ours in regard to either size or
satisfactory condition of preservation.”</p>
<p class='c000'>Of the fig, the Doctor remarks: “The fruit is
plainly that of a fig, and, although some twenty-three
species of <i>Ficus</i> have been described from the
Dakota Group, they were based upon leaf impressions.
This fossil has every appearance of many
dried herbarium specimens, and it is evident that it
must have possessed considerable consistency in
order to retain its original shape, as it has done to a
certain extent, under the pressure to which it must
have been subjected.”</p>
<p class='c000'>In 1888 I sent over three thousand leaf impressions
from the Dakota sandstone to Dr. Lesquereux,
and he selected from them over three hundred and
fifty typical specimens, many of them new, for the
National Museum. Hundreds of others, identified
<span class='pageno' id='Page_24'>24</span>by him, were afterwards purchased by R. D. Lacoe,
of Pittston, Pa., and presented to the Museum.</p>
<p class='c000'>So feeble had the great botanist become in these
last years of his life, that friends passed before his
failing eyes the trays containing these great collections.</p>
<p class='c000'>In my estimation, America can show no life more
unselfishly devoted to science than that of Lesquereux,
probably the most scholarly and conscientious
botanist of his day. He once wrote me that he received
a salary of five dollars a day from the U. S.
Geological Survey, and out of this he had to pay his
artist. He labored with unfailing enthusiasm to
complete his monumental work, “The Flora of the
Dakota Group,” but by the irony of fate, he never
saw his beloved book in print. It was published by
the Government five years after his death, under
the able editorship of Dr. F. H. Knowlton.</p>
<p class='c000'>He passed away at the age of eighty-three.</p>
<p class='c000'>“Born in the heart of Switzerland’s mountain
grandeur,” he once said, “my associations have
been almost all of a scientific nature. I have lived
with nature,—the rocks, the trees, the flowers. They
know me, I know them. Everything else is dead to
me.”</p>
<div class='figcenter id003'>
<ANTIMG src='images/i_044.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' /></div>
<div class='figcenter id003'>
<ANTIMG src='images/i_045.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' /></div>
<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_25'>25</span>It was my good fortune to be in constant correspondence
with Lesquereux, and his letters, which I
need not say I prize highly, have done more, perhaps,
than any other thing to fix my determination
that, come what might, I would be a fossil hunter
and add my quota to human knowledge. The letter
here reproduced has been as a lodestar to lead me
on past all discouragements in the path which as a
boy of seventeen I set out to follow. May it shed
light upon the life of some other straggler!</p>
<p class='c000'>In 1897, not having the means to go into the
vertebrate fields of western Kansas, I spent three
months in the Dakota Group, although I knew that
I had already supplied most of the museums of the
world with examples of its flora, and that there was
little interest in or demand for the leaves.</p>
<p class='c000'>I secured over three thousand leaves, however,
and paid first-class freight on them to my home at
Lawrence. Then I hauled them out to my little
twenty-acre farm, four miles southeast of town, and
pitched my 9 × 9 wall-tent for a workshop, flooring
it and putting up a stove. There I worked from
November to May, standing on my feet on an
average of fourteen hours a day, with my face to
the opening of the tent for light, and my back to
the stove. At night I worked over a coal-oil lamp.</p>
<p class='c000'>With a chisel-edged hammer weighing two
ounces, I trimmed off the rough stone from the
margin of the nodules, as illustrated in the woodcuts
by Christian Weber of New York (Fig. <SPAN href='#fig_05'>5</SPAN>, <i>c</i>, <i>d</i>,
<i>e</i>, and <i>f</i>), a labor of love on his part, for which I
<span class='pageno' id='Page_26'>26</span>am deeply grateful. I smoothed down the rock
with emery-stone also, and with a No. 1 needle
pried away the stone from the petioles, leaving the
impression as if it were the leaf itself standing up
in bold relief, thus bringing out all its beauty. One
of my neighbors, after examining the prepared
specimens, remarked, “You must have taken a long
time to carve those things. Why, they look just
like leaves!”</p>
<p class='c000'>When no more loving labor could be bestowed on
them without risk of injuring the specimens, I laid
them away in trays, to be numbered and identified.
I knew that some authorities demanded the specimens
in payment for the labor of identification, and
as I had to make a living out of my work, this
would never do for me. So after Lesquereux’s
death I undertook the work of identification myself,
although I confess it hurt my conscience, as I had
never had the training of a botanical authority. I
was greatly relieved, therefore, when, after selling
two hundred and fifty specimens to the New York
Botanical Gardens, I asked Dr. Arthur Hollick
whether my identifications were correct, to receive
the answer that upon a casual examination he could
find no reason to make any changes in my names.
I was certainly much encouraged by such words
from this eminent authority in fossil botany.</p>
<p class='c000'>To return to my great collection from the Dakota
<span class='pageno' id='Page_27'>27</span>Group, I spent nine months of incessant labor upon
it, and my readers may be surprised to learn that
I was delighted when Professor Macbride, of the
University of Iowa, purchased it for the munificent
sum of three hundred and fifty dollars, the price I
put upon it. My delight was even greater when I
received the following letter, which is now and was
then more highly prized than the check which it
enclosed.</p>
<div class='lg-container-r c011'>
<div class='linegroup'>
<div class='group'>
<div class='line'><span class='sc'>State University of Iowa.</span></div>
</div>
<div class='group'>
<div class='line in8'><span class='sc'>Botany.</span></div>
</div>
<div class='group'>
<div class='line in6'>Iowa City, Iowa, May 1, 1898.</div>
</div></div>
</div>
<div class='lg-container-l c011'>
<div class='linegroup'>
<div class='group'>
<div class='line'><span class='sc'>Dear Mr. Sternberg</span>:</div>
</div></div>
</div>
<p class='c013'>The boxes are all safely here. We have at present
no place for the display of the specimens, but have
opened the first three cases and are delighted with
the beauty of the material. I hope next year to have
a case for fossil plants, when I shall certainly make a
display of these beautiful leaves, and quote you as
collector. I should think the National Museum would
give you employment all the time.</p>
<p class='c013'>I trust you may have a pleasant and profitable summer,
and if in future I can in any way serve you,
kindly advise me.</p>
<div class='lg-container-r c011'>
<div class='linegroup'>
<div class='group'>
<div class='line'>Very truly yours,</div>
<div class='line in14'><span class='sc'>Thomas K. Macbride</span>.</div>
</div></div>
</div>
<p class='c000'>This small sum enabled me to go with my son
George into the chalk of Kansas, where we discovered
the splendid specimen of a mosasaur, now in the
museum of Iowa University. But for the timely
<span class='pageno' id='Page_28'>28</span>assistance given me when I most needed help, it is
doubtful whether Iowa would have secured this
treasure. My months of patient labor on the leaves
had convinced the authorities that my work on the
mosasaur would be faithfully done.</p>
<p class='c000'>Before closing this account of my work in the
Dakota Group, I should like to say a few words
about the manner in which the nodules are formed
around leaf impressions, a subject of which I have
made a careful study during years of exploration.
The illustrations (Fig. <SPAN href='#fig_05'>5</SPAN>, <i>a</i> and <i>b</i>) show the
nodules before they are opened, and the open
specimens before they have been trimmed, as in the
other cuts.</p>
<p class='c000'>The mother rock, or matrix, as it is called, from
which these concretions come, is quite soft and
easily disintegrates into yellowish sand under the
influences of the weather. Through this yellowish
sandstone are scattered countless leaf impressions
and their counterparts, but on account of the softness
of the matrix it is impossible to work out any
leaves from the inside of the rock masses, and we
should lose them altogether were it not for the following
natural process:</p>
<p class='c000'>Falling from the trees that grew along the shore
of the Cretaceous Ocean, these leaves were covered
with sand by the incoming tide. Some, falling stem
first, were turned over into a U-shape; others are
<span class='pageno' id='Page_29'>29</span>found lying flat, and others again at various angles.
The sand, accumulating through the years, finally
became consolidated, and, being in course of time
exposed to the air, began to “weather.” In the
meantime the iron coloring matter of the vegetation
had been dissolved out by the water and distributed
through the rock mass. As the rock weathers away,
the leaf impressions are hardened by the iron that
has been dissolved out of the sandy mass by water
holding acids in solution.</p>
<p class='c000'>As the soft rock about them continues to wear
away, the nodules begin to appear above the surface,
at first only as bumps slightly elevated above
the surrounding rock, but in time as complete concretions,
with the form of the leaves imprisoned
within, which are left standing on pedestals no
thicker than a lead pencil.</p>
<p class='c000'>Then the first storm of rain or hail breaks them
from their moorings; they become independent, are
reduced in size, and constantly hardened, so that
often a nodule is almost pure iron ore a fraction of
an inch in thickness.</p>
<p class='c000'>So the process goes on and will continue until all
the leaves within the parent rock have been protected
by an iron envelope; and it is this natural process
alone which can save these beautiful impressions
from falling to pieces when the sand is freed from
the rock by disintegration.</p>
<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_30'>30</span>The locality from which I collected these specimens
I have named the <i>Betulites</i> locality, on account
of the abundance of birch leaves of many varieties
which have been found there. It was discovered by
the late Judge E. P. West, collector for the University
of Kansas, and Professor Lesquereux honored
him by calling one species <i>Betulites westii</i>. He made
a wonderful collection of Dakota leaves for the
University, many of them new to science. The locality
is about a mile in length and tops the highest
hills in Ellsworth County.</p>
<p class='c000'>I have no record of the thousands of fossil leaves
I have collected from the sandstone of central Kansas.
I have never kept a single specimen for myself,
although I love them dearly, and it has often been
hard to give them up. But the object of my life has
been to advance human knowledge, and that could
not be accomplished if I kept my best specimens to
gratify myself. They had to go, and they went,
often for less than they cost me in labor and expense,
into the hands of those who could give
authoritative knowledge of them to the world, and
preserve them in great museums for the benefit
of all.</p>
<p class='c000'>One thing I have demanded as my right, in my
opinion an inalienable right, although I am sorry to
say that there are those who have denied it to me,—I
demand that my name appear as collector on all
<span class='pageno' id='Page_31'>31</span>the material which I have gathered from the rocks
of the earth.</p>
<p class='c000'>I might have sold to showmen or dealers; in fact
I have the assurance of one of the largest dealers
in America that I made a great mistake in selling
directly to museums instead of through him. If
I had done as he advised, the thousands of fossils I
have collected would have cost the museums fifty
per cent. more than they have, and my work would
have been measured by the money these dealers
would have been pleased to allow me, and I should
never have been known as one of those who have
devoted their lives to the advancement of paleontology.</p>
<div class='chapter'>
<span class='pageno' id='Page_32'>32</span>
<h2 class='c005'>CHAPTER II<br/> <span class='large'>MY FIRST EXPEDITION TO THE KANSAS CHALK, 1876</span></h2></div>
<div class='c006'>
<ANTIMG class='drop-capi' src='images/i_053.jpg' width-obs='100' alt='' /></div>
<p class='drop-capi_8'>
I spent the winter of 1875 and ’76 as
a student at the Kansas State Agricultural
College.</p>
<p class='c000'>Here a party was gathered to explore
western Kansas for fossils, under the leadership of
Professor B. F. Mudge, the enthusiastic state geologist
and a popular professor of the college. The expedition
was to be made under the auspices of Professor
O. C. Marsh, of Yale College, whose efforts
have secured for that institution the largest collection
perhaps in the world of American fossil vertebrates.</p>
<p class='c000'>I made every effort in my power to secure a place
in the party, but failed, as it was full when I applied.
It has always been hard, however, for me to give up
what I have determined to accomplish; so, although
almost with despair, I turned for help to Professor
E. D. Cope, of Philadelphia, who was becoming
so well known that a report of his fame had reached
me at Manhattan.</p>
<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_33'>33</span>I put my soul into the letter I wrote him, for this
was my last chance. I told him of my love for
science, and of my earnest longing to enter the
chalk of western Kansas and make a collection of
its wonderful fossils, no matter what it might cost
me in discomfort and danger. I said, however,
that I was too poor to go at my own expense, and
asked him to send me three hundred dollars to buy
a team of ponies, a wagon, and a camp outfit, and
to hire a cook and driver. I sent no recommendations
from well-known men as to my honesty or
executive ability, mentioning only my work in the
Dakota Group.</p>
<p class='c000'>I was in a terrible state of suspense when I had
despatched the letter, but, fortunately, the Professor
responded promptly, and when I opened the
envelope, a draft for three hundred dollars fell at
my feet. The note which accompanied it said: “I
like the style of your letter. Enclose draft. Go to
work,” or words to the same effect.</p>
<p class='c000'>That letter bound me to Cope for four long years,
and enabled me to endure immeasurable hardships
and privations in the barren fossil fields of the West;
and it has always been one of the joys of my life
to have known intimately in field and shop the greatest
naturalist America has produced.</p>
<p class='c000'>As soon as the frost was out of the ground, having
secured a team of ponies and a boy to drive
<span class='pageno' id='Page_34'>34</span>them, I left Manhattan and drove out to Buffalo
Park, where one of my brothers was the agent.
The only house, beside the small station building,
was that occupied by the section men. Great piles
of buffalo bones along the railroad at every station
testified to the countless numbers of the animals
slain by the white man in his craze for pleasure and
money. A buffalo hide was worth at that time about
a dollar and a quarter.</p>
<p class='c000'>Here at Buffalo I had my headquarters for many
years. A great windmill and a well of pure water,
a hundred and twenty feet deep, made it a Mecca
for us fossil hunters after two weeks of strong
alkali water. At this well Professor Mudge’s party
and my own used to meet in peace after our fierce
rivalry in the field as collectors for our respective
paleontologists, Marsh and Cope.</p>
<p class='c000'>What vivid memories I have of that first expedition!—memories
of countless hardships and splendid
results. I explored all the exposures of chalk
from the mouth of Hackberry Creek, in the eastern
part of Gove County, to Fort Wallace, on the south
fork of the Smoky Hill, a distance of a hundred
miles, as well as the region along the north and
south forks of the Soloman River.</p>
<p class='c000'>When we left Buffalo Station, we left civilization
behind us. We made our own wagon trails, two
of which especially were afterwards used by the
<span class='pageno' id='Page_35'>35</span>settlers until the section lines were constructed. One
of them ran directly south, crossing Hackberry
Creek about fifteen miles from the railroad, at a
point where there was a spring of pure water—a
rare and valuable find in that region. We camped
here many times, and made such a good trail that it
was used for years. Our second trail extended
across the country, striking Hackberry Creek where
Gove City now stands, and led over Plum Creek
Divide, whose high ledges of yellow chalk served
us as a landmark for twenty miles. From this point
we could see Monument Rocks, and near them the
remains of an old one-company post on the Santa
Fé Trail. Our trail then led up the Smoky Hill to
the mouth of Beaver Creek, on the eastern edge of
Logan County, and followed the old road as far
west as Wallace.</p>
<p class='c000'>Prairie-dog villages extended west along all the
water courses, and open prairies to the state line,
and we were rarely out of sight of herds of antelope
and wild horses. Near the present site of Gove
City, on the south side of Hackberry Creek, there
is a long ravine with perpendicular banks ten feet
or more in height. This ravine was at that time
used as a natural corral by some men who made a
business of capturing these wild ponies by following
them night and day, keeping them away from
their watering places, and giving them no chance
<span class='pageno' id='Page_36'>36</span>to graze, until they were exhausted. They were
then easily driven into the ravine and roped; after
which they were picketed on the prairie and soon
became tame. These wild horses were swift travelers,
and the most graceful of all the wild animals
of the West, being distinguished for the beauty of
their flowing manes and tails.</p>
<p class='c000'>There was constant danger from Indians, and in
order that we might escape as much as possible the
eagle eye of some scout who might be passing
through the country, our tent and wagon-sheet were
of brown duck. This blended with the dry, brown
buffalo grass, as we traveled from canyon to canyon,
and could not be distinguished very far even by the
trained eye of an Indian.</p>
<p class='c000'>I never carried my rifle with me. I left it in camp
or in the wagon, for I soon decided that I could not
hunt Indians and fossils at the same time, and I was
there for fossils.</p>
<p class='c000'>I had no unpleasant experiences with Indians,
however, although I came very near it once. It
was one day late in June, when we were about three
miles north of Monument Rocks. A gentle rain
early in the morning had taken the glare from the
chalk cliffs, and as this is a circumstance favorable
to the discovery of fossils, I shouldered my pick and
started down the canyon, eagerly scanning the rocks
on either side.</p>
<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_37'>37</span>About a mile below camp I was startled to come
upon a pony trail, so deeply cut into the soft chalk
that I knew each horse must be carrying a burden.
It had been made within the hour, and as I was
anxious to find out what it meant, I took the back
trail to the river. There I found that a large band
of warriors had sought shelter from the rain in a
willow thicket, tying bunches of the twigs together
and throwing deer or antelope skins over them to
shed the water. They had squatted within these
shelters until the storm had passed, and then cooked
their breakfasts, as the live coals in many of the
ash heaps testified.</p>
<p class='c000'>There were no squaws or children along; it makes
no difference whether women are white or red, they
always lose some of their belongings wherever they
go, and there was none of such property at this
camp. The ponies had been tied to the bushes and
not allowed to graze, showing that the party had
not expected to camp here, but had simply taken
shelter from the rain to avoid the discomfort of
traveling with wet buckskin moccasins and leggings.
I learned later that it was a large band of Kiowas,
Cheyennes, and Arapahoes, under their famous
chief, Crazy Horse, going north to join commands
with Sitting Bull, in Montana.</p>
<p class='c000'>The chalk beds which were the field of my labors
once composed the floor of the old Cretaceous ocean,
<span class='pageno' id='Page_38'>38</span>and consist almost entirely of the remains of microscopic
organisms, which must have fairly swarmed
in the water. They were discovered by the late Dr.
Bunn, of Lawrence, while a student in the laboratories
of the Kansas State University, after Dana
and others had said there was no chalk in America.</p>
<p class='c000'>When the animals that inhabited this ocean died
or were killed, their carcasses, buoyed up by the
gases that formed after death, floated about on the
surface of the water, losing a limb here, a head
there, a trunk or tail somewhere else. These detached
fragments, sinking to the bottom, were covered
by the soft ooze of the ocean floor, and remained
there as fossils, while the sedimentary rock
was being lifted three thousand feet above sea level.</p>
<p class='c000'>My explorations began on Hackberry Creek,
where I went over every inch of the exposed chalk,
from the creek’s mouth to its head, in Logan County.
Then I searched the river and the ravines that cut
into its drainage area along the flanks of the divides.</p>
<hr class='c014' />
<p class='c000'>Perhaps a description of a typical day’s experience
in one of the long ravines that gash the southern
slope of the country may be of interest to my
readers.</p>
<p class='c000'>Human beings, in order to accomplish any result
of moment, must be reasonably comfortable, that is,
they must not be over-hungry or thirsty or sleepy.
<span class='pageno' id='Page_39'>39</span>If they are, their minds will dwell upon their discomforts,
and they will accomplish little, as the hungry
boy, who keeps turning his head in the direction
of the sun and wondering whether it is not almost
dinner-time, is not likely to hoe much corn. My
first step, therefore, must be to find water and pitch
a camp.</p>
<p class='c000'>But often I have no idea where water is to be
found, and must give as much care to the search
as if I were looking for fossils. So while the driver
follows me with the wagon, I hunt for water and
fossils at the same time.</p>
<p class='c000'>Both sides of my ravine are bordered with cream-colored,
or yellow, chalk, with blue below. Sometimes
for hundreds of feet the rock is entirely denuded
and cut into lateral ravines, ridges, and
mounds, or beautifully sculptured into tower and
obelisk. Sometimes it takes on the semblance of a
ruined city, with walls of tottering masonry, and
only a near approach can convince the eye that this
is only another example of that mimicry in which
nature so frequently indulges.</p>
<p class='c000'>The chalk beds are entirely bare of vegetation,
with the exception of a desert shrub that “finds a
foothold in the rifted rock” and sends its roots
down every crevice. This shrub is one of the fossil
hunter’s worst enemies. Sending its roots down
the clefts in the rock, it searches out the fossil bones
<span class='pageno' id='Page_40'>40</span>that have been preserved there, and feasts upon them
until they have been entirely consumed, thus thriving
at the expense of God’s buried dead. More fine
fossil vertebrates have been destroyed by this plant
than by the denudation of the rock, or the vandal
hand of man, although both of the latter have been
powerful factors in the destruction of fossils. In
those days, however, there were no curiosity hunters
to dig up the precious relics, so that they were more
abundant than they are now.</p>
<p class='c000'>All this time I am wandering along the canyon
in search of water. Sometimes I come upon gorges
only two feet wide and fifty feet deep; sometimes
for five miles or more the sides of the ravine will
be only a few feet high.</p>
<p class='c000'>I know that there is water at the river, but it is
so far away from my work that I go on and on in
the hope of finding some nearer at hand. Dinnertime
comes, and the day is so hot that perspiration
flows from every pore. A howling south wind rises
and fills our eyes with clouds of pure lime dust, inflaming
them almost beyond human endurance. Still
no water. The driver, with horses famishing for it,
makes frantic gestures to me to hurry. To ease my
parched lips and swelling tongue, I roll a pebble
around in my mouth, or, if the season is propitious,
allay my thirst with the acid juice of a red berry
that grows in the ravines.</p>
<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_41'>41</span>After hours of search, I find in moist ground the
borings of crawfishes; with line and sinker I measure
the depth to water a couple of feet below in these
miniature wells. The welcome signal is given to
Will, the driver, and he digs a well, so that both man
and beast may be supplied.</p>
<p class='c000'>If I could sum up all the sufferings I endured in
the chalk fossil fields, I should say that I suffered
more from the lack of good drinking water than
from all the other ills combined. Except when we
were in the vicinity of one of the half-dozen springs
that are scattered about over an expanse of country
a hundred miles long and forty wide, the only water
that we had to drink was alkali water, which has the
same effect upon the body as a solution of Epsom
salts, constantly weakening the system. Yet whole
neighborhoods of settlers to this day have no other
water for themselves or their beasts, and they show
the deteriorating effects in their faces and their
walk.</p>
<p class='c000'>If I have found, scattered along a wash, the bones
of some fossil fish or reptile, as soon as we have
pitched camp and eaten our meal of antelope meat,
hot biscuits, and coffee, we both return with pick
and shovel, and, carefully saving each weathered
fragment, trace the remains to where the rest of
the bones lie <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">in situ</span></i>, as the scientists say,—that is,
in their original position in their rocky sepulcher.</p>
<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_42'>42</span>Then comes the work in the hot sun, whose rays
are reflected with added fervor from the glaring
surface of the chalk. Every blow of the pick loosens
a cloud of chalk dust, which is carried by the
wind into our eyes. But we labor on with unfailing
enthusiasm until we have laid bare a floor space upon
which I can stretch myself out at full length. Lying
there on the blistering chalk in the burning sun, and
working carefully and patiently with brush and awl,
I uncover enough of the bones so that I can tell what
I have found, and so that when I cut out the rock
which holds them I shall not cut into the bones
themselves.</p>
<p class='c000'>After they have been traced, if they lie in good,
hard rock, a ditch is cut around them, and by repeated
blows of the pick, the slab which contains
them is loosened.</p>
<p class='c000'>This is then securely wrapped and strengthened
with plaster or with burlap bandages that have been
dipped in plaster of the consistency of cream. In
the case of large specimens, boards are put lengthwise
to assist in strengthening the material, so that
it will bear transportation. Later I hope to tell of
a method, originated by me, by which the most
delicate fossil, even if preserved in very loose, friable
rock, may be detached and transported safely.</p>
<p class='c000'>So, as a hunter will follow the deer, through thickets
and over rocks, forgetting hunger and cold and
<span class='pageno' id='Page_43'>43</span>thirst in his anxiety to get a glimpse of his game,
that he may add its antlers to his list of trophies,
we fossil hunters, Professor Mudge’s party and my
own, sought our prey over miles and miles of barren
chalk beds, cheerfully enduring countless discomforts.</p>
<p class='c000'>Urged on by enthusiasm and the desire to secure
finer and finer material, I went over every inch of
the acres of exposed chalk along these ravines and
creeks, hoping each moment to find stretched before
my delighted eyes a complete skeleton of one of
those old sea serpents described by Cope, or a specimen
of that wonderful <i>Pteranodon</i>, or toothless flying
reptile, whose wing expanse was twenty feet or
more.</p>
<p class='c000'>All day, from the first streak of light until the
last level ray forced me to leave the work, I toiled
on, forgetting the heat and the miserable thirst and
the alkali water, forgetting everything but the one
great object of my life—to secure from the crumbling
strata of this old ocean bed the fossil remains
of the fauna of Cretaceous Times.</p>
<p class='c000'>The incessant labor, however, had a weakening
effect upon my system so that I fell a victim to malaria,
and when a violent attack of shaking ague
came on, I felt as if fate were indeed against me.</p>
<p class='c000'>I remember how, one day, when I was in the
midst of a shaking fit, I found a beautiful specimen
<span class='pageno' id='Page_44'>44</span>of a Kansas mosasaur. <i>Clidastes tortor</i> Cope named
it, because an additional set of articulations in the
backbone enabled it to coil. Its head lay in the center,
with the column around it, and the four paddles
stretched out on either side. It was covered by
only a few inches of disintegrated chalk.</p>
<p class='c000'>Forgetting my sickness, I shouted to the surrounding
wilderness, “Thank God! Thank God!”
And I did well to thank the Creator, as I slowly
brushed away the powdered chalk and revealed the
beauties of this reptile of the Age of Reptiles. Its
snake-like tail and flexible movements caused it to
appear to Cope a veritable serpent, so that he put it
in his new sub-order <i>Pythonomorpha</i>.</p>
<p class='c000'>I well remember the terrible journey over the
rough sod to the station with this specimen. I was
seized with another attack of ague, and as I jolted
about in the bottom of the wagon, I thought that
my head would surely burst. Little I cared,
though, so that I got my beloved fossil to the
Professor.</p>
<div id='fig_06' class='figcenter id003'>
<ANTIMG src='images/fig_06.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
<div class='ic001'>
<p><span class='sc'>Fig. 6.—Skull and front limb of</span> <i>Clidastes tortor</i>.<br/><br/>As collected and preserved by Charles Sternberg. (Now mounted in the Carnegie Museum.)</p>
</div>
</div>
<div id='fig_07' class='figcenter id003'>
<ANTIMG src='images/fig_07.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
<div class='ic001'>
<p><span class='sc'>Fig. 7.—Skeleton of</span> <i>Clidastes tortor</i>.<br/><br/>(In American Museum of Natural History.)</p>
</div>
</div>
<div id='fig_08' class='figcenter id003'>
<ANTIMG src='images/fig_08.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
<div class='ic001'>
<p><span class='sc'>Fig. 8.—Skeleton of Ram-nosed Tylosaur</span>, <i>Tylosaurus dyspelor</i>.<br/><br/>(In the American Museum of Natural History.)</p>
</div>
</div>
<p class='c000'>And I felt amply repaid for my sufferings when
the next winter I laid out the skeleton on the platform
of St. George’s Hall, in Philadelphia, where
the Professor spoke for an hour to a spellbound
audience, unfolding to them the wonders of the
creatures that lived when this old world was young.
At the close, which came suddenly, as was usually
<span class='pageno' id='Page_45'>45</span>the case in Cope’s speeches, before the people had
had time to come back from the misty past, he
turned to where I was sitting on a step, and beckoned
me to him. When I got within reach, he
turned me around to the audience and said: “Ladies
and gentlemen, allow me to introduce to you Mr.
Sternberg, the man who found this beautiful example
of the fauna of the Cretaceous.”</p>
<p class='c000'>He was much pleased with the hearty applause
that greeted me.</p>
<p class='c000'>This incident illustrates one of the characteristics
of Cope which endeared him to all his collectors.
He did not think that the money he paid them paid
for the dangers and privations they endured, far
from their friends and the comforts of civilization.
On the contrary, he gave them credit in all his publications
for their discoveries of species new to
science. And this is the one essential thing to the
collector—at least the true collector who values his
labor as something that cannot be measured by
money. All work done for science has a value above
that of money. Lesquereux might have made
money if he had remained a watchmaker, and Cope
would have won a fortune as a ship-owner if he had
entered his father’s office, but both men realized that
there is work which offers higher rewards than
riches; they gave their lives to science, and they
will never be forgotten.</p>
<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_46'>46</span>But we are far afield; let us return to the plains
and canyons of the Kansas chalk beds.</p>
<p class='c000'>I recall many trying experiences during that
memorable first season. Often we got into barren
ground and walked over miles and miles of blistering
chalk with nothing to show for our trouble. In
one locality the remains might be very abundant,
while in another, perhaps just as promising in appearance,
thousands of acres would be entirely barren.
But we had to go over it all before we could
be sure that there was nothing to repay our toil.</p>
<p class='c000'>Once after two weeks of fruitless effort, we drove
into a deep canyon, cut into the upper or reddish
chalks near Monument Rocks, which are so much
richer in fossils than the yellow or whitish beds
farther east.</p>
<p class='c000'>I had barely pitched the tent and got among the
beds when I discovered not only that I was the first
collector to visit the canyon but that it was rich in
fossil remains. I found two specimens of <i>Platecarpus</i>,
a species of Kansas mosasaur, in a low
knoll, separated by but three feet of chalk.</p>
<p class='c000'>At the same time one of those uncomfortable cold
rains set in, and I was not much encouraged when
Will told me that we had no food left. There was
plenty of corn for the ponies, but no coffee, flour,
bacon, or canned goods, not even an antelope; and
we were forty miles from our base of supplies. I
<span class='pageno' id='Page_47'>47</span>would not leave, however, without my load of fossils,
as I feared that during my absence my rivals
would come upon this Eldorado and clean it out. So
the cook was told to parch a kettleful of corn, and
we made our meals on that. In fact, we filled our
pockets with it and lived on it for three days, eating
most of the time to keep ourselves sufficiently
nourished.</p>
<p class='c000'>We had always depended for fuel upon the buffalo
chips which even then were strewn about everywhere,
but fortunately we found here an old dead
cottonwood tree, a rare thing in that region, where
even the willows on the river banks are short and
stunted. But for this wood we should have suffered.</p>
<p class='c000'>We remained there until we had loaded our
wagon with eight hundred pounds of fossil vertebrates.</p>
<p class='c000'>During the summer my constant use of a large
butcher knife in cutting away the chalk from specimens
caused a felon to form in the palm of my hand.
A fistula resulted, and for ten days I slept but little,
and could not work in the field.</p>
<p class='c000'>Finally, worn out by hard labor and constant attacks
of ague, I felt that my strength was failing,
and called on Professor Cope for an assistant. He
sent me J. C. Isaac, from Illges Ranch, Wyoming;
but matters were not much improved, for Mr. Isaac
had but a short time before seen five of his companions
<span class='pageno' id='Page_48'>48</span>shot down and scalped by a band of marauding
Indians, and only the swiftness of his horse had
saved him from the same fate. Consequently, he
saw an Indian behind every bush; and, although I
had never been afraid before even when I learned
that a large party on the warpath had passed close
to my camp, now, worn and tired as I was, I became
infected with his fears.</p>
<p class='c000'>When I found that I could do nothing to get myself
out of this mental condition and be of further
use to the Professor, I wrote to him, and was ordered
home for rest, to meet him later in Omaha,
in company with Mr. Isaac.</p>
<p class='c000'>But before we return to civilization, will my readers
go with me on another expedition to these Kansas
chalk beds? “How fleet is a glance of the
mind!” Instead of an arid, treeless plain, covered
with short grass, a great semi-tropical ocean lies
at our feet. Everywhere along the shores and
estuaries are great forests of magnolia, birch, sassafras,
and fig, while a vast expanse of blue water
stretches southward.</p>
<p class='c000'>“But,” you ask, “what is that animal at full
length upon the water in that sheltered cove?”</p>
<p class='c000'>Watch it a moment! It raises a long conical head,
four feet in length and set firmly upon a neck of
seven strongly spined vertebræ. This powerful head
terminates in a long, bony rostrum, also conical in
<span class='pageno' id='Page_49'>49</span>shape. Back of the neck are twenty-three large dorsal
vertebræ, followed by six pygals, as Dr. Williston
calls them, to which the hind arches and paddles
are attached. The body terminates in an eel-like
tail of over eighty elements, each strengthened by
a dorsal spine above and a V-shaped bone, called a
chevron, below; so that a vertical section of the
lizard would have a diamond shape.</p>
<p class='c000'>But see! an enemy in the distance is attracting
our reptile’s attention. It sets its four powerful
paddles in motion, and unrolling its forked tongue
from beneath its windpipe, throws it forward with
a threatening hiss, the only note of defiance it can
raise. The flexible body and long eel-like tail set
up their serpentine motion, and the vast mass of
animal life, over thirty feet in length, rushes forward
with ever-increasing speed through water
that foams away on either side and gurgles in a long
wake behind.</p>
<p class='c000'>The great creature strikes its opponent with the
impact of a racing yacht and piercing heart and
lungs with its powerful ram, leaves a bleeding
wreck upon the water. Then raising its head and
fore paddles into the air, it bids defiance to the
whole brute creation, of which it is monarch.</p>
<p class='c000'>A noble specimen of this great ram-nosed Tylosaur
is now mounted as a panel on the wall of the
American Museum, in New York, at the head of
<span class='pageno' id='Page_50'>50</span>the stairs on the right (Fig. <SPAN href='#fig_08'>8</SPAN>); and a little further
on, is a splendid skull of the same species, which
I discovered on Butte Creek, in Logan County.
Fig. <SPAN href='#fig_09'>9</SPAN> shows a restoration of this species.</p>
<p class='c000'>Doubtless many of the ankylosed bones which
we fossil hunters often find in the chalk of the Niobrara
Group of the Cretaceous were broken by blows
from these ram-nosed lizards.</p>
<p class='c000'>We have in Kansas three genera of these mosasaurs
as the celebrated Frenchman, Cuvier, named
them in 1808. The word literally means a reptile
of the Meuse, and it was given them because the
first specimen ever found was taken from the quarries
under the city of Maestricht, on the River
Meuse. For this information, and for much more
as to the anatomy of the Kansas mosasaurs, I am
indebted to Dr. Williston’s splendid work in Volume
IV of the University Geological Survey of Kansas:
Paleontology, Part I; although, of course, I obtained
most of my knowledge from the hundreds of
specimens which I collected myself.</p>
<p class='c000'>Among these are four especially fine specimens,
nearly complete, of the flat-wristed <i>Platecarpus
coryphæus</i> Cope. One of them I sent to the Iowa
State University, with head, column, and limbs
nearly in position, and still bedded in their native
chalk. This fellow, who was over eighteen feet
long, must have sunk so deep in the slimy mud of
the ocean-bed that even the gases formed in his
stomach could not lift his body to the surface. A
second specimen was sent to the British Museum of
Natural History, in London; a third to Munich,
Bavaria, and a fourth to the Roemer Museum, in
Hildesheim, Germany.</p>
<div id='fig_09' class='figcenter id003'>
<ANTIMG src='images/fig_09.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
<div class='ic001'>
<p><span class='sc'>Fig. 9.—Ram-nosed Tylosaur</span>, <i>Tylosaurus dyspelor</i>.<br/><br/>Restoration by Osborn and Knight. (From painting in American Museum of Natural History.)</p>
</div>
</div>
<div id='fig_10' class='figcenter id003'>
<ANTIMG src='images/fig_10.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
<div class='ic001'>
<p><span class='sc'>Fig. 10.—Skull of the Flat-wristed Mosasaur</span>, <i>Platecarpus coryphæus</i>.<br/><br/>(In the Kansas State University.)</p>
</div>
</div>
<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_51'>51</span>This last specimen is the best I ever took from the
Kansas chalk until 1907. It is twenty-five feet long.
Unfortunately, the head was all washed away, with
the exception of the mandibles and a few bones of
the skull. The most remarkable feature of this
specimen was the presence, for the first time in my
experience, of the complete cartilaginous breastbone
with the cartilaginous ribs, which are very
rare. They were described for the first time from
the noble Bourne specimen, by Dr. H. F. Osborn, of
the American Museum.</p>
<p class='c000'>This mosasaur, <i>Platecarpus</i>, is the most common
species known, and is almost as large as the big
<i>Tylosaurus</i>. It differs from the latter, however, in
the shape of the short, strong paddles and the blunt
rostrum. The skull in the illustration (Fig. <SPAN href='#fig_10'>10</SPAN>) is
that of a very fine specimen, one of my discoveries,
which was mounted by Mr. Bunker, of the natural
history department in the Kansas State University.
I have never seen a more complete skull, or one that
shows the height so well, in any specimen, unless it
is the little <i>Clidastes velox</i>, in the Kansas University
<span class='pageno' id='Page_52'>52</span>collection. You will notice the triangular shape of
the head, with the strong bones arching back to support
the lower jaw by the pulley-like quadrate bone.
Notice also that the suspensorium, instead of curving
down so that its groove fits over the rounded
edge of the quadrate, is straightened out. This is
caused by its having been flattened and distorted,
as nearly all fossils are, by the immense pressure to
which it has been subjected. Observe the conical
shape of the head in front of the eye-rim, terminating
in the hard, blunt rostrum. It is believed by the
authorities that a blow from this ram, delivered at
full speed, would put an adversary out of commission.</p>
<p class='c000'>But how did this creature feed itself, when all
its teeth are for grasping, none for masticating?
And how did it hold its prey, when it has no claw-armed
fingers, only weak paddles for swimming?</p>
<p class='c000'>In answering these questions, we shall describe
two characteristics of the mosasaurs which differentiate
them from all other reptiles.</p>
<p class='c000'>If you will look closely at the photograph, you
will notice, within the head, and below the eye-socket,
a row of recurved teeth. These are the
teeth on the pterygoid bones, which are located on
either side of the roof of the mouth, near the gullet,
and are provided with twelve teeth, more or less.
The lower jaw with its powerful sweep on its fulcrum,
<span class='pageno' id='Page_53'>53</span>pressed the living prey firmly upon these
teeth so that it could not come forward and escape.
Then notice the ball-and-socket joint just back of the
tooth-bearing bone or dentary, of the lower jaw.
After the wriggling, struggling prey had been fastened
on the teeth in the roof of the mouth, the
mandibles were shortened by a spreading of this central
joint, and the victim was forcibly pushed down
the throat.</p>
<p class='c000'>The species <i>Clidastes velox</i> of these Kansas mosasaurs,
was, as its name indicates, very agile, with
beautiful bones of so firm a texture that they have
suffered less than any of the other fossil vertebrates
from the vast pressure to which they have been
subjected, not only from the enormous amount of
material that has been heaped above them, but from
the still more powerful upward push which has
raised their burial-place three thousand feet above
sea level.</p>
<p class='c000'>I sent one very beautiful specimen of <i>Clidastes</i>
to Vassar College; so complete, in fact, that it can
be made into a panel mount.</p>
<p class='c000'>I think no artist has more fully appreciated what
these great reptiles must have been when alive than
Mr. Sidney Prentice, now of the Carnegie Museum,
whose beautiful restoration, made to illustrate Dr.
Williston’s work on Kansas Mosasaurs, is here reproduced
(Fig. <SPAN href='#fig_11'>11</SPAN><i>b</i>). I am under obligations to him
<span class='pageno' id='Page_54'>54</span>for the labor of his pencil. He has certainly put
life into this denizen of the old Cretaceous ocean,
and I do not believe that anyone, after a careful
study of the skeleton, could find any fault with the
restoration, from a scientific standpoint.</p>
<p class='c000'>In this connection, I should like also to call attention
to the beautifully preserved skull I sent to
the Carnegie Museum. This specimen shows a complete
side view of the head, with mandibles and
maxilla, the teeth interlacing as perfectly as in life.
The sclerotic plates that protect the eyeball are also
in natural position.</p>
<p class='c000'>The luxuriant life of the Cretaceous ocean was
certainly remarkable. Fish swarmed everywhere,
and often, as the specimens are uncovered, the scales
are picked up by the wind, crumbled into dust, and
scattered in every direction.</p>
<p class='c000'>Among the most common of the fossil bones in
those early days were those of a huge fish, whose
vertebræ, with fragments of heads and jaws, were
found in great abundance, although no perfect specimen
has been discovered. Professor Cope, who described
this fish, called it <i>Portheus molossus</i>. I secured
a fine specimen on Robinson’s ranch, in Logan
County. It lay in a small exposure of chalk along
a grassy hill slope, within a stone’s throw of the
ranch buildings. My son George was my assistant
then, and we got out this specimen in the month of
<span class='pageno' id='Page_55'>55</span>November. Our boarding place was five miles away,
and every night the ground froze hard. Nothing
daunted, we went to work with a will.</p>
<p class='c000'>The head and trunk region had already been uncovered,
and many of the ribs and spines had been
swept away and lost. We took up the head and
front fins in a great slab of plaster, as the chalk in
which they lay had disintegrated under the influence
of the frost. A violent windstorm was raging at
the time, and to complete the slab, George had to
bring water from a tank a hundred yards away. I
can still see that boy running up with his pail of
water, trying to carry it so that it would not be
emptied by the raging, howling wind that was almost
tearing his coat from his back, while I stood and
shouted, “Hurry up! The plaster’s hardening!”</p>
<p class='c000'>The rest of the column, to the tail, we took up separately,
and as the great tail-fins and many of the
caudal vertebræ were present with their spines, embedded
in solid chalk, we removed five feet of superincumbent
rock, cut a trench around the slab containing
the bones, and took it up by digging under it.</p>
<p class='c000'>This made another huge mass to be handled. The
section containing the head weighed over six hundred
pounds, and this tail section almost as much.
The latter froze solid before we could get it up to
the tent, where we kept a fire burning to dry out the
water from the bones and thus prevent the injurious
<span class='pageno' id='Page_56'>56</span>effects of freezing. I should like just here to
express my gratitude to those ranchmen who gave
their time and strength to assist me in handling
these huge sections.</p>
<p class='c000'>When they had been packed with excelsior in
strong boxes, a wagon was backed up against the
level platform which we had made in throwing out
the rock and soil that lay over the specimen. The
boxes were then set on edge, and, with the help of
boards and rollers, loaded into the wagon for shipment
to the railroad thirty miles away.</p>
<p class='c000'>But my troubles with this specimen were not
over; on the contrary, they had just begun. When
the section containing the head was being raised on
to a table in my shop it fell and its weight was so
great that the head was badly shattered, as was the
plaster that secured the bones in place below.</p>
<p class='c000'>Then all through the winter, while I was trying
to dry out the specimen, so that it could be cleaned
and prepared for shipment, the rats, which inhabited
the walls of the laboratory in great numbers, kept
pulling out the bran and excelsior that had been put
around the delicate bones to protect them; thus
causing the broken plaster, with the bones of the
head, to sink lower and lower, as the packing was
carried away from underneath.</p>
<div id='fig_11' class='figcenter id001'>
<ANTIMG src='images/fig_11.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
<div class='ic001'>
<p><span class='sc'>Fig. 11.—Restoration of Kansas Cretaceous Animals.</span><br/><br/>(From drawing by S. Prentice, after Williston.)<br/><br/><i>a</i>, <i>Uintacrinus socialis</i>; <i>b</i>, <i>Clidastes velox</i>; <i>c</i>, <i>Ornithostoma ingens</i>.</p>
</div>
</div>
<div id='fig_12' class='figcenter id003'>
<ANTIMG src='images/fig_12.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
<div class='ic001'>
<p><span class='sc'>Fig. 12.—Giant Cretaceous Fish</span>, <i>Portheus molossus</i> (above), compared with a six-foot modern Tarpon (below).<br/><br/>By courtesy of American Museum of Natural History.</p>
</div>
</div>
<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_57'>57</span>Driven to think out some plan of saving the specimen
from destruction, I conceived the idea of shoving
a number of wooden pegs of various lengths
under the broken fragments, so as to push them up
into their places and hold them firmly there. All
the excelsior was then taken away from beneath
them, a frame of lumber made around the section,
and the whole space filled with plaster which held
all the broken bones in place.</p>
<p class='c000'>In this specimen I found for the first time a complete
column of eighty-five vertebræ, a very important
find, as these vertebræ are of so nearly the
same size that in restoring an incomplete specimen
there was no way of estimating how many of them
there ought to be, and for anything to the contrary,
one might go on adding them indefinitely, as a certain
man in Europe added an enormous number to
his mounted specimen of a <i>Zeuglodon</i>.</p>
<p class='c000'>This now famous specimen is mounted above the
Bourne Tylosaur, in the corridor of the Halls
of Paleontology, at the American Museum. Dr.
Henry Fairfield Osborn, in his report describing it,
says: “The noble specimen of which a preliminary
description is here given, adds another to the many
services which Mr. Charles H. Sternberg has rendered
to vertebrate paleontology. It was secured
by him in the year 1900, near Elkader, Logan
County, Kansas. Originally the specimen had been
probably complete, but portions of the skeleton, especially
the ribs and spines, were injured and partly
<span class='pageno' id='Page_58'>58</span>removed by previous explorers. The fish was purchased
by the Museum in 1901, and mounted and
partly restored, under the direction of the writer,
by Adam Hermann, with the able assistance of Mr.
A. E. Anderson. Total length, from tip of tail to
a point directly above premaxillaries, 15 feet, 8
inches. Length of skull, 2 feet, 2 inches. Spread
of tail, 3 feet, 9 inches.” (Fig. <SPAN href='#fig_12'>12</SPAN>.)</p>
<p class='c000'>At the time it was mounted, this great predaceous
fish of the Cretaceous was said to be the most striking
example of a fossil fish in any museum of the
world. Since that day, however, a still finer one
has been sent to the Carnegie Museum. This specimen
is much superior to that at the American Museum,
as the ribs, spines, pelvic fins, arches, and
anal fin are in position.</p>
<p class='c000'>I should certainly be guilty of a great injustice
to my friend and the friend of paleontology, Mr.
W. O. Bourne, of Scott City, whose name has already
appeared in these pages in connection with
the great Tylosaur in the American Museum, if I
did not give him due credit for his share in the
securing of this specimen. He discovered the splendid
fish and tumbled a small mountain over on top
of it to hide it. Then he kindly gave it to me, and
after much digging, my son was able to get trace of
it. Mr. Bourne showed his wisdom in thus covering
it up, not only from the elements, but also from man,
<span class='pageno' id='Page_59'>59</span>who, out of curiosity, has destroyed some splendid
examples of creative power. I shall mention one
or two as object lessons before I complete this
history.</p>
<p class='c000'>But let us put life into this fish, whose bones now
lie in the Carnegie Museum.</p>
<p class='c000'>We are back again where the two mosasaurs did
battle royal for our enjoyment. Watch that ripple!
It is caused by a shoal of mackerel scurrying in toward
shallow water, in a mighty column five feet
deep. They are flying for their lives, for they have
seen behind them their most terrible enemy, a monster
fish with a muzzle like a bulldog’s, and huge
fangs three inches long projecting from its mouth.
Two rows of horrid teeth, one above and one below,
complete its armature. The great jaws, fourteen
inches long and four deep, move on a fulcrum, and
when they have dropped to seize a multitude of
these little fish, they close with a vise-like power.
The crushed and mangled remains pass down a cavernous
throat to appease a voracious appetite.</p>
<p class='c000'>The powerful front fins are armed with an outer
ray that moves on a joint in the pectoral arch, a long
recurved piece of solid bone, enameled on the outer
side and more powerful as a weapon than a cavalryman’s
sword. This single-edged sword is three feet
long, and commands the respect of its owner’s enemies,
the great saurians, or Kansas mosasaurs. Our
<span class='pageno' id='Page_60'>60</span>fish has only to swim up close to the abdomen of a
sleeping reptile, and lay it open for several feet with
one sudden stroke. If that is not sufficient, a slap
of the powerful tail, with a span of nearly four feet,
finishes the work.</p>
<p class='c000'>But see! nearer and nearer the great fish comes,
mouthful after mouthful of the fishes falling
into its horrid jaws. It must be starving; so
eager is it for its prey that it seems unconscious of
the fact that the tide has turned and is moving outward.
Now it discovers its danger and turns, but
too late. The water has gone back to the deep, leaving
it struggling for breath in a shallow pool. It
thrashes wildly about with its tail, whose sticky secretions
help to envelop it more and more thickly
with mud and slime, until at last its struggles cease.</p>
<p class='c000'>And then the scene changes. The old ocean disappears,
and we stand, George and I, three thousand
feet above sea level, on Hay Creek, in Logan
County, among crumbling ruins of denuded and
eroded chalk; and working with pick and shovel in
the burning sun, we bring the mighty carcass once
more to the light of day.</p>
<p class='c000'>But I hope to take my readers into this field again,
and will pass on now to my expedition in the Bad
Lands with Professor Cope.</p>
<div class='chapter'>
<span class='pageno' id='Page_61'>61</span>
<h2 class='c005'>CHAPTER III<br/> <span class='large'>EXPEDITION WITH PROFESSOR COPE TO THE BAD LANDS OF THE UPPER CRETACEOUS, 1876</span></h2></div>
<div class='c006'>
<ANTIMG class='drop-capi' src='images/i_088.jpg' width-obs='100' alt='' /></div>
<p class='drop-capi_8'>
About the first of August, 1876, Mr.
Isaac and I were in Omaha, awaiting the
arrival of Professor Cope from Philadelphia.</p>
<p class='c000'>We met him at the depot, and I remember his
watching me with astonishment as I limped along
the street on my crippled leg. At last, turning to
Isaac, whom he knew to be a horseman, he asked,
“Can Mr. Sternberg ride a horse?”</p>
<p class='c000'>Isaac answered: “I’ve seen him mount a pony
bareback and cut out one of his mares from a herd
of wild horses.”</p>
<p class='c000'>That satisfied the Professor, and when we got
to Montana, he gave me the worst-tempered pony
in the bunch.</p>
<p class='c000'>We were soon hurrying along over the treeless
plains of Nebraska, gaining in altitude every hour,
until we reached the highlands of the Great Divide,
and plunged down into Weber and Echo canyons,
<span class='pageno' id='Page_62'>62</span>whose forests are dwarfed into miniatures by the
majesty of the mountains about them.</p>
<p class='c000'>It was the first time that I had ever been among
these stupendous cliffs and ranges, and I held my
breath for very wonder as they unfolded before
my astonished vision. They soon became familiar
sights enough, but never, even when I gazed every
day upon the three Tetons, with the snow glistening
in their gorges in midsummer, or upon the mighty
ranges of the Rockies, did I lose my feeling of awe
at the power here displayed by the almighty Architect
who carved these wonderful canyons and set
these towering peaks as solemn sentinels over the
works of His hands.</p>
<p class='c000'>We had the pleasure of Mrs. Cope’s company as
far as Ogden. Then we three men, taking the narrow-gauge
railway, went on to Franklin, Idaho.
Here the most uncomfortable journey I have ever
experienced awaited us,—six hundred miles in a
Concord coach, through the dry, barren plains of
Idaho. Our six horses raised clouds of fine dust,
which penetrated our clothing and filled our eyes and
ears, and, sticking to the perspiration that oozed
from every pore, soon gave us the appearance of
having the jaundice.</p>
<p class='c000'>I cannot begin to describe the discomforts of that
terrible ride. We traveled ten miles an hour, day
and night, stopping only for meals, which cost us
<span class='pageno' id='Page_63'>63</span>a dollar each, and consisted of hot soda biscuit,
black coffee, bacon, and mustard, without butter,
milk, or eggs. If, worn out from continued loss
of sleep, we dozed off for a moment, a sudden lurch
of the coach into a chuck-hole would break our heads
against a post or a neighbor’s head. I remember
that once when the Professor was almost exhausted
from lack of sleep I took his head in my arms and
held it there, so that he might get a few hours’ rest.
I should like here to express my gratitude to the
fellow passengers who so often gave me a seat by
the driver, where, buttoned in by the leathern apron,
I got more than my share of sleep.</p>
<p class='c000'>When we reached the mountains, the beauty of
the scenery and the absence of dust made the journey
more endurable, but we had to walk up all the
steep ascents.</p>
<p class='c000'>At Helena we laid off for a few days. There the
news was fresh from the battle-field, of Custer and
the brave men who had followed him to death. A
letter of his, written just before he entered the valley
of death, was read to us by the proprietor of the
hotel. I remember one sentence of it: “We have
found the Indians, and are going in after them. We
may not come out alive.”</p>
<p class='c000'>All was excitement, and the Professor was
strongly advised against the folly of going into the
neutral ground between the Sioux and their hereditary
<span class='pageno' id='Page_64'>64</span>enemies, the Crows. A member of either tribe
might kill us, and lay our death to the other tribe.</p>
<p class='c000'>Cope, however, reasoned that now was our time
to go into this region, since every able-bodied Sioux
would be with the braves under Sitting Bull, while
the squaws and children would be hidden away in
some fastness of the mountains. There would be no
danger for us, he argued, until the Sioux were
driven north by the soldiers who were gathering
under Terry and Crook for the final struggle.</p>
<p class='c000'>Judging from past experience, he concluded
that we should have nearly three months in which to
make our collections in peace. We would leave the
field, he said, when we learned that the great chief
was being so closely pressed as to be forced to seek
safety in flight to the soil of Great Britain, across
the Sweet Grass Mountains into Assiniboia.</p>
<p class='c000'>His judgment proved good. It was not until
November, when a heavy snowstorm had covered
both the fossil fields and grass for the ponies, that
Sitting Bull gave up the unequal struggle against
cold and the Boys in Blue, and retreated to a more
friendly soil.</p>
<p class='c000'>At Fort Benton we found a typical frontier town
of that day,—streets paved with playing-cards, and
whisky for sale in open saloons and groceries. Our
presence had been heralded abroad during our stay
in Helena, and the Professor had difficulty in securing
<span class='pageno' id='Page_65'>65</span>an outfit without paying an exorbitant price for
it They knew him to be a stranger, and they “took
him in.”</p>
<p class='c000'>Finally, however, he secured four horses for the
wagon. The wheelers were worn-out mustangs,
which we were obliged to punish constantly to keep
at work, while one of the leaders, a fine four-year-old
colt, had to be knocked down half a dozen
times before he could be taught not to balk and
strike out with his fore feet at everyone who came
within reach. The other leader, old Major, was as
true as steel, and often saved the day, doing his
duty nobly in spite of the miserable company in
which he was forced to work.</p>
<p class='c000'>The first night Mr. Isaac and I slept outside the
town, with the four wagon horses and the three saddle
ponies, which were all picketed with new rope.
In the middle of the night, we heard an animal
groaning, and rushed out, to find our four-year-old
cut fearfully beneath the fetlocks by the ropes. We
had to cut him loose, help him up, and bind his
wounds. He was able to travel the next day, however,
and his accident was not altogether a misfortune,
as he was too sore for some time afterwards
to show his natural disposition.</p>
<p class='c000'>We drove down to the mouth of the Judith River,
opposite Claggett, where an Indian trader had a
store inclosed in a stockade. Here we went into
<span class='pageno' id='Page_66'>66</span>camp. Across the river were the lodges of two
thousand Crow Indians, who were preparing for
their annual buffalo hunt in this neutral ground,
where Sioux and Crow alike buried the hatchet
while they hunted the game that was their principal
sustenance.</p>
<p class='c000'>Mr. Isaac, with the dread of the Redman still in
his heart, insisted that we must protect the camp
by standing guard over it turn and turn about, and
to pacify him, the guard was mounted. I took the
first turn, and Mr. Isaac the second.</p>
<p class='c000'>The Professor did me the honor of sharing his
tent with me, and we were just dozing off when we
heard Mr. Isaac shout “Halt!” Looking out, we
saw an Indian approaching, with his squaw behind
him, the moonlight bringing out their forms in bold
relief.</p>
<p class='c000'>“Halt! Halt!” called Isaac, leveling his Winchester,
but the Indian, followed by his faithful
squaw, continued to advance up to the very muzzle
of the gun, repeating, “Me good Indian! Me good
Indian!”</p>
<p class='c000'>Cope dressed and went out, and found that the
Indian had mistaken us for illicit whisky dealers,
and come over to get a supply. The Professor told
the man to go to sleep under the wagon, and at daylight
to recross and invite half a dozen of the principal
chiefs to breakfast with us.</p>
<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_67'>67</span>The two Indians lay down and went to sleep as
directed, but they had just begun to snore peacefully
when Isaac’s turn at guard duty was over, and
he came to the wagon to wake the cook, a slow,
heavy man, whose fat cheeks had induced the Professor
to believe that he could cook digestible food.
The scout Cope had hired was not on hand, although
he, as well as the cook, had demanded his pay in
advance before he would accompany us.</p>
<p class='c000'>After much growling, the cook got up, and remembering
that he had left his shoes under the
wagon, went to get them and came upon the sleeping
beauties. Without more ado, he seized their
dirty blanket in both hands and coolly hauled them
out on to the open prairie. After which he proceeded
to get his shoes.</p>
<p class='c000'>At four o’clock in the morning it was Cope’s turn
to go on guard. He was awakened, but as his
Spencer carbine was at the bottom of his trunk,
and perhaps, too, because he was a Friend, and did
not believe in war, he refused to get up; and we
slept in safety the rest of the night without a
guard.</p>
<p class='c000'>Just before breakfast the Professor, as was his
custom, was washing his set of false teeth in a basin
of water, when a party of six stalwart chieftains
strode up in single file, in answer to his invitation
through the brave we had entertained.</p>
<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_68'>68</span>Quickly slipping the teeth into his mouth, Cope
advanced with a smiling face to greet his guests,
who shouted as one man, “Do it again! Do it
again!” He repeated the performance for them
again and again, much to their mystification.</p>
<p class='c000'>After they had tried to pull out their own and
each other’s teeth, and had failed, they settled down
to breakfast. The cook poured out their coffee for
them, and when they had had enough they shouted,
“When!”</p>
<p class='c000'>We never knew whether this hospitality was of
any benefit to us, as the whole tribe went on their
buffalo hunt, and we saw no more of them, but very
likely their chiefs forbade petty stealing from our
camp, for we lost nothing.</p>
<p class='c000'>We crossed the Missouri, here a clear, sparkling
stream, and the Judith River, and went into camp
in the narrow valley of Dog Creek, in the midst of
the fossil fields which we had come so far and at
such risks to explore.</p>
<p class='c000'>All about us stretched the interminable labyrinths
of the Bad Lands. Above us lay twelve hundred
feet of denuded rock, which Cope at that time believed
to belong to several formations. The rock
consists of great beds of black shale, which disintegrates
on the surface into a fine, black dust. The
lower levels contain many beds of lignite, which
makes a good soft coal, and burns readily. We
<span class='pageno' id='Page_69'>69</span>found beds four feet thick along the canyons. All
one had to do was to drive up to the face of the
cliff and load a wagon in a few minutes.</p>
<p class='c000'>As soon as the first streak of daylight appeared,
we breakfasted and were off, our picks tied to our
saddles, our collecting-bags dangling from the pommels,
and a lunch of cold bacon and hardtack in
our saddle-bags.</p>
<p class='c000'>I usually rode beside the Professor, my mount
a treacherous black mustang, who was ever on the
watch to regain his liberty. A curb bit that almost
tore his mouth to pieces was my only means of restraining
him. My right ear being totally deaf, I
usually rode at the Professor’s right, when the trail
would admit of our traveling abreast. He was not
always in a talkative mood, but when he began to
speak of the wonderful animals of this earth, those
of long ago and those of to-day, so absorbed did he
become in his subject that he talked on as if to himself,
looking straight ahead and rarely turning toward
me, while I listened entranced.</p>
<p class='c000'>Not so that wicked black mustang of mine. Suddenly
his front feet would leave the ground, and he
would stand up at full length on his hind legs.
Then feeling the gouging of the Spanish bit, he
would drop and run ahead to the Professor’s left
side. When the Professor, happening to look up,
found the place where I had been vacant, he would
<span class='pageno' id='Page_70'>70</span>exclaim in surprise, “Why, I thought you were on
my right, and here you are on my left!”</p>
<p class='c000'>The pony repeated this trick whenever I became
so deeply interested in the Professor’s talk as to
loosen my hold on the reins.</p>
<p class='c000'>On the very top of the Bad Lands were the
Judith River beds, now known, through the researches
of the late Professor J. B. Hatcher, to belong
to the Fort Pierre Group of the Upper Cretaceous.
Here tablelands and level prairies offered
plenty of grass for our ponies; so we climbed to
these heights, picketed our horses, and went into
the gorges in search of fossils. It was necessary
to give the loose shale the most careful examination,
as only a streak of dust a little different in
color from the uniform black around it, indicated
where the bones were buried.</p>
<p class='c000'>As a result of the loose composition of this friable
black shale and the overlying rocks of sandstone,
the Missouri has lowered its bed twelve hundred feet
below the level of the prairies, and the whole country
is cut up by a perfect labyrinth of canyons and
lateral ravines into a dreary landscape of utter
barrenness.</p>
<p class='c000'>At night the view from above of these intricate
passages was appalling. The black material of
which the rocks are composed did not permit a
single ray of light to penetrate the depths below,
<span class='pageno' id='Page_71'>71</span>and the ebony-like darkness seemed dense enough
to cut.</p>
<p class='c000'>Long ridges, terminating in perpendicular cliffs,
whose bases impinge upon the river a thousand feet
below, extend back into the country for miles. Often
they are cut by lateral ravines into peaks and pinnacles,
obelisks and towers, and other fantastic
forms. These ridges are so narrow that we could
hardly walk along them, and their sides drop at an
angle of forty-five degrees. It was only the disintegrated
shale on the surface, into which our feet
sank at every step, that gave us a foothold and kept
us from shooting with frightful velocity into the
gorges below.</p>
<p class='c000'>One day the Professor asked me to climb to a
point near the summit of a lofty ridge, crowned by
two massive ledges of sandstone, four feet thick,
which projected over the steep slope like the window
sills of some Titanic building. These ledges,
one above the other and separated by sixty feet
of shale, had been swept clean for about three feet,
so that I found an easy pathway for my feet, when
after laborious climbing I reached the lower ledge.
From my lofty perch I had a bird’s-eye view of
mile upon mile of the wonderful Bad Lands, a scene
of desolation such as no pen can picture.</p>
<p class='c000'>It was my duty to search every square inch of the
dust-covered slope between the ledges for fossil
<span class='pageno' id='Page_72'>72</span>bones. After much unsuccessful effort, I came to a
place at the head of a gorge, where a perpendicular
escarpment dropped downward for a thousand feet.
The upper ledge of sandstone had broken loose for
a space of thirty feet, and this huge mass of rock,
four feet thick, carrying with it the loose dirt and
polishing the underlying surface as it thundered
down the slope, had struck the lower ledge with such
force that it too had broken loose and plunged downward
into the abyss. A grove of pine trees at the
base of the cliff had been crushed to the earth by
this avalanche. To my view the remaining trees,
which I knew to be about fifty feet high, appeared
like seedlings, and the vast mass of rock like a
cobblestone.</p>
<p class='c000'>I concluded that I should have no difficulty in
crawling across the smooth space, for I reasoned
that if I began to slip, I could drive the sharp end
of my pick into the soft rock and thus stop myself.
So, climbing up the slope through the loose earth
to the base of the upper ledge, I started to cross.
When I was halfway over I began to slip, and confidently
raising my pick, struck the rock with all
my might. God grant that I may never again feel
such horror as I felt then, when the pick, upon
which I had depended for safety, rebounded as if it
had been polished steel, as useless in my hands as a
bit of straw. I struck frantically again and yet
<span class='pageno' id='Page_73'>73</span>again, but all the time I was sliding down with
ever-increasing rapidity toward the edge of the
abyss, safety on either side and certain and awful
death below.</p>
<p class='c000'>I remember that I gave up all hope of escape,
and that after the first shock I felt no fear of death;
but the few moments of my slide seemed hours,
measured by the rapidity with which my mind
worked. Everything, it seemed to me, that I had
ever done or thought spread itself out before my
mind’s eye as vividly as the wonderful panorama
of the cliffs and canyons upon which I had been
gazing a few moments before. All the scenes of my
life, from childhood up, were re-enacted here with
the same emotions of pleasure or pain. I saw distinctly
the people I had known, many of them long
forgotten. My mother seemed to stand out more
prominently than anyone else, and I wondered what
she would think when she heard that I had been
dashed to pieces. I even planned how, when I did
not return to camp, Cope would set out to find me,
following my footsteps into the loose dirt until he
reached the slide, and I wondered how he would ever
get down into the canyon, and how much of my body
would be left for burial.</p>
<p class='c000'>To this day I do not know how I escaped. I suddenly
found myself lying on the ledge, on the side
I had left a moment before. Probably some part of
<span class='pageno' id='Page_74'>74</span>my clothing, covered with dust as it was, had acted
as a brake upon the polished surface. I lay for an
hour with trembling knees, too weak to make my
way back to camp.</p>
<p class='c000'>This experience of mine is another instance of the
fact that the human brain forgets nothing, and will
yield up everything when the right kind of stimulus
is applied.</p>
<p class='c000'>The excitement of our work and the danger with
it seemed to make us reckless of life, Professor
Cope even more so than the rest of us, although he
was at that time United States Paleontologist, and
worth a million dollars. I remember one night he
was following a buffalo trail to the river, when suddenly
his horse stopped and refused to go further.
Without dismounting to find out the cause, he
plunged his spurs into the animal, and it sprang into
the air. Mr. Isaac, who was behind, followed. The
next day they were surprised to find that they had
crossed a gorge ten feet wide, and that but for the
keen sight and the strength of their horses, they
would have been dashed to pieces a hundred feet
below.</p>
<p class='c000'>Cope’s indefatigability, too, was a constant source
of wonder to us. We were in excellent training,
after our strenuous outdoor life in the Kansas
chalk beds, while he had just been working fourteen
hours a day in his study and the lithographer’s
<span class='pageno' id='Page_75'>75</span>shop, completing a large Government monograph,
writing his own manuscript, and reading his own
proof. When we first met him at Omaha, he was
so weak that he reeled from side to side as he
walked; yet here he climbed the highest cliffs and
walked along the most dangerous ledges, working
without intermission from daylight until dark.</p>
<p class='c000'>Every night when we returned to camp, we found
that the cook had spent the whole day in cooking.
Exhausted and thirsty,—we had no water to drink
during the day (all the water in the Bad Lands being
like a dense solution of Epsom salts),—we sat
down to a supper of cakes and pies and other palatable,
but indigestible food. Then, when we went to
bed, the Professor would soon have a severe attack
of nightmare. Every animal of which we had
found traces during the day played with him at
night, tossing him into the air, kicking him, trampling
upon him.</p>
<p class='c000'>When I waked him, he would thank me cordially
and lie down to another attack. Sometimes he
would lose half the night in this exhausting slumber.
But the next morning he would lead the party,
and be the last to give up at night. I have never
known a more wonderful example of the will’s
power over the body.</p>
<p class='c000'>His memory and his imagination, too, were extraordinary.
He used to talk to me by the hour,
<span class='pageno' id='Page_76'>76</span>arranging the living and dead animals of the earth
in systematic order, giving countless scientific names
and their definitions. I forgot the names as soon
as I heard them, but the loving tribute which he paid
to the wonders of creation has had a lasting and
helpful effect upon me. If I ever had any feelings
of disgust or fear toward any of God’s creatures,
I lost them upon a knowledge of the animals as revealed
to me by this master naturalist, who saw
beauty even in lizards and snakes. He believed, and
taught me to believe, that it is a crime to destroy
life wantonly, any life. Of course the first law of
nature is self-preservation; we must, in order to
live, kill our enemies and protect our friends; but
this superstitious fear which men and, even more,
women have of snakes, lizards, and bugs, how cruel
it is! Why should they rejoice when some poor
little garter-snake, which has gone as a friend into
the cellar walk to destroy rats and mice, is dragged
out and cut to pieces? My heart bleeds when I
think of the brutal way in which people take life,
something they can never give back, and with the
great Cope, I cry out against this crime, which is
exterminating some of our most beautiful and useful
friends. No man can say he loves us, when he
wantonly destroys our work; no man loves God who
wantonly destroys His creatures.</p>
<div id='fig_13' class='figcenter id003'>
<ANTIMG src='images/fig_13.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
<div class='ic001'>
<p><span class='sc'>Fig. 13.</span>—<i>a</i>, <span class='sc'>Lower Jaw of</span> <i>Trachodon marginatus</i>, <span class='fss'>SHOWING SUCCESSIVE LAYERS OF TEETH</span>. <i>b</i>, <span class='sc'>Top and side views of a tooth of</span> <i>Myledaphus bipartitus</i>.<br/><br/>(After Osborn and Lambe.)</p>
</div>
</div>
<div id='fig_14' class='figcenter id003'>
<ANTIMG src='images/fig_14.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
<div class='ic001'>
<p><span class='sc'>Fig. 14.—Skull of a Duck-billed Dinosaur</span>, <i>Diclonius</i>, <span class='fss'>FOUR FEET IN LENGTH</span>. (In American Museum of Natural History.) Photo, by Matthew.</p>
</div>
</div>
<p class='c000'>We found no complete specimens of any fossil
<span class='pageno' id='Page_77'>77</span>animals during our stay on Dog Creek, but near the
summit of the Bad Lands, under beds of yellowish
sandstone, we came upon localities literally filled
with the scattered bones and teeth of dinosaurs,
those terrible lizards whose tread once shook the
earth. They are represented now by the little
horned toad of central Kansas. Among the fragments
were pieces of the finely-sculptured shells of
the sea turtles, <i>Trionyx</i> and <i>Adocus</i>, and remains of
that strange dinosaur <i>Trachodon</i> (Fig. <SPAN href='#fig_13'>13</SPAN><i>a</i>), whose
teeth were arranged as in a magazine, one below
another, so that when the old teeth wore out, others
were ever ready to take their place.</p>
<p class='c000'>The specimen in the illustration is from Drs.
Osborn and Lambe’s Contribution to Canadian
Paleontology, on the Vertebrata of the Mid-Cretaceous
of the Northwest Territory (1902). The
splendid Cretaceous dinosaur here illustrated is from
Wyoming (Fig. <SPAN href='#fig_14'>14</SPAN>). This last form was restored
by the late Professor Marsh, and is now mounted in
the museum of Yale University. What a strange
picture it presents, this great plant-eater, as, standing
on its hind limbs, its powerful tail acting as the
third leg of a tripod, it grasps the branches of a
tree with its weak hands and arms, while its teeth
scrape off the tender leaves!</p>
<p class='c000'>In one of these localities we found teeth belonging
to some extinct ray-like fish that were arranged
<span class='pageno' id='Page_78'>78</span>in the roof and floor of the mouth like bricks in a
pavement, forming a sort of mill which ground up
the shells upon which the creature subsisted. A
strange thing about these teeth was that one side
of the enamel was white and the other black. Cope
called the species <i>Myledaphus bipartitus</i> (Fig. <SPAN href='#fig_13'>13</SPAN><i>b</i>).</p>
<p class='c000'>The diamond-shaped enameled scales of the <i>Lepidotus</i>,
an ancient relative of the gar-pike, were very
common, as were also the teeth of several species
of dinosaurs besides those already mentioned.</p>
<p class='c000'>To-day the great museums of the country have
complete or nearly complete skeletons of these creatures,
the largest land animals that ever inhabited
the earth. The splendid specimen of <i>Brontosaurus</i>
(Fig. <SPAN href='#fig_16'>16</SPAN>) in the American Museum at New York
is over sixty feet long. Nothing so fires the imagination
as a visit to the halls where these ancient
lizards now stand.</p>
<p class='c000'>I am delighted that recent authorities, Drs.
Osborn and Lambe, have given Professor Cope
credit for these discoveries of his in 1876, discoveries
which are made the more memorable by the
fact that he was the first scientist who had the foresight
and the courage to explore these fossil beds
after Dr. Hayden, their original discoverer, was
driven out of the region by Blackfeet Indians.
Indeed, the chief purpose of this chapter is to put
forward the claim that Professor Cope, Mr. Isaac,
and myself made the first real collection of these
wonderful saurians.</p>
<div id='fig_15' class='figcenter id001'>
<ANTIMG src='images/fig_15.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
<div class='ic001'>
<p><span class='sc'>Fig. 15.—Professor E. D. Cope.</span></p>
</div>
</div>
<div id='fig_16' class='figcenter id003'>
<ANTIMG src='images/fig_16.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
<div class='ic001'>
<p><span class='sc'>Fig. 16.—Brontosaurus or Thunder Lizard.</span><br/><br/>Restoration by Osborn and Knight. (From painting in American Museum of Natural History.)</p>
</div>
</div>
<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_79'>79</span>After satisfying himself that there were no skeletons
more or less complete on Dog Creek, Cope took
the guide and went off down the river to Cow
Island, forty miles below. This point was the head
of navigation on the Missouri in October, the water
then being so low that the steamboat could not get
up to Fort Benton. The last boat came up on the
fifteenth of October, to carry a load of ore and passengers
down to the railroad at Omaha, and as the
Professor had decided to take this boat, it was necessary
for him to be on hand when it arrived.</p>
<p class='c000'>A few days later he sent word to us on Dog Creek
to break camp and proceed, according to the scout’s
directions, to Cow Island with all the outfit. This
was no easy task; in fact, at first sight it appeared
impossible. No wagon had ever before rolled down
those steep hillsides. Mr. Isaac, however, took command,
and, after removing everything from the
wagon except the Professor’s trunk, which could
neither be packed on a horse nor carried by hand,
we began our journey up the long twelve hundred
feet to the prairies above.</p>
<p class='c000'>Working with axes, picks, and shovels, we cut
trees, bridged chasms, and made roads, climbing
upward step by step, until in the afternoon we
reached what for the moment threatened to be the
<span class='pageno' id='Page_80'>80</span>end of our journey. Before us rose the sloping
side of a ridge, covered entirely with loose shale,
and so steep that it was impossible to climb it even
on horseback without making a long diagonal across
its flank. At the summit the ridge was narrow
enough to be straddled by a wagon, and it sloped
down at the same angle on the other side.</p>
<p class='c000'>The teamster refused to go any further, and this
angered Isaac, who said that he would drive himself.
So he unhitched the lead horses, and climbing
the wagon, urged on the stupid mustangs. One
walked in a trail that we had made, the other in the
loose dirt below.</p>
<p class='c000'>I was a good deal concerned as to the fate of both
man and team, but experience had taught me the
folly of arguing with an angry man; so I sat on my
horse and waited for the outcome. Isaac had driven
about thirty feet above the level floor, when the inevitable
happened. I saw the wagon slowly begin
to tip, pulling the ponies over sideways, and then
the whole outfit, wagon and horses, began to roll
down the slope. Whenever the wheels stuck up in
the air, the ponies drew in their feet to their bellies,
and at the next turn, stretched out their legs for
another roll.</p>
<p class='c000'>My heart was in my mouth for fear that Isaac
would be killed in one of the turns, or that wagon
and all would roll over a thousand-foot precipice
<span class='pageno' id='Page_81'>81</span>below, but after three complete turns, they landed,
the horses on their feet, the wagon on its wheels,
on a level ledge of sandstone, and stood there as if
nothing had happened.</p>
<p class='c000'>When I saw that Isaac was safe, I could not help
laughing, and in consequence was told that if I was
so smart I could get up the slope myself. I quickly
gave orders that the picket ropes be tied together
and fastened to the hind axle of the wagon, and that
the horses be led singly up the trail. The rope was
then carried to the top of the ridge, and the horses
were hitched to it, and driven down the steep
slope on the opposite side, thus drawing up the
wagon. We then righted it so that it straddled
the ridge and could be safely hauled out to the level
prairie.</p>
<p class='c000'>After this we had to go back on horses and bring
the camp outfit, which we had left at Dog Creek, to
the wagon.</p>
<p class='c000'>About three o’clock that afternoon our scout, who
had not showed up during the heavy labor of getting
the outfit up to the prairie, was seen coming from
the south through a break in the foothills, while at
the same time another horseman approached at full
speed from the east. At a sign from the scout, our
driver stopped his horses, and Isaac and I rested in
our saddles.</p>
<p class='c000'>The second horseman soon proved to be Professor
<span class='pageno' id='Page_82'>82</span>Cope, who galloped up to the guide and stopped
him, the gestures of the two men and the sound of
their raised voices indicating that an animated argument
was going on between them. Finally the scout,
his face heated and scowling, came up to the wagon,
and without a word, got out his roll of blankets and
extra clothing, and started off in the direction of
Fort Benton.</p>
<p class='c000'>The cook shouted after him, and then, springing
from the wagon, followed him. When they were
out of earshot, the scout stopped, and the two began
an excited conversation. Then it was the cook’s
turn to show of what poor stuff he was made, for,
coming back to the wagon, he loaded his blankets
and grip on his broad shoulders, and struck out on
foot for a wood-camp a few miles to the north, on
the river.</p>
<p class='c000'>When Cope came up he told us that these two
men, whom he had paid in full for three months’
work, had deserted him here on the open prairie, a
hundred and twenty miles from his base of supplies.</p>
<p class='c000'>It seems that the scout had come across Sitting
Bull’s war camp, where thousands of warriors,
drunk with the blood of Custer and the brave men
of the Seventh U. S. Cavalry, were defying the
Government in the inaccessible canyons around the
Dry Fork of the Missouri. The camp was only a
day’s journey from us, and the scout and our valiant
<span class='pageno' id='Page_83'>83</span>cook had concluded that their precious scalps were
too valuable to risk.</p>
<p class='c000'>The Professor asked us whether we could carry
on the double work which their dishonorable conduct
had made necessary, and we willingly undertook
to do so, even if it were to mean working our
fingers to the bone.</p>
<p class='c000'>Isaac took the seat, and we prepared to start on,
but misfortunes never come singly. Our four-year-old
colt, who had had a chance to rest during the
delay, suddenly decided that he too would try to
put a stop to the expedition. He balked, and when
the Professor went up to him to lead him along, he
struck out viciously with his fore feet.</p>
<p class='c000'>Now I imagine that the Professor had put up
with about all that he was willing to bear. The
cowardly desertion of our men, combined with the
discomforts of our situation,—we had had nothing
to eat or drink since we left Dog Creek, and the
only spring on the route at which we could get good
water was miles away,—left little mercy in his
heart for this miserable, obstinate horse. He told
Isaac to unhitch the animal and tie him to a hind
wheel, while I got on top of the wagon, armed with
a club to prevent his trying to climb in.</p>
<p class='c000'>With the whip in one hand, butt end down, Cope
approached the horse with the other outstretched,
speaking gently to conciliate him. The horse, however,
<span class='pageno' id='Page_84'>84</span>struck out with all his might. Narrowly escaping
the blow, the Professor stepped back, raised the
whip, and with the butt end, hit the horse behind
the ear. The animal fell like a flash, and lay for
some time stunned; but when he struggled to his
feet, and the Professor approached him again with
outstretched hand and soft words, the brute struck
again. Again Cope knocked him down, and, although
when he rose to his feet, he made another
feeble attempt to strike, a third knock-down blow
was enough for him. After that he welcomed the
Professor’s advances, accepting with every symptom
of pleasure the caresses bestowed upon him, and
when untied, he almost dragged Cope after him in
his anxiety to get to his traces. We had no more
trouble with him until a long rest and plenty of food
caused him to forget his punishment, and made a
repetition of it necessary.</p>
<p class='c000'>It was not until late that night, after fourteen
hours of strenuous labor, that we were able to eat
our supper of bacon and hardtack, and lie down for
a few hours’ rest. We slung our food from a tree
to get it out of the reach of any grizzlies which
might come straying around in search of bread
crumbs or bacon rinds. We expected any moment
to be rolled out of bed by some prowling paw.</p>
<p class='c000'>The next day we traveled along through the great
level stretches that skirt the Bad Lands. The prairie
<span class='pageno' id='Page_85'>85</span>was covered with thick bunches of grass, and
often had been rooted up for acres by grizzlies
in search of wild artichokes, a sweet morsel they
love. We often saw herds of deer and elk and
antelope.</p>
<p class='c000'>Part of the time our route lay among the foothills
of the Judith River Mountains to the south of us;
and when we emerged again on to the open plain, we
found ourselves in a great amphitheater, a hundred
miles across. To the west the towering ranges of
the Rockies rose in silent grandeur, their sides
scarred deeply with canyons, in whose recesses the
white snow gleamed and sparkled in the morning
light To the south, east, and north, the Judith
River Mountains, the Little Rockies, Medicine Bow,
Bearpaw, and the Sweet Grass Mountains on the
border line of Assiniboia made up the circle. A
glorious scene! And there was exhilaration too in
the thought that ours was the first wagon to roll
through these rich solitudes, given up for ages to
the red hunter and his game. These hills were soon
to re-echo with the shriek of the locomotive, and
this rich soil to nourish a thousand souls, but in the
days I am recalling, we did not meet a single human
being in all the forty miles of our journey.</p>
<p class='c000'>That night, after another hard day, we halted at
the head of a short and very steep ravine ending in
an open valley between two ridges, whose lofty
<span class='pageno' id='Page_86'>86</span>precipices abutted on the Missouri twelve hundred
feet below.</p>
<p class='c000'>This valley, Cope told us, was to be our camping
ground for some time to come, as a steamboat snubbing-post
was situated here. When I learned this,
I threw out my roll of blankets and started it on its
way to camp. It bounded down the ravine, leaping
high in the air from boulder to boulder, and never
stopped until it was caught in a bunch of the cactus
that covered the level plain below.</p>
<p class='c000'>Everything but the Professor’s trunk was unloaded,
and the wagon pulled to the head of the
gulch, where Isaac took charge of the tongue, and
the Professor and I, each tying a picket rope to the
hind axle and making a half-hitch to a convenient
sapling, let the wagon slowly down the hill. When
the rope was paid out, Isaac blocked the wheels with
stones, and we advanced for another hitch, continuing
in this way until we reached the bottom. The
baggage was then packed down, and, after a space
had been cleared of cactus, our tent was pitched.
It was not until long after midnight that we sat
down to cook our meal, and when we rolled into our
blankets we slept the sleep of utter exhaustion.</p>
<p class='c000'>Not only during this trip, but all through our
stay in the Bad Lands, we were tormented by
myriads of black gnats, which got under our hat
rims and shirt sleeves, and produced sores that gave
<span class='pageno' id='Page_87'>87</span>rise to pus and thick scabs. They got under the
saddles and girths too, irritating the horses almost
beyond endurance. We were forced, for lack of
something better, to cover our faces and arms with
bacon grease and to rub the skins of the horses
under the collars and saddles with the same disagreeable
substance.</p>
<p class='c000'>Fossil bones always partake of the characteristics
of the rock in which they are entombed, and here
they were quite hard when we got in to where the
rock was compact. The Professor found here
the first specimen ever discovered in America of
the wonderful horned dinosaurs; <i>Monoclonius</i> he
called the first species. I assisted him in digging
out his specimen of <i>M. crassus</i>, a species distinguished
by a small horn over each orbit, and a large
one on the nasal bones; and I myself discovered two
species new to science. One of these, an <i>M. sphenocerus</i>,
was six or seven feet high at the hips, and,
according to Cope, must have been twenty-five feet
long, including the tail. It has a long compressed
nasal horn, and two small horns over the eyes.</p>
<p class='c000'>Professor Marsh later discovered a similar form
in these same fossil beds, and named it <i>Ceratops
montanus</i>.</p>
<p class='c000'>The species I discovered were collected on the
north side of the river, three miles below Cow
Island, after the Professor had taken the last boat
<span class='pageno' id='Page_88'>88</span>down the river. When we uncovered these bones
we found them very brittle, as they had been shattered
by the uplift of the strata in which they were
buried; and we were obliged to devise some means
of holding them in place. The only thing we had
in camp that could be made into a paste was rice,
which we had brought along for food. We boiled
quantities of it until it became thick, then, dipping
into it flour bags and pieces of cotton cloth and burlap,
we used them to strengthen the bones and hold
them together. This was the beginning of a long
line of experiments, which culminated in the recently
adopted method of taking up large fossils by
bandaging them with strips of cloth dipped in plaster
of Paris, like the bandages in which a modern
surgeon encases a broken limb.</p>
<p class='c000'>I feel it a great privilege to have been one of the
original discoverers of these great horned dinosaurs,
whose skeletons are now among the chief glories
of our museums.</p>
<hr class='c014' />
<p class='c000'>One day, about the fifteenth of October, Professor
Cope, who had been anxiously awaiting the arrival
of the last steamboat, concluded to ride out on the
open prairie to some bad lands which we had seen
on our journey down from Dog Creek. I accompanied
him. On the way he fell into one of his frequent
absent-minded moods, picturing the land as it
<span class='pageno' id='Page_89'>89</span>must have been at the time of the dinosaurs, when
the shale of these black-sided canyons was mud on
an ocean floor. So fascinated were we both by his
descriptions that the time flew by unheeded, and it
was afternoon before we reached the prairie south
of Cow Island.</p>
<p class='c000'>Upon arriving at the bit of bad lands, we separated,
agreeing to meet at four o’clock at the place
where we left the horses. I kept the appointment,
but the Professor was nowhere to be seen, and as
hour after hour passed with no sign of him, I began
to grow anxious. I knew the foolishness of trying
to find him in that network of gorges and ridges,
and could only wait, eagerly watching the outlets
of the labyrinth.</p>
<p class='c000'>Just as the sun was sinking behind the Rockies he
came out of a narrow ravine with the head of a large
mountain sheep on his back. He gave it to me to
carry behind my saddle, and with few words we
mounted and set off at full speed for home, remembering
the three men whom we had met on the
prairie at noon, who had been lost for three days
in the intricate passages of the Bad Lands. I did
not like to think of trying to find the way there after
night.</p>
<p class='c000'>The Professor dashed over the prairie without
once drawing rein, clearing bunches of cactus ten
feet, sometimes, in diameter, at a single bound; and
<span class='pageno' id='Page_90'>90</span>I followed suit. So, by a series of leaps, we crossed
the ten-mile stretch and drew up at the head of a
gorge, from which we could see Cow Island.</p>
<p class='c000'>Cope eagerly scanned the lights of the little station,
and finally decided that a new set had been
added to those of the soldiers’ tents. He was sure
that the long-expected steamer lay at her snubbing-post,
and declared emphatically that we must reach
Cow Island that night.</p>
<p class='c000'>I knew the uselessness of trying to combat his
iron will, but I pleaded with him against the folly
of attempting to thread in the darkness those black
and treacherous defiles, where a single misstep
meant certain death. I begged him to wait until
daylight. We were, to be sure, hungry and thirsty,
and food, water, and shelter were to be had only at
the river, but sleeping in our saddle blankets without
supper was, I urged, preferable to running the
risk of being dashed to pieces.</p>
<p class='c000'>He paid no attention to what I said, but dismounting,
led his horse into the canyon. He had to cut a
stick to shove in front of him, as his eyes could not
penetrate the darkness a single inch ahead. I cut
another to punch along his horse, which did not
want to follow him.</p>
<p class='c000'>Sometimes when we had climbed down several
hundred feet, the end of the Professor’s stick would
encounter only air, and a handful of stones thrown
<span class='pageno' id='Page_91'>91</span>ahead would be heard to strike the earth far below.
Then we had to turn and climb back through the
deep dust to the top, and circling a canyon, plunge
down on the other side.</p>
<p class='c000'>Once we got down to the river four miles from
the prairie, and thought that our journey was over,
as we could see the lights of the station just across
the river. But when we had watered our thirsty
horses and started down for the landing, we found
our way blocked by a huge ridge with a towering
precipice impinging on the river; and we had to
drag ourselves back over those four long, hard
miles to the prairie, and start again. I freely confess
that I should have been willing to lie down in
the dust just where I was, and let the horses look
out for themselves, but Cope’s indomitable will
could not be conquered. Back we climbed to the
top, and down we went into the next ravine.</p>
<p class='c000'>I have never known another man who would have
attempted this journey. It was both foolhardy and
useless, but we could say that we accomplished what
no one else ever had in reaching Cow Island through
the Bad Lands after dark.</p>
<p class='c000'>For we did reach it. Just before daylight we got
down to the landing across from the station, and
sure enough, the steamboat was at her post. But
another disappointment was in store for us. The
Professor shouted to the sergeant to come and take
<span class='pageno' id='Page_92'>92</span>us over, but his voice was not recognized, and as
the sergeant was afraid that the call might come
from some Indian who had prepared an ambush, he
refused to respond. We were soaked with perspiration,
and rapidly becoming chilled by a cold fog that
was rising along the shore, and we were obliged to
walk back and forth to keep warm until the Professor
had recovered his natural voice.</p>
<p class='c000'>Then, in his haste to correct his error, the sergeant
sent a boat across in the wrong place, and it
was turned over in the rapids. He had to rescue the
half-drowned men, capture the boat, and try again.</p>
<p class='c000'>At last, however, we were warming ourselves in
a tent, where a pot of beans was simmering for the
soldiers’ breakfast. Not a bean was left when we
got through with them, and three pounds of raspberry
jam, spread upon, I was going to say a box of,
hardtack, followed the beans. Then the sergeant
took us both out into the open air and turned back
the big black tarpaulin covering the gold ore that
was to be shipped to the smelter at Omaha. He
made us a warm nest of new blankets, and when we
had crawled into it, pulled the tarpaulin back into
place. Did we sleep? Ask the deckhands who let
the sunlight in upon us about nine o’clock the next
morning, when they pulled away the tarpaulin to
load the ore.</p>
<p class='c000'>Cope at once sought the captain of the boat and
<span class='pageno' id='Page_93'>93</span>said, “I am Professor Cope, of Philadelphia. I
have a four-horse wagon at a steamboat snubbing-post
three miles below. I would like you to stop
there on your way down, and carry my outfit across
to this side. My baggage and freight are also
there, and I want to take passage for Omaha.”</p>
<p class='c000'>“Well, sir,” the man answered, “I am the captain
of this boat. If you want to go down the river,
you must have your baggage, freight, and self at
this landing before ten o’clock to-morrow morning,
when I leave for down-river points.”</p>
<p class='c000'>The Professor did not argue the question further.
He tried to get the loan of an old sand-scow, but
the man who owned it had heard this conversation
with the captain, and refused to lend it. The Professor
was obliged to purchase it for an enormous
price, and the next day left it where he got it. We
boarded this scow, and leaving our ponies picketed
across the river, paddled down to camp, where, to
our disgust, we found that Mr. Isaac had gone out
into the Bad Lands to look for us. There was no
time to lose; so, although stiff and sore from our
night’s exertions, we plunged into the work of lowering
the tent, packing our stores and fossils into
the wagon, and dragging everything aboard the
scow. We were ready to start when Mr. Isaac
appeared.</p>
<p class='c000'>We crossed the river, swimming our horses;
<span class='pageno' id='Page_94'>94</span>and then came the time for old Major to go it alone
and show his worth. We converted the Missouri
into a canal, and its northern bank into a towpath.
Old Major we hitched to a line attached to the
scow; and while a couple of mountain men whom
we had in camp kept the boat away from the shore
with long poles, I rode the big horse, often right
into the river, until he began to sink in a mud bank,
and I had to turn hastily back to shore. The Professor
and Mr. Isaac had the worst places, for they
had to keep the rope from being caught by a snag
or rock; and when it did catch, if they did not instantly
loose their hold upon it, the tension threw
them far over into the river, and they had to get out
as best they could. This occurred a number of times.</p>
<p class='c000'>When about sundown we hove-to under the big
steamer, the deck was crowded with passengers
watching our approach. Cope was covered with
mud from head to foot, and his clothing, with
hardly a seam whole, hung from him in wet, dirty
rags. He had forgotten to bring along any winter
wearing apparel, so, although the nights were quite
cold, and the women were clad in fur coats and the
men in ulsters, he emerged from the sergeant’s tent,
whither he had carried his grip, in a summer suit
and linen duster.</p>
<p class='c000'>He told me about a funny experience that he had
on the boat on the way down the river. It goes
<span class='pageno' id='Page_95'>95</span>without saying that in that long trip he taught the
passengers more natural science than they had ever
learned in all their lives before. At a certain wood-camp,
he and some others went ashore and found
the skull of a Crow Indian. The Crow method of
burial was to wrap the body in a blanket, lay it on
the ground, and build around it an open frame of
logs, to keep away wild animals. It was an easy
matter to pick up a skull.</p>
<p class='c000'>The Professor carried his find aboard in his hands
before everyone, and was beginning to tell his enlightened
listeners the special cranial characteristics
of this tribe, when a body of deckhands, headed by
their appointed speaker, came forward and told the
captain that they would not allow Professor Cope to
“emulate the dead.” He must take the skull back
to its grave or they would not remain aboard and
take the boat down to Omaha.</p>
<p class='c000'>“Why,” said the speaker earnestly, “we will be
caught on every mud bank in the river, and there is
no telling what calamities will happen, if he is allowed
to emulate the dead.”</p>
<p class='c000'>There was no getting them to back down from
their position, and the Crow’s skull was restored to
its grave. But the Professor said afterwards, “We
had about a dozen skulls packed in with the fossils,
and in spite of them, reached Omaha without having
to walk on stilts, as had been prophesied.”</p>
<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_96'>96</span>Shortly after the Professor left us, I discovered
a fine specimen, one of those mentioned earlier in
this chapter, three miles below Cow Island, near the
base of a high tableland, where I kept my pony
picketed while I worked. One day, when I prepared
to mount him, I noticed that he was unusually quiet.
His custom was to start on a run as soon as my
foot touched the stirrup, leaving me to get into the
saddle as best I could. This time he stood still, and
when I reached my seat and lifted the lines, I found
that they were perfectly useless, as the curb was
broken.</p>
<p class='c000'>Before I could dismount, the brute started at a
rapid pace across the tableland toward a sheer precipice,
hundreds of feet high. I settled myself firmly
in the saddle and hung on with both hands to the
hand-holds behind, fearing that he might try to
hurl me over; and that was just what he did. When
he got within a few inches of the brink, he planted
his feet and stopped suddenly. But Providence and
long practice in riding all kinds of horses enabled
me to keep my seat, and fortunately, the saddle
girths held.</p>
<p class='c000'>I was just about to dismount, when suddenly the
determined animal whirled around and started for
the precipice on the other side, where he went
through the same performance. And not satisfied
even then, tried the trick a third time. Then he allowed
<span class='pageno' id='Page_97'>97</span>me to dismount and mend the curb. In payment
for his treachery, I forced him to run at full
speed down the steep and rugged trail to camp.</p>
<p class='c000'>This chapter has been largely taken up with adventures
and a study of the man Cope; but as a
matter of fact, there was little else to tell about, as
we were in such haste that we secured few specimens,
and the most important result of the expedition
was our discovery of many new specimens of
dinosaurs, represented chiefly by teeth.</p>
<p class='c000'>On the first of November a heavy snowstorm set
in, promising to leave the country covered with
snow for the winter; so we loaded our outfit and
started for Fort Benton. The sergeant went with
us, very fortunately, as it proved; for one night,
as we were camping in the Bear Paw Mountains,
one of our crazy mustang wheelers heard a wolf
howl and started on a run for one of the other
horses which was picketed farther down the slope.
Coming suddenly to the end of its rope, its feet
slipped, and it fell and broke its neck. But for the
sergeant’s horse we could not have hauled in our
load.</p>
<p class='c000'>Countless herds of buffalo were being driven to
the Bad Lands by the storm, as were also great
droves of deer, elk, and antelope. It seemed as if
it would be impossible to exterminate them. Yet
I learned by the papers the other day that the last
<span class='pageno' id='Page_98'>98</span>herd of buffalo of any size had been sold at three
hundred dollars a head to the Canadian Government,
Uncle Sam being too poor to make the purchase.</p>
<p class='c000'>We reached Fort Benton in safety, learning later
that Sitting Bull had crossed at Cow Island and
killed the soldiers who had been left there. I never
saw my associate, Mr. Isaac, again, but I know
that he discovered some fine material the next year.</p>
<p class='c000'>I made the return stage journey of six hundred
miles in six days. Through the mountains the
thermometer averaged twenty below zero, and I ate
four hearty meals a day. I recrossed the Great
Divide on the Union Pacific Railroad, made a brief
visit home, and went on to spend the winter with
Professor Cope.</p>
<div class='chapter'>
<span class='pageno' id='Page_99'>99</span>
<h2 class='c005'>CHAPTER IV<br/> <span class='large'>FURTHER WORK IN THE KANSAS CHALK, 1877</span></h2></div>
<div class='c006'>
<ANTIMG class='drop-capi' src='images/i_130.jpg' width-obs='100' alt='' /></div>
<p class='drop-capi_8'>
I spent the winter of 1876–77 with Professor
Cope, first at Haddonfield, then
at his new home on Pine Street, in Philadelphia.</p>
<p class='c000'>At Haddonfield the commodious loft of a large,
old-fashioned barn was fitted up as a workshop, and
I had also a bed here. I boarded with a Mr. Geismar,
Professor Cope’s preparator, but I had a standing
invitation to eat dinner every Sunday with the
Professor and his wife and daughter, a lovely child
of twelve summers.</p>
<p class='c000'>I shall never forget those Sunday dinners. The
food was plain, but daintily cooked, and the Professor’s
conversation was a feast in itself. He had
a wonderful power of putting professional matters
from his mind when he left his study, and coming
out ready to enter into any kind of merrymaking.
He used to sit with sparkling eyes, telling story after
story, while we laughed at his sallies until we could
laugh no more.</p>
<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_100'>100</span>I never knew his wit to fail him. I remember
being present at a meeting of the Academy of
Science, in Philadelphia, at which he was up for
re-election to the office of recording secretary, and
was defeated. Among others, Professor William
Moore Gabb made some remarks against him.
Cope’s only defense was “Now, William, more
gab!”</p>
<p class='c000'>I attended also the dinners which he gave to his
hosts of friends in the city, and the luncheons at
which Mrs. Cope entertained the young men to
whom the Professor gave lectures in his own home.
He told his funniest anecdotes on these occasions,
and used to call on me for my story of the old
farmer who, while at work hoeing corn in a stump-field
on the side of a hill, saw a hoop-snake at the
top take its tail in its mouth and begin to roll down
towards him. Springing behind a stump, he struck
at it with his hoe handle, into which the sting at
the end of the snake’s tail entered deeply. In less
than an hour the handle had swelled up to the size
of a man’s leg.</p>
<p class='c000'>I believe that this story-telling of which he was
so fond was for Cope a form of relaxation from his
heavy work in the study, and that his ability to give
himself up so thoroughly to it in his leisure hours
was what enabled him to accomplish in his life an
amount of work such as few men have ever accomplished.
<span class='pageno' id='Page_101'>101</span>It would take a volume even to name the
titles of all the products of his industrious brain.
One of them alone, the great Volume III of the
“Tertiary Vertebrata,” often called “Cope’s Bible,”
has over a thousand pages of text, beside many fine
plates. It was published by the Government, in
1884.</p>
<p class='c000'>Before starting back to outfit another expedition
to the Kansas Chalk, I secured the services of Mr.
Russell T. Hill, an able young man who was working
in the Academy under the Jesup Fund; and
upon our arrival at Manhattan, I hired Mr. A. W.
Brouse as teamster and cook.</p>
<p class='c000'>About the last of March we started with a team
of ponies and a light spring wagon upon our long
and extremely tedious journey across the state of
Kansas, to our headquarters at Buffalo Park. At
Chapman Creek, a few miles from Junction City,
we were stopped by high water. A raging torrent
twenty feet deep filled the bed of the creek; neither
man nor beast could have crossed it alive. We
were, therefore, horrified to see a farmer, sitting on
a seat on top of two sets of side-boards in a lumber
wagon, come driving down into this fearful flood.
I called to him to stop, and asked him what he was
going to do.</p>
<p class='c000'>“I must come over,” he shouted.</p>
<p class='c000'>“Why,” I answered, “the water is twenty feet
<span class='pageno' id='Page_102'>102</span>deep, and running like a mill race. You’ll be swept
away.”</p>
<p class='c000'>“But I have not had my mail for a week. I must
come over,” he shouted back.</p>
<p class='c000'>“Well,” said I, “you big fool, why don’t you go
down to the railroad bridge, just below here, and
walk over?”</p>
<p class='c000'>“By Chimmeny,” he said, “I hadn’t thought of
that!”</p>
<p class='c000'>As we were now in the antelope country, we were
rarely out of antelope meat. One morning we saw
a buck antelope standing close to the railroad track,
watching an incoming train. I remarked, as I
urged the driver to hurry up his horses, that perhaps
someone would shoot the animal from the
train. And sure enough, as the train passed, a window
flew up, and a man with a revolver shot the
buck through the neck. It began to describe a circle,
its feet planted together, and springing from the
wagon, I cut its throat with a butcher knife, while
the boys held its horns.</p>
<p class='c000'>Another time, as we were traveling along over
the prairie, we suddenly came upon a young antelope
hidden securely in the center of a bunch of
grass. We should not have seen him at all from the
ground, but being above him on the wagon seat,
we looked right down on him. The boys jumped
out, and approaching the little chap carefully, were
<span class='pageno' id='Page_103'>103</span>just spreading out their arms so as to be ready to
grab him, when he sprang to his feet so quickly that
their hands were thrown into the air, and darted
off. The boys started after him at the top of their
speed, but they might as well have tried to catch
a streak of lightning.</p>
<p class='c000'>One day we were camping at the spring on Hackberry,
south of Buffalo, when a couple of men rode
up to us. They said that they were cowmen, and
that they had lost their outfit. I invited them into
my tent, and after supper gave them the boys’ bed,
the boys themselves climbing into the covered
wagon.</p>
<p class='c000'>Early in the morning one of the men wakened
me and asked for a revolver. There was an antelope
in camp, he said. I handed him a Smith and
Wesson, and peeped out, to see a fine buck standing
just at the end of the wagon tongue, looking over
the tent and wagon. The stranger opened fire at
three or four paces and emptied the revolver. Then
throwing it down as of no account, he asked for a
gun. I gave him a Sharp’s rifle and a cartridge belt.
In the meanwhile the antelope had walked a few
yards away and turned to look at us. The man
fired several shots, and threw down the rifle also,
and as the boys were by this time climbing out of
the wagon, one with a Winchester, the other with
a little Ballard, he borrowed from them first one
<span class='pageno' id='Page_104'>104</span>firearm and then the other, and blazed away without
once drawing blood. Finally the buck deliberately
moved over the hill and out of sight, while the man
swore that it had a charmed life. We thought otherwise,
however, and the boys followed it; soon returning
with it swinging from a gun, which they
carried on their shoulders like a pole.</p>
<p class='c000'>I recall another ludicrous incident connected with
this expedition. We happened to be at Buffalo Station
once when Professor Snow, the much-loved
Kansas naturalist, and at one time the chancellor of
the State University, was in town with a large party
of students, on his annual insect hunt.</p>
<p class='c000'>The old Chisholm cattle trail led through Buffalo,
and one day the owner of a large herd of Texas
cattle, who was passing through, noticed Professor
Snow and his party out on the prairie with their
nets in their hands, running about as if possessed.
It happened to be the first time that he had ever
seen insect collectors at work, and his curiosity was
aroused.</p>
<p class='c000'>“What are those men doing?” he asked Jim
Thompson, the storekeeper.</p>
<p class='c000'>“Catching bugs,” was the laconic reply.</p>
<p class='c000'>“I don’t believe it,” said the cowman. “They
are grown men.”</p>
<p class='c000'>“All right,” said Jim, “you can find out for
yourself if you want to.”</p>
<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_105'>105</span>The man started off after the Professor, and I
waited, with a good deal of curiosity, to hear his
report of the conversation. On his return he was in
a brown study. The Professor had taken him into
his tent, and shown him hundreds of mounted insects,
reeling off their names to him until his head
whirled.</p>
<p class='c000'>“Well, did I tell you the truth?” Jim asked.</p>
<p class='c000'>“That man,” said the cowman, “is the smartest
man I ever saw. He knows the names and surnames
of all the bugs in this country.”</p>
<p class='c000'>On the thirtieth of April we drove down to the
Smoky, thirty miles south of Buffalo, and got
caught in a quicksand, but managed to save both
team and wagon. We camped at the mouth of a
large ravine with plenty of grass in it.</p>
<p class='c000'>All that night it blew a perfect gale. Did you,
dear reader, ever try to sleep in a tent when the
wind was high and the canvas flapped about you,
waking the fear that at any moment the pegs might
pull out or a seam part? Do you know what it is to
lie, deafened by thunder and blinded by lightning,
while the rain and sleet dash against the thin covering
which is all that separates you from the fury
of the storm? It is not a pleasant experience, and
yet in all the years that I have gone camping, although
I have expected time and again to find my
tent torn to shreds over my head, my fears have
<span class='pageno' id='Page_106'>106</span>never once been realized. Even in the most terrible
storms my tent has stood securely, and I have escaped
without serious inconvenience.</p>
<p class='c000'>On this trip, however, we did have a disagreeable
experience. A cold rain continued for four days,
and the tent sprang a leak right over my bed. Moreover,
the buffalo chips were so wet that we could
not build a fire, and had to eat cold food and sleep
in wet blankets.</p>
<p class='c000'>Among the difficulties with which we had to contend
on this expedition was a defective wagon
wheel. One day, as we were driving along a slope,
our lower wheel dished out, and dumped us, load
and all, to the ground. Upon examination, we
found that the maker had used a hub whose mortises
were too large for the spokes. The latter had been
held in place by wedges which had been painted over
so that they should not be detected. The man who
sold us the wagon had guaranteed it for a year, but
unfortunately, he lived two hundred miles away.
When the necessity arises, however, one can solve
any problem somehow; so we took off the tire, put
back the spokes and wedges, heated the tire in a fire
of buffalo chips, and reset it. We tried to drive
carefully after this and avoid sloping places, but it
generally happened that when we least expected it,
we would fall by the wayside. Most aggravating
of all, when we did take the defective wheel back
<span class='pageno' id='Page_107'>107</span>to the man who guaranteed it, he gave us another
even more unreliable than the first. It is a mystery
to me how manufacturers can play such miserable
tricks on their customers.</p>
<p class='c000'>We were much inconvenienced also by the illness
of one of our horses. He often gave out on
the open prairie, in one case, I remember, three
miles from water. The only vessel we had in which
to bring it to camp was a gallon jug, and it kept one
person busy getting enough for our use. We were
finally obliged to get another horse in place of the
sick one; and our bad luck persisting, hit upon one
which had evidently been trained to the wheel
of a coach, for as soon as the last trace had been
hitched, he was off like a shot. Fortunately, his
mate could not run as fast, so that they simply
went round in a circle, and the boys, watching
their chance, caught hold of the wagon and got
aboard.</p>
<p class='c000'>This horse was continually giving us trouble.
One day when we were about to cross Hackberry
Creek I went ahead with my pick and struck the
dry, cracked clay of the bed, to see whether it would
hold. As I could not break through, I concluded
that we could cross safely, and beckoned to Will
Brouse to come on. Whereupon that miserable mustang,
taking his bit between his teeth, came down
the hill with the load at full speed, and, dashing
<span class='pageno' id='Page_108'>108</span>onto the hardened clay, broke through into the
thick mortar below.</p>
<p class='c000'>The boys, jumping out, managed to get both
horses unhitched before they went down, and
quickly hitched them to the hind axle of the wagon,
to save the load of fossils which we were hauling
to the station. Then began a performance of that
tantalizing trick which horses know so well how to
play. Rowdy would make a rush forward, as if
he intended to haul out the load in a hurry, but the
moment he felt the collar press his neck, he would
fall back against the wheel, while his mate went
through the same performance. So they see-sawed
up and down, until I could stand it no longer, as the
wagon was slowly sinking. I took the lines, and
putting all my will-power into the command “Get
out of this!” I forced them to pull together and
haul the wagon out to solid ground. Then when
we unhitched them, they ran away and scattered
singletrees, nuts, and bolts all over the prairie.</p>
<p class='c000'>South of the river we found some fine examples
of large <i>Haploscapha</i> shells, some of them a foot
in diameter. The valves of this shell are shaped a
little like a woman’s bonnet, and the name Conrad
gave it, “<i>Haploscapha grandis</i>,” may be freely
translated “The great hood.” (Fig. <SPAN href='#fig_17'>17</SPAN>.)</p>
<div id='fig_17' class='figcenter id001'>
<ANTIMG src='images/fig_17.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
<div class='ic001'>
<p><span class='sc'>Fig. 17.—Fossil shells</span>, <i>Haploscapha grandis</i>.<br/><br/>(After Cope.)</p>
</div>
</div>
<div id='fig_18' class='figcenter id003'>
<ANTIMG src='images/fig_18.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
<div class='ic001'>
<p><span class='sc'>Fig. 18.—Charles Sternberg and son taking up a large slab of fossils from a chalk bed in Gove Co., Kansas.</span></p>
</div>
</div>
<div id='fig_19' class='figcenter id003'>
<ANTIMG src='images/fig_19.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
<div class='ic001'>
<p><span class='sc'>Fig. 19.—Camp and wagon of the fossil hunters on Grasswood Creek, Converse Co., Wyoming.</span></p>
</div>
</div>
<p class='c000'>We found many fish and saurians or mosasaurs
also. Very different was our method of collecting
<span class='pageno' id='Page_109'>109</span>them then from what it is now, for fossil hunting is
as capable of improvement as any other form of
human endeavor. Then we went over, in a few
months, all the chalk in western Kansas, which lines
the ravines on either side of the Smoky Hill and its
branches for a hundred miles; now it takes us five
years to get over the same ground. Then we dug
up the bones with a butcher knife or pick, and
packed in flour sacks with dry buffalo grass, which
we pulled with our fingers. Some strange animals
were created by Cope and Marsh in those early days,
when they attempted to restore a creature from the
few disconnected bones thus carelessly collected.
Now we take up great slabs of the chalk, so that we
can show the bones <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">in situ</span></i>, that is, in their original
matrix, so that they may be the more easily fitted
together in their natural relations with each other.</p>
<p class='c000'>When, after much careful exploration, we find,
sticking out of the edge of a canyon or wash, the
bones of some “ancient mariner” of the old Cretaceous
ocean, we first lay bare a floor above the bones
by picking away the rock. Then I, usually stretched
at full length on this floor, with a crooked awl and
a brush, uncover the bones enough to be able to
determine how they lie, often keeping up the tedious
work for hours. When the position of each bone
has been ascertained, my son George, who for years
has been my chief assistant, and I cut trenches
<span class='pageno' id='Page_110'>110</span>around the specimen, and, hewing down the outside
rock two or three inches, make a frame of 2 × 4 lumber,
cover the bones with oiled paper, and fill the
frame with plaster. As the fossil rarely lies level,
it is necessary to have the cover ready to nail on,
a board at a time, while the plaster is being poured
in. This results in a panel of even thickness, with
every bone in or near its original position, or at least
in the position in which it was buried.</p>
<p class='c000'>After the plaster has hardened comes the difficult
labor of digging the rock away from underneath.
One has to lie on one’s left side and work with a
light pick, using great care, so as to cut away the
rock just enough to allow the frame to come down
by its own weight. If force is used very likely the
rock, with its enclosed fossil, will be torn from the
frame, and the specimen ruined. Afterwards the
rock is leveled off even with the frame, and the bottom
nailed on. The case is then placed in a larger
box with excelsior carefully packed around it.</p>
<p class='c000'>The illustration (Fig. <SPAN href='#fig_18'>18</SPAN>) shows a huge panel in
process of being cut out. George and I spent two
weeks of heavy labor upon another. Luckily, it was
preserved in chalk hard enough to allow of its being
lifted without breaking. The slab was about four
inches thick, and weighed at least six hundred
pounds, yet he and I handled it entirely alone, getting
it boxed and into the wagon ourselves.</p>
<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_111'>111</span>My old friend, Dr. S. W. Williston, who in the
seventies was in charge of collecting parties for Professor
Marsh, and is now a noted authority in
paleontology and professor of that science in the
University of Chicago, describes this specimen in
his great work on North American plesiosaurs, a
Field Columbian Museum publication. He says:
“The specimen of <i>Dolichorhynchops osborni</i>, herewith
described and illustrated [Fig. <SPAN href='#fig_20'>20</SPAN>], was discovered
by Mr. George Sternberg, in the summer
of 1900, and skilfully collected by his father, the
veteran collector of fossil vertebrates. The specimen
was purchased of Mr. Sternberg in the following
spring for the University of Kansas, where it
has been mounted and now is. When received at
the museum, the skeleton was almost wholly contained
in a large slab of soft, yellow chalk, with
all its bones disassociated, and more or less entangled
together. The left ischium, lying by the
side of the maxilla, was protruding from the surface,
and part of it was lost. The bones of the tail
and some of the smaller podial bones were removed
a distance from the rest of the skeleton, and were
collected separately by Mr. Sternberg. The head
was lying partly upon its left side, and some of the
bones of the right side had been macerated away.
The maxilla indeed had disappeared.</p>
<p class='c000'>“The task of removing and mounting the bones
<span class='pageno' id='Page_112'>112</span>has required the labor of Mr. H. T. Martin the
larger part of a year, and is as finally mounted, an
example of great labor and skill on his part....
The skeleton, as mounted, is just ten feet in length.
The neck in life must have been thick and heavy at
the base. The trunk was broad; the abdominal region
short between the girdles; the short tail was
thick at its base. The species was named in honor
of Professor H. F. Osborn, of Columbia University.”</p>
<p class='c000'>In his introduction Dr. Williston speaks of the
great scientific value of this specimen of the plesiosaurian
family, of which he says: “Thirty-two
species and fifteen genera have been described from
the United States, and in not a single instance has
there been even a considerable part of the skeleton
made known.”</p>
<p class='c000'>I am glad that the University of Kansas owns
this splendid denizen of her ancient Cretaceous sea.</p>
<p class='c000'>My collection in the Royal Museum of Munich is
said by Dr. H. F. Osborn to be the finest prepared
collection of Kansas Chalk and Texas Permian vertebrates
in the world. A recent letter from my friend
Dr. Broili, an assistant there, says that the collection
contains over eighty-five distinct species of extinct
vertebrates. Among these, there are eighteen
species and seven genera new to science. Seven
papers have been published describing this material,
<span class='pageno' id='Page_113'>113</span>by J. C. Merriam, A. R. Crook, Charles R. Eastman,
F. B. Loomis, F. Broili, L. Neumayer, and L.
Strickler, respectively; and it has been illustrated
by forty plates. The lamented German paleontologist,
Dr. Carl von Zittel, under whom I served
the Munich museum for several years, wrote me that
I had erected here “an immemorial monument” to
my name.</p>
<p class='c000'>Here rests, far from its native shores, the most
complete skeleton of the Cretaceous shark, <i>Oxyrhina
mantelli</i> Agassiz, ever discovered in any formation.
It formed the basis for the inaugural address delivered
by Charles R. Eastman before the Ludwig-Maximilian
University of Munich.</p>
<p class='c000'>I discovered this specimen while conducting an
expedition for Dr. von Zittel. I was entirely alone,
and camping on one of the ravines that score the
southern slope of the Smoky Hill valley, south of
Buffalo Park. I had already found a number of
flattened disks, the centra of fish vertebræ, which
Dr. Williston had assured me belonged to a species
of shark, as he had found teeth associated with
them. I was delighted, therefore, to find here a
continuous string of them leading into a low knoll.
I quickly shoveled away the loose chalk and cleaned
up the floor, to find the whole column, nearly twenty
in length; while the skull was represented by great
plates of cartilaginous bone, containing some two
<span class='pageno' id='Page_114'>114</span>hundred and fifty teeth from the roof and floor of
the mouth. The larger teeth were over an inch long
and covered with a shining, dark-colored enamel.
They were as sharp and polished as in life, and lay
in or near their natural positions.</p>
<p class='c000'>This is the first time and, I believe, the only time
that so complete a specimen of this ancient shark has
been discovered. The column and other solid parts
were composed of cartilaginous matter which
usually decays so easily that it is rarely petrified.
I suppose my specimen was old at the time of its
death, and bony matter had been deposited in the
cartilage. It is not very likely that such a specimen
will ever be duplicated. Dr. Eastman’s study of
this skeleton enabled him to make synonyms of
many species which had been named from teeth
alone.</p>
<p class='c000'>Among the most valuable of my further discoveries
in the Kansas chalk beds was that of two
nearly complete skeletons of that great sea tortoise,
<i>Protostega gigas</i> Cope. The type had already been
described by Professor Cope from a number of disconnected
bones which he found near Fort Wallace
in 1871.</p>
<div id='fig_20' class='figcenter id003'>
<ANTIMG src='images/fig_20.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
<div class='ic001'>
<p><span class='sc'>Fig. 20.—Skeleton of the Plesiosaur</span>, <i>Dolichorhynchus osborni</i>.<br/><br/>Discovered by George F. Sternberg and collected by Charles Sternberg. After Williston. (Now in the Kansas State University.)</p>
</div>
</div>
<div id='fig_21' class='figcenter id003'>
<ANTIMG src='images/fig_21.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
<div class='ic001'>
<p><span class='sc'>Fig. 21.—Fossil Limb bones of the Giant Sea Tortoise</span>, <i>Protostega gigas</i>.<br/><br/>Collected by Charles Sternberg.</p>
</div>
</div>
<p class='c000'>In 1903 I was so fortunate as to find a practically
complete skeleton of <i>Protostega gigas</i> in normal condition,
that is, with the bones all in or near their
original positions. The late Dr. J. B. Hatcher,
<span class='pageno' id='Page_115'>115</span>whose death in the very noonday of his glorious
career as a fossil hunter cast a gloom over the world
of paleontology, purchased this specimen from me
for the Carnegie Museum. It has been described
in the Memoirs of the Carnegie Museum by Dr. G.
R. Wieland, the authority on extinct turtles, under
the title “The Osteology of <i>Protostega</i>.” He says,
on page 289: “The third of a century which elapsed
since Cope’s discovery of <i>Protostega gigas</i>, has not
sufficed to bring forth a complete restoration of any
single individual of these great sea-turtles. How
welcome then has been the discovery during the last
two years by Mr. Charles Sternberg in the Niobrara
Cretaceous of western Kansas, of the nearly complete
specimens of <i>Protostega gigas</i> which permit
the present description of the organization of the
limbs, the most important of the parts yet undescribed
as well as the very least likely to be recovered
in complete form.” (Fig. <SPAN href='#fig_21'>21</SPAN>.)</p>
<p class='c000'>This rare fossil was briefly mentioned by Professor
Osborn also in <cite>Science</cite> as a “complete skeleton
of <i>Protostega</i> which lay on its dorsal surface
with fore limbs stretched out at right angles to the
median line of the carapace, measuring six feet
between the ungual phalanges.”</p>
<p class='c000'>A second specimen, which I discovered and sold
directly to Dr. W. J. Holland, the director of the
Carnegie Museum, is thus described by Dr. Wieland
<span class='pageno' id='Page_116'>116</span>on page 282 of the Memoirs, under the heading
“Specimen No. 1421, Carnegie Museum Catalogue
of Vertebrates”:</p>
<p class='c000'>“This fine fossil is from the Niobrara Cretaceous
of Hackberry Creek.” (I should like to correct this
mistake. It was found about three miles northwest
of Monument Rocks in a ravine that empties into
the Smoky, east of where Elkader once stood.)
“The <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">ex situ</span></i> portions of the original skeleton, which
had weathered out and are secured in more or less
complete condition, include the left humerus, radius,
ulna, etc. The <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">in situ</span></i> portion consists of the right
anterior part of the skeleton, and was secured on a
single slab of matrix, in which it still remains intact,
as shown in the accompanying drawing by Mr.
Prentice, including the lower jaw in oblique inferior
view, the skull, the T-shaped nuchal (plate) and
two marginals. It will be seen what exceedingly
satisfactory information is furnished by the present
specimen as compared with all other examples of
<i>Protostega</i> hitherto found. Specimen 1420 [my
first specimen] is more complete than any other at
present discovered. As originally embedded in its
matrix of chalk, nearly every element was present
in an exactly or approximately natural position.
Unfortunately, the collector of this surprisingly
complete fossil, in an attempt to remove and separate
the bones from their original matrix of chalk,
<span class='pageno' id='Page_117'>117</span>mismarked some of them, and also made it impossible
to either replace more than a few of the
marginal elements, or to determine the outlines of
any of the plastral elements. Such work is difficult
enough in well-equipped laboratories. However,
none of the bones of the limbs are broken, and
Mr. Sternberg redeemed himself by discovering and
securing in such excellent condition No. 1421, as
just related.”</p>
<p class='c000'>I learn from one of the Museum’s staff that this
specimen is to be mounted this summer of 1908, and
placed on exhibition. As long as the Carnegie
Museum stands, this splendid example of the great
sea-tortoise will be admired by lovers of nature. In
shape it is very like the present-day turtle of the
Mediterranean. Its huge front paddles, with a span
of ten feet, were armed with horrid claws. The
hind ones were stretched out parallel with the body
and used as sculls by this “boatman of the
Cretaceous.”</p>
<p class='c000'>An account of my work in the Kansas Chalk
would not be complete without some mention of my
discovery, in several small localities, of the crinoid
<i>Uintacrinus socialis</i> Grinell. According to Mr.
Frank Springer, our noted American authority on
this subject, only seven localities were known in 1901;
he did not know of my discoveries. I can bear witness
with him, though, to the rarity of this species.
<span class='pageno' id='Page_118'>118</span>During the fifteen years in which I have gone over
the chalk exposures again and again, I can remember
only three localities of these fossils, the Martin
locality, another three miles to the east of it, and a
third on Butte Creek near Elkader. The first has
yielded the finest specimens among those which were
described by Mr. Springer in his magnificent treatise
on <i>Uintacrinus</i>, published by the Museum of Comparative
Zoology at Harvard University.</p>
<p class='c000'>Last year, however, my son George found two
splendid specimens about fifty feet apart, further
east than they had been discovered before. The
locality is south of Quinter, in the southern part of
Gove County, thirty-seven miles east of the Martin
locality. These two colonies each contained about
forty calices. As usual, they are flattened out on
the under side of a calcareous slab about a quarter of
an inch thick and beveled off as thin as paper at the
margins. One slab was sent to the Senckenberg
Museum in Germany, while Mr. Springer secured
the other.</p>
<p class='c000'>The calyx, or as we have called it, “the head,” has
ten long arms, some of them about thirty inches
long.<SPAN name='r1' /><SPAN href='#f1' class='c015'><sup>[1]</sup></SPAN></p>
<div class='footnote' id='f1'>
<p class='c000'><span class='label'><SPAN href='#r1'>1</SPAN>. </span>A restoration of the <i>Uintacrinus</i> is shown in the same illustration
(Fig. <SPAN href='#fig_11'>11</SPAN><i>a</i>) in which the <i>Clidastes</i> is represented.</p>
</div>
<p class='c000'>These beautiful globular animals were stemless,
and evidently lived in swarms, as single specimens
<span class='pageno' id='Page_119'>119</span>are never found. According to Mr. Springer, when
death overtook one of these swarms, it fell to the
bottom, where the first individuals were buried in
the soft mud and preserved, while the others, not
being so protected, disintegrated. The limy plates
of the calices and those of the arms, which were thus
mingled together above the perfect specimens, became
compressed into a hard slab, in the bottom of
which the perfect specimens are firmly impressed.</p>
<p class='c000'>Great numbers of these creatures have been discovered
in the English chalk, but they consist only
of the disintegrated plates.</p>
<div class='chapter'>
<span class='pageno' id='Page_120'>120</span>
<h2 class='c005'>CHAPTER V<br/> <span class='large'>DISCOVERY OF THE LOUP FORK BEDS OF KANSAS AND SUBSEQUENT WORK THERE, 1877 AND 1882–84</span></h2></div>
<div class='c006'>
<ANTIMG class='drop-capi' src='images/i_155.jpg' width-obs='100' alt='' /></div>
<p class='drop-capi_8'>
About the first of July, 1877, I received
orders to go north to the Loup Fork
River in Nebraska to search for vertebrate
fossils in beds of the Upper Miocene,
called by Hayden the Loup Fork Group. I
happened to meet, however, an old line hunter,
Abernathy by name, who had brought into Buffalo
his last load of buffalo hides, and he told me that a
little above his cabin, on the middle branch of Sappa
Creek in Decatur County, there was the skull of a
mastodon, sticking out of the solid rock.</p>
<p class='c000'>As a visit to his house would not take me far out
of my way, I followed his lead; and thanks to the
observation of this old hunter, who was scalped in
front of his door the next year by a band of hostile
Kiowas, I had the privilege of discovering the rich
fossil beds of the Loup Fork Group in northwestern
Kansas, and found enough to do without crossing
into Nebraska.</p>
<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_121'>121</span>The whole country north of Buffalo was without
human habitation until we reached the old man’s
cabin. On our way there, as we were driving one
sultry day down the long slope to the south branch
of the Soloman, we chanced to look behind us, and
as high as the eye could reach, the air was as black
as midnight with flying dust, dry grass, and buffalo
chips. Experience had taught us what all this
meant. Will Brouse laid the whip to the ponies, but
they did not need it. They, too, had taken fright,
and tore down the hill at breakneck speed. On
reaching the valley, we came upon a perpendicular
bluff, over twenty feet high, impinging on the level
flat, and Will swung the horses under its protecting
shelter. We sprang out, and while one of us unhitched
and tied the horses, the rest caught hold of
the wagon and held it down. In an instant all was
dark, while the rush of a mighty wind swept over
us with a terrible roar and passed on, leaving a calm
in its wake. As we followed its trail along the
river, we found large trees twisted off at the stump
or broken to pieces, their branches scattered like
straws.</p>
<p class='c000'>About sundown one evening, the old man pointed
out, in a side draw of the middle fork of the Sappa,
his mastodon. I sprang from the wagon, shouting,
“It’s a monster turtle!” And so it proved to be, a
great land turtle, over thirty inches long, twenty-eight
<span class='pageno' id='Page_122'>122</span>inches wide, and fifteen inches high; <i>Testudo
orthopygia</i> Cope called it. The back of the carapace
was sticking out of a ledge of grey sandstone.
We applied our picks, and soon had the specimen
collected. (Fig. <SPAN href='#fig_22'>22</SPAN>.)</p>
<p class='c000'>Now began an extremely interesting search for
this new fauna in Kansas. The rocks in this part of
the state usually consist of gray sand cemented together
with washed chalk and soluble silica. The
foundation on which these beds were deposited is
the Niobrara Group of the Cretaceous. The river
beds were cut in this soft lime, and later on the wash
of the land mingled the whiting with the sand and
gravel which the streams brought down from the
mountains. The tops of the hills are capped with
this conglomerate gray sandstone in ledges many
feet in thickness, and as the materials composing it
easily disintegrate, great masses of it lie at the bases
of the cliffs, resembling old mortar. I called them
mortar beds, and the stratigraphers have adopted the
name. Indeed, they are mortar beds not only in
name, from a fancied resemblance to mortar, but in
fact, as all the early settlers can testify. It was no
trouble for them to find beds so soft that the material
could easily be dug out, and when mixed with water
and spread with trowels over the inside walls of a
sod house, it made a very comfortable home. When
it comes to comfort, the settlers of the short-grass
country have gained nothing by building frame instead
of sod houses. The early settler’s sod house
was cool in summer and warm in winter, and those
who live in more modern houses in order to keep up
with the times will even now speak with regret of
the change.</p>
<div id='fig_22' class='figcenter id003'>
<ANTIMG src='images/fig_22.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
<div class='ic001'>
<p><span class='sc'>Fig. 22.—Fossil shell of Giant Land Turtle</span>, <i>Testudo orthopygia</i>.<br/><br/>Discovered by Charles Sternberg in Phillips Co., Kansas.</p>
</div>
</div>
<div id='fig_23' class='figcenter id003'>
<ANTIMG src='images/fig_23.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
<div class='ic001'>
<p><span class='sc'>Fig. 23.—The Snake-necked Elasmosaurus</span>, <i>Elasmosaurus platyurus</i>.<br/><br/>Discovered in the Niobrara Group of the Cretaceous. Restoration by Osborn and Knight. (From painting in American Museum of Natural History.)</p>
</div>
</div>
<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_123'>123</span>Not only did I secure a number of specimens of
these great turtles, so abundant at this time, but
also large quantities of the remains of a rhinoceros.
Cope thought it hornless, and named it <i>Aphelops
megalodus</i>, but since then Hatcher has found that
the male bore a loose horn on the end of the nasal
bones.</p>
<p class='c000'>I also got specimens of the great inferior tusked
mastodon, <i>Trilophodon campester</i> Cope. This remarkably
primitive mastodon had a lower jaw that
projected beyond the molar teeth for two feet in a
straight line, with a socket on either side, containing
two powerful tusks that terminated in chisel points.
One specimen, which I discovered in 1882 for the
Museum of Comparative Zoology in Cambridge,
had a jaw four feet long, including the tusks, which
extended eighteen inches beyond the end of the jaw.</p>
<p class='c000'>A set of jaws was brought me by my son last
fall. It belongs to a new form of this gigantic
pachyderm, which, during the Loup Fork times,
inhabited northwestern Kansas and a vast territory
west and northwest as far as the John Day basin
<span class='pageno' id='Page_124'>124</span>in eastern Oregon. A remarkable peculiarity of
this specimen is that the symphysis is greatly elongated
and curves downward thirteen inches below
the level of the alveolus, which bears the great molar
teeth. This individual was an old animal, as he had
shed his first dentition and all the premolars and
molars of the second except the very last, those
which we call wisdom teeth. Even these are well
worn; so the days of the mastodon’s life must have
been numbered even if he had escaped his enemy,
the great saber-toothed tiger, which preyed on him
and the other herbivorous animals of the day.</p>
<p class='c000'>The length of these remarkable jaws is four feet
and one inch. The height at the condyle, where
they connect with the skull, is thirteen and a half
inches; length of molar, nine and a quarter inches;
height of crown, two and one-half inches; distance
between the two molars, four inches. The sockets
for the great inferior tusks are two feet long and
six inches in diameter, and the huge recurved tusks
themselves must have been over four feet long.
Only a sight of these peculiar jaws, with tusks above
and below, can give the reader an idea of the formidable
appearance of this early mastodon. By the
large size and downward curvature of the lower
tusks, this mastodon suggests the great <i>Dinotherium</i>
of the Lower Pliocene of Europe. I regret for
America’s sake, but I am glad for the sake of the
<span class='pageno' id='Page_125'>125</span>world, that these jaws of the largest mammal ever
found in Kansas will find their last resting-place in
the great British Museum, where many of my finest
discoveries have gone.</p>
<p class='c000'>Another splendid set of lower jaws I found in
1905 in the Sternberg Quarry, of which I shall
speak later, for the Royal Museum of Munich, Bavaria.
Part of the symphysis was broken off, as
were also the inferior tusks. The length of the
jaw as preserved is two feet, six inches and a half,
and the height of the condyle, fourteen inches. In
the center of the grinding surface, the height is nine
and a half inches. The length of the molar is about
seven and a half inches, and the width three and a
half. This is Professor Cope’s <i>Trilophodon</i>.</p>
<p class='c000'>We found near this mastodon many chisel-like
tusks that had fallen out of their respective jaws and
lay scattered with the other bones. By comparing
this specimen with the new species, it will be noticed
that there is quite a difference in size, though evidently
they were about the same age, as in both
cases all the teeth have been discarded except the
last molars.</p>
<p class='c000'>The teeth of these animals were kept sharp by the
sand that adhered to the roots on which they lived.
Falling into the pits and valleys between the crests
of enamel, it scoured away the dentine and cementum,
and kept the great grinders ever sharp and
<span class='pageno' id='Page_126'>126</span>ready for use. It is a distinguishing characteristic
of these early mastodons that their tusks have a strip
of enamel along the inside, while the modern
elephants’ tusks have only a vestige of enamel at the
extreme tip that is quickly worn off.</p>
<p class='c000'>Another remarkable inhabitant of Kansas during
the Loup Fork Period was the three-toed horse, an
animal but little larger than the new-born colt of an
ordinary farm horse, which evidently lived in herds,
judging from the great quantity of loose teeth that
we have found. Its toes were spreading, which enabled
it to walk over bogs and mossy quagmires on
the shores of lakes or rivers, and thus escape the
fangs of bloodthirsty tigers by venturing farther
out on the soft ground than they dared to follow.</p>
<p class='c000'>In 1882, while employed by the Agassiz Museum,
I found the famous Sternberg Quarry at Long Island
on Prairie Dog Creek in Phillips County. I
had been exploring for weeks the region at the head
of the branches of Deer Creek, which spread out in
the divide like a fan; but although once in a while,
especially in the neighborhood of Bread Bowl
Mound, I had found fragments of the bones of
Loup Fork animals in the sod, I had not met with
much success, as the rocks here disintegrate so easily
and hold moisture so readily that the whole country
is covered with grass. There are thirty-three
streams in this county as a result of the immense
<span class='pageno' id='Page_127'>127</span>amount of moisture which accumulates in these
sandstone beds and is carried to the surface in
springs.</p>
<p class='c000'>One very hot day I started to cross the divide to
Prairie Dog Creek. I had the wagon sheet stretched
over the bows, the sides lifted to admit the breeze,
and sleepy with the heat, I let the horses go on about
as they pleased; not noticing, until the level rays of
the sun warned me that it was time to camp, that I
had gone farther east than I had intended. I had
my camp outfit with me, however, and as I saw a
bunch of trees in a ravine a mile from the creek I
knew that there must be water there. So the three
requisites, grass, wood, and water, were at hand.</p>
<p class='c000'>After pitching the tent, and starting supper, I
found to my delight a large exposure of hard
siliceous rock, consisting of sand and chalk held
firmly together by soluble sand, which proved to be
the bottom ledge of a deposit of gray sandstone. I
soon found above it a mastodon’s bones. My joy
knew no bounds, however, when following the narrow
draw up to its head, I found that it cut through
a quarry of rhinoceros bones, which were sticking
out of the sand on either side, while the narrow ditch
at the bottom was filled with toe bones, complete or
in fragments, and broken skulls and teeth without
number. I have collected fossil vertebrates and
plants since I was seventeen years old, but this is the
<span class='pageno' id='Page_128'>128</span>greatest deposit of fossils that I have ever discovered.</p>
<p class='c000'>I shall never forget how, carried away with enthusiasm,
I took possession in the name of Science
of the largest bone bed in Kansas. I did not stop
to ask whether anyone else had any interest in the
land, nor did I think it necessary. I had grown so
used in my own case to putting aside every other
consideration for the sake of the advancement of
science that it did not occur to me that anyone else
might take a different view. But one day, as I was
working in the ravine, an old man, plowing corn,
drove up to its eastern edge. When he made the
turn, he chanced to look across and saw me, pick in
hand, diligently uncovering the skull of a rhinoceros
from the sandbank on the other side. He instantly
shouted with all the strength of his lungs, “What
are you doing?”</p>
<p class='c000'>“Digging up antediluvian relics,” I shouted back.
We both shouted as if we were a hundred yards
apart.</p>
<p class='c000'>“Well,” he called, “get out of there!”</p>
<p class='c000'>“All right,” I answered in the same loud tones,
and kept on working.</p>
<p class='c000'>The old man, whose name I learned later was Mr.
Overton, disappeared, and I heard no more of him
until I went into Long Island for food, or grub as
they say in the West, and was told that he had come
<span class='pageno' id='Page_129'>129</span>in to a justice of the peace and asked for a warrant
to arrest me for collecting these old bones. He
never again came directly to me, either that year or
the following, but people told me that he went
around to all the justices in that part of the country,
trying to get his warrant. Finally, however, they
managed to convince him that I was not harming
him, and was benefiting science.</p>
<p class='c000'>Two years later, in 1884, I was employed by the
late Professor Marsh to explore this same fossil bed.
The bones which I was after now were covered by
fourteen feet of moulding sand and a four-foot ledge
of hard rock, the heavier bones lying on the sandstone,
the lighter ones mingled with the sand above.
This sand and rock had to be removed by pick and
scraper, which meant that there was a large amount
of heavy labor before us. Therefore, having more
means at my command than I had had before, I
drove up to Mr. Overton’s door and offered him
forty dollars a month to work for us with his team
during the whole summer, with the understanding
that I was to have all the fossils found. This offer
he gladly accepted, and I found him a very careful
worker. Not only did he do the rough work well,
but when we got a floor laid bare above the bones,
he proved to be a most careful collector. My other
assistant on this expedition was a Mr. Will Russ,
who afterwards became a skilful dentist.</p>
<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_130'>130</span>Our method of work was first to cut down and
remove the sand and rock for a space twenty feet
wide and perhaps a hundred long, using a plow and
scraper. Then we cleaned up our floor and uncovered
the bones with oyster knives and other tools
which we had made to suit our purpose. One, I remember,
was a hoe straightened out at the shank and
cut off at the corners to make a diamond-shaped tool.
With this we could work under the high bank, and
take out specimens which we could not reach otherwise.
Trowels and diggers of various patterns were
used also.</p>
<p class='c000'>The bones which we were collecting lay scattered
along both sides of the ravine for a quarter of a
mile, often in pockets or pot-holes in the gray sandstone.
Of this there are two layers, about fourteen
feet apart, the interspace being filled with beds
of fine moulding sand, with some whiting from the
underlying chalk, which constituted the land surface
when these fresh-water beds were deposited.
There are also beds of sand that have been washed
clean by the currents of the flood-plain of some
ancient river, for the exposed section shows all the
different deposits of an overflowed valley. Above
the washed sand is a stratum of sand and clay, indicating
that here was a quiet place where the
muddy backwater deposited its load. This layer,
upon exposure, cracks in all directions, like the mud
<span class='pageno' id='Page_131'>131</span>at the bottom of a puddle after the water has
evaporated.</p>
<p class='c000'>It has always been a problem to account for the
number of the animals represented here, and for the
fact that the bones are so scattered. All parts of
the skeletons are mingled in the greatest confusion,
with no two bones in a natural position. One is, of
course, forced, after an observation of this country,
to agree with Drs. Matthew and Hatcher that these
bones were deposited in the flood-plain of a running
stream and not in great lakes, as was believed by
older geologists. But the only supposition upon
which I can account for the intermingling of all the
bones of the skeletons on the bottom sandstone layer
is that the fine sand through which the bones were
distributed, becoming saturated with water, was
converted into a quicksand, in which the bones sank
until they reached the impenetrable layer below; the
heavier bones of course being at the bottom.</p>
<p class='c000'>What caused the death of the countless individuals
in the Sternberg Quarry, is a question not easily
answered. The authorities quoted above believe
that during the Upper Miocene Period, there were
many water-courses separated, by slightly elevated
divides and broad flood-plains, with possibly here
and there small lakes, where the dense vegetation
had clogged some sluggish stream. But during a
rainy season of unusual duration, the whole region
<span class='pageno' id='Page_132'>132</span>for many miles must have been converted into a
series of lakes; and all the animals in the vicinity,
after having gathered at the highest points they
could find to escape death, must have been finally
overwhelmed by some great flood that covered every
inch of ground. Then after maceration took place,
the bones might have been scattered by other floods.</p>
<p class='c000'>A theory of my own, equally plausible, is that the
animals were buried beneath a sandstorm, which
tore loose the fine sand of the flood-plain, and scattered
it in suffocating volumes over the frightened
multitudes which had herded together in search of
safety or courage.</p>
<p class='c000'>This land, now three thousand feet above sea
level, was only a few feet above when these rhinoceroses
moved over it in countless herds. Everywhere
were swamps filled with sponge moss, and
tropical streams, whose wealth of vegetation formed
thick jungles along their banks. On firmer ground,
great areas were covered with a dense growth of
rushes, through which the paths of these animals
were the only trails; while higher up still, the soft
damp soil gave a foothold to forests, through which
the great mastodons sounded their trumpet calls, as
they roamed about, tearing up trees with their powerful
trunks and feasting upon the rich, juicy roots.</p>
<div id='fig_24' class='figcenter id004'>
<ANTIMG src='images/fig_24.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
<div class='ic001'>
<p><span class='sc'>Fig. 24.—Three-toed Horse</span>, <i>Hypohippus</i>.<br/><br/>From the Middle Eocene of Colorado. (After Gidley.) In American Museum of Natural History.</p>
</div>
</div>
<div id='fig_25' class='figcenter id003'>
<ANTIMG src='images/fig_25.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
<div class='ic001'>
<p><span class='sc'>Fig. 25.—Fossil Rhinoceros</span>, <i>Teleoceras fossiger</i>.<br/><br/>From Sternberg’s quarry at Long Island, Phillips Co., Kansas. Collected by Wortman; mounted in the American Museum of Natural History. (After Osborn.)</p>
</div>
</div>
<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_133'>133</span>That year, 1884, in which I explored the quarry
at Long Island, was a memorable one, not only because
we secured a large carload of rhinoceros
bones, but also because we had with us Mr. J. B.
Hatcher, who afterwards helped to build up three
great museums of vertebrate paleontology,—the
museums of Yale and Princeton and the Carnegie
Museum. With the last he was connected at the
time of his death in 1904, just twenty years after he
made his first collection of vertebrate fossils with
me. A bright, earnest student, he gave promise of
a future even then by his perfect understanding of
the work in hand and the thoughtful care which he
devoted to it. I have always been glad that I had
the honor of being his first teacher in the practical
work of collecting, although he soon graduated
from my department, and requested me to let him
take one side of the ravine while I worked the other.
He employed Mr. Overton’s son with a plow and
scraper, and got out a magnificent collection with no
further instructions from me.</p>
<p class='c000'>That same year Professor Marsh came to my
quarry and leased it from the owner, and I never
saw it again until 1905, when I came into my own
once more, and in addition to the splendid mastodon,
mentioned earlier in this chapter, found the material
for two perfect mounts of the rhinoceros. One is
to be mounted at Munich, the other at Bonn.</p>
<p class='c000'>With Professor Osborn’s consent, I give a photograph
of the fine specimen (Fig. <SPAN href='#fig_25'>25</SPAN>) which Dr.
<span class='pageno' id='Page_134'>134</span>Wortman secured in 1894 from this quarry for the
American Museum. A vast collection from the
same spot is stored in the National Museum in its
original packages, with which I filled a car in 1884.
I saw there a whole case filled with the skulls of
the rhinoceros <i>Teleoceras fossiger</i>, which I secured
in great numbers at Long Island.</p>
<p class='c000'>It is strange to think that the foundation on which
these beds of fresh-water deposits lie unconformably
is the great Cretaceous sea bottom, whose tilted and
uplifted strata tower two thousand feet above the
carboniferous rocks in eastern Kansas. The Republican,
Smoky Hill, and Kansas rivers have
carved their way through all these strata, so that by
following down these streams, one can get cross
sections of the country.</p>
<p class='c000'>I have often asked men who were sure that there
must be coal beneath the surface, why, instead of
hiring a man to dig a hole for them, they did not
hitch up their buggies and follow the valley of the
Smoky Hill, beginning at the Colorado line. The
first stratum exposed is of course the recent, with its
sandy loam; in it, here and there, a crumbling buffalo
skull or an eroded implement. Then comes the
Pleistocene deposit, consisting of clay, sand, and
fragments of rock mingled together. From this
formation I secured over two hundred teeth of the
great Columbian Mammoth. Next come beds of
<span class='pageno' id='Page_135'>135</span>black shale with giant septaria, the Fort Pierre
Group of the Cretaceous, whose upper beds we explored
in Montana in 1876 for dinosaurs. In this
formation, in Kansas, I found a new species of
<i>Clidastes</i>. The specimens are now in the Kansas
University collection, and the species has been
named by Dr. Williston <i>Clidastes westi</i>, in honor of
the Kansas University collector, the late Judge E. P.
West.</p>
<p class='c000'>We have not gone far down the river below the
forks, before this formation, which at McAllister
topped the hills, passes under the river. Then
reddish and blue chalks occupy the country for some
miles, and in turn disappear to give place to yellowish
and blue chalks, which finally make way for
the blue and almost white chalks that run under the
river near the mouth of Hackberry Creek in eastern
Gove County.</p>
<p class='c000'>At White Rock in Trego County the hard white
limestone, in fortification blocks, is piled ninety feet
high. Further down appears the post limestone of
the Fort Benton Group, with its characteristic <i>Inoceramus</i>
shells; while in central Kansas, brown and
white sandstone and brilliantly colored clays occupy
the whole region for sixty miles, giving place at
last to the hard limestones and the friable shales and
sandstones of the Upper Carboniferous. No coal,
except very shallow veins in the Upper Carboniferous
<span class='pageno' id='Page_136'>136</span>and the Dakota Group of the Cretaceous,
has even been found in this big ditch, which, less
than a quarter of a mile wide at the head of the
Smoky Hill branch at Wallace, broadens out to a
width of several miles at the mouth of the Kansas
River.</p>
<p class='c000'>It is impossible to compute the vast amount of
mineral matter which has been cut out from these
Kansas plains and carried by the river into the
Mississippi and on to the Gulf. Since the first narrow
trench cut its way through the hardened ooze of
the Cretaceous ocean bed, all the flood-plains of the
Missouri and the Mississippi below Kansas City
have been enriched by the material that once covered
these valleys of Kansas, and the delta below New
Orleans has been partly built up by it.</p>
<p class='c000'>It may interest my readers and give them a
glimpse into the daily routine of a fossil hunter’s
life, if I quote one or two notes from a diary
which I kept during my work in these Loup Fork
beds.</p>
<p class='c000'>“Friday, July 11.—This is to record the most
successful day since we have been in the field. We
have collected three sets of under-jaws, three skulls.
It has been extremely hot. We have put in eight
hours of hard work.”</p>
<p class='c000'>“Saturday, July 12.—To-day I got out and
packed our three skulls and three lower jaws. They
<span class='pageno' id='Page_137'>137</span>were within the space of a square yard. We got
some very fine bones, and best of all, a perfect front
foot in position, a perfect humerus, a perfect femur,
except proximal articulation, the premaxilla of a cat
with a huge canine (saber-toothed tiger). We got
great quantities of the bones of the feet, an axis, and
one other vertebræ in good state of preservation, a fine
scapula, etc. This afternoon has been the hottest
day of the season, but this evening the wind changed
to the north, and it is quite cool. I got in addition to
the specimens mentioned a maxilla of a saber-toothed
tiger. The enormous young canine was
two inches long and three-quarters of an inch
wide.”</p>
<p class='c000'>I might go on and quote indefinitely, but the story
would be about the same. I recall, however, one or
two incidents connected with my work in this
field, which may be amusing or interesting to my
readers.</p>
<p class='c000'>Once in 1882, while collecting for the Museum of
Comparative Zoology of Harvard University, I met
an old gentleman and his dear old wife, the hair of
both showing upon it the snows of many winters,
sitting on a board laid across a dry-goods box to
which two wagon wheels had been attached. A
team of ponies harnessed with rope instead of
leather, with lines of the same material, completed
the outfit. The old man and his wife sat up very
<span class='pageno' id='Page_138'>138</span>straight and dignified and demanded of me what I
was doing in that part of the country.</p>
<p class='c000'>“Oh,” I answered, “I’m looking for rhinoceros
bones in the loose sand of the hills here.”</p>
<p class='c000'>“Well,” the old man said, “I am interested in
these old bones myself. I don’t claim to be a
scholar; in fact, I am quite illiterate, but I think
when this earth was in a molten state, these old
hippopotamuses wallowed around in the mud and
got congealed in the rocks.”</p>
<p class='c000'>The following incident I did not find quite so
amusing. One day I discovered turtle shells sticking
out on either side of a narrow gulch which cut
through a large deposit of sand. In digging out
those already in sight, I found many more; collecting
in all some twenty fine specimens, but all quite
small. Following down the gorge, I discovered
that it opened out, on Beaver Creek in Rawlins
County, into a great amphitheater several acres in
extent and almost denuded of vegetation; an ideal
place for fossil hunting, as the elements had been
digging out and removing the sand for ages. And
sure enough, I soon stumbled upon the complete
shell and skeleton, four feet in diameter, of a specimen
of Cope’s <i>Testudo orthopygia</i>; but it nearly
broke my heart to find that while the specimen had
weathered out in a perfect condition, some vandal—for
I shall ever maintain that the wanton destruction
<span class='pageno' id='Page_139'>139</span>of life that now is or of the remains of life that
once was, is wicked,—some man had chopped it all
to pieces with a mattock.</p>
<p class='c000'>Passing on in a not very pleasant frame of mind,
I came upon another individual of huge proportions,
which had suffered the same fate, and then upon
another; all that this rich-looking ground afforded
had been utterly ruined.</p>
<p class='c000'>Angry at the thought that any man should commit
such sacrilege,—for to me these footsteps of
the Creator in the sands of time are sacred,—and
bitterly disappointed, since I knew that I should
very likely never again come upon such huge specimens
of the reptilian life of that age, I walked into
camp blinded by hot tears, and failed to notice a
stranger who was sitting there on a box.</p>
<p class='c000'>“Some infernal vandal has been up this ravine,”
I shouted to Will, “and dug up with a mattock three
of the finest turtles I ever saw.”</p>
<p class='c000'>As if he had been shot, the man jumped from the
box and exclaimed in accents of heartfelt contrition,
“It was me. I was out here digging roots to
build a fire with, and ran across them. I didn’t
know they had any value, and I wanted to see what
was inside of them and dug into them.”</p>
<p class='c000'>His surprise and dismay were so comical that the
murder vanished from my heart, and overwrought
as I was, I broke out into a fit of uncontrollable
<span class='pageno' id='Page_140'>140</span>laughter which used me up for the rest of the
day.</p>
<p class='c000'>Another time I had a rather unusual experience.
My assistant, a Mr. Wright, and I were digging
out rhinoceros bones on Sappa Creek. We had
noticed a house on the other side of the creek, although
dense timber cut off most of its surroundings,
and happening to look toward it once, we saw
a girl of about sixteen years rush out from the timber
and begin to climb the steep hill toward us. I
never saw anyone run so fast up so steep a hill.
Her strength failed her, however, when she got to
us, and it was some time before she could tell her
story. It seems that her mother had gone out to
milk, and as the ground was slippery from a rain of
the night before, she had fallen and dislocated one
of the bones in the palm of her hand.</p>
<p class='c000'>All the men were away and had taken all the
horses, and it was seventeen miles to the nearest
doctor. The girl, knowing that we were digging up
bones, had concluded that we could set them, and
had come to us for help. Although I had never attempted
anything of the kind before, I could not resist
the poor child’s appeal and went to the house.
The mother lay moaning on her bed, and would
answer nothing when I asked whether I should try
to set her hand. But as the girl was very desirous
that I should make the attempt, I decided to do so.
<span class='pageno' id='Page_141'>141</span>So while Mr. Wright held the arm, I put splints and
a roller bandage under the hand, which was laid on
a table, and then forcibly pushed the bone back into
its natural position. After which I bandaged the
hand tightly. I left directions with the girl to hang
a can of water with a small hole in it over the hand,
so that the water might drip on it and by evaporation
cool it and prevent inflammation. My instructions
were carried out by the brave girl, and her
mother’s hand was soon as well as ever.</p>
<p class='c000'>In these last chapters I have often wandered far
afield, for it would have taken too long to relate all
the events of my various expeditions in consecutive
order. Hoping that my readers will pardon the
digressions, I return to the expedition of 1877.</p>
<p class='c000'>Russell Hill proved a most efficient assistant, and
it has always grieved me that he should in later years
have given up work in the fossil fields for the
practice of medicine. Will Brouse, too, was an
enthusiastic worker; he was not satisfied to be
relegated to the pots and kettles and horses, and not
only did his duty as our teamster and cook, but
soon accomplished almost, if not quite as much in
the field as any one of us. I never had a more
congenial party in all the years of my field work.</p>
<p class='c000'>But one day in August I received a bulky letter
from Professor Cope. “Turn over all the outfit to
Mr. Hill,” he wrote, “and go at once to a new field
<span class='pageno' id='Page_142'>142</span>discovered in the desert of eastern Oregon. Go to
Fort Klamath, Oregon, and from there to Silver
Lake, to a man by the name of Duncan, the postmaster.
He will guide you to the fossil bed in the
heart of the sage-brush desert. You will likely find
human implements mingled with extinct animals.
You are to go secretly; tell no one where you are
going. Have your mail sent by a circuitous route,
so you cannot be traced.”</p>
<p class='c000'>I received the Professor’s order with excitement
and great joy; but in spite of his injunction to start
at once and without communicating my intention to
anyone, I could not bring myself to leave for the
Pacific Coast, to be gone for an indefinite time, without
bidding good-by to my father and mother, and I
concluded that even if someone should find out
where I was going and try to follow me I could
easily give him the slip and get to the field first.</p>
<p class='c000'>Buffalo, the nearest railway station, was seventy-five
miles away, a two days’ journey, with our big
load of fossils. So I mounted my riding pony and
made the long trip the next day, reaching the station
at sunset, tired and sore. My pony, however, endowed
with the enduring power characteristic of a
good Indian pony, was still fresh enough to shy at a
rattlesnake in the road, and as I happened to be sitting
sideways in the saddle, throw me to the ground
within a few feet of the snake.</p>
<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_143'>143</span>That night I went to my home in Ellsworth
County, bade my dear ones good-by for an indefinite
length of time, and was back at Buffalo again at
midnight of the following day. My boys met me at
the station with my roll of blankets, tools, and baggage,
and away I went to “fresh fields and pastures
new.”</p>
<div class='chapter'>
<span class='pageno' id='Page_144'>144</span>
<h2 class='c005'>CHAPTER VI<br/> <span class='large'>EXPEDITION TO THE OREGON DESERT IN 1877</span></h2></div>
<div class='c006'>
<ANTIMG class='drop-capi' src='images/i_183.jpg' width-obs='100' alt='' /></div>
<p class='drop-capi_8'>
At Monument Station, I was surprised to
see Mr. S. W. Williston get aboard with
all his outfit. Williston did not know at
first that I was on the train, and when he
entered my car, he was greatly astonished, thinking
that I was on his trail. He tried to find out my
destination, but failed. We slept together at Denver.
Then he took a train south, while I went north
toward Cheyenne and the West.</p>
<p class='c000'>Onward our train sped toward the land of the
setting sun, through the grand and impressive
scenery of the Rockies and Sierra Nevadas. At
Sacramento I took the railroad for Redding, where,
with seven other passengers, I entered a Concord
coach drawn by a team of eight horses, and continued
my journey by stage.</p>
<p class='c000'>It was a lovely August evening. The moon was
at its full, and the night was almost as bright as day.
No sound broke the deep silence, except now and
then the whoo of an owl as it called to its mate far
<span class='pageno' id='Page_145'>145</span>away in the depth of the forest, or the plash of running
water falling in cascades over the shelving
rocks and dashing against the boulders.</p>
<p class='c000'>Higher and higher we climbed, through primeval
forests of spruce and fir, whose branches clove the
sky a hundred feet above our heads. The rarefied
air filled our lungs with its life-giving tonic, exhilarating
us like wine. We knew that far above us
rose Mount Shasta, the giant of the range, but for a
time the heavy timber shut out the view, and we
could see only the road ahead, winding up and up
through the forests. Then suddenly, without warning,
we moved above the timber-line, and Mount
Shasta stood revealed in all its beauty, a perfect
cone, towering four thousand feet into the air, its
robes of everlasting snow glistening in the moonlight.
Above, in the clear blue of the sky, the stars
sparkled like jewels in an immortal canopy.</p>
<p class='c000'>It was the first time that any of us had looked
upon that majestic scene, and whatever may have
been the differences of temperament among us, we
were one in the feeling of awe which the glorious
picture inspired. It laid a spell upon us; we were
dumb before the invisible presence of the Power that
had reared this stupendous pinnacle, and involuntarily
our thoughts turned to that “city that hath
foundations, whose builder and maker is God.”</p>
<p class='c000'>Then to break the awful silence, and give some
<span class='pageno' id='Page_146'>146</span>vent to our emotions, we broke out into the old song,
“’Way down upon the Suwanee River”; and so we
journeyed on for many hours, never out of sight of
that majestic form.</p>
<p class='c000'>At Ashland I was obliged to wait for a driver
with a buckboard and a team of ponies to take me
to Fort Klamath, Oregon. I was at that time a
great lover of the gentle art of fishing, and early in
the morning, before it was fully light, I was astir
among the great live-oaks that grace the town.
Walking through the sleeping village, I ran across
the footprints of a large grizzly bear in the dust of
the road, and followed them through the vacant
streets. Wherever a gate had been left open, the
bear had entered the yard, walked around the house,
and come out at the gate again. I hoped to get a
glimpse of him, but was disappointed, as the tracks
led into the gloom of the forest. So I went fishing,
and caught some speckled beauties for breakfast.</p>
<p class='c000'>That evening I was driven over to Fort Klamath,
where I was kindly invited to take possession of the
commanding officer’s quarters and make myself at
home; an invitation which I proceeded to accept at
once.</p>
<p class='c000'>Learning that a sheep-owner a few miles away
had killed a grizzly, I went out to his camp to see it.
Sure enough, there lay the mighty carcass, encircled
with four inches of grease, enough for the polls of
<span class='pageno' id='Page_147'>147</span>all the boys in Oregon. It seemed that as the time
for his winter nap was approaching, Mr. Bruin had
been laying in a supply of fuel by devouring the fat
wethers of our friend’s flock. The latter had built
a heavy brush fence around the sheep, and with the
help of a large number of hounds, had kept his
range free from coyotes, but he had been helpless
before the attacks of this big bear. When he
watched on top of the brush fence, he was not
molested, but no sooner did he seek the comfortable
cot in his tent, than his slumbers were broken by the
piteous bleat of some sheep, as it was carried off to
the woods by the bear.</p>
<p class='c000'>About ten days before I reached Klamath, he had
been awakened in the middle of the night by a commotion
in the flock, and rushing out in his shirt into
the cool night air, had seen the bear only ten feet
away, across a deep and narrow stream. Without
thinking of the consequences to himself if he only
wounded the creature, he opened fire with his Winchester,
and the first shot broke the bear’s neck.</p>
<p class='c000'>When I arrived, the skin had been removed, but
the huge carcass, which must have weighed at least
a ton, had been lying in the hot August sun ever
since. The sheep-owner (I am sorry that I have
forgotten his name, as I was under heavy obligations
to him) promised me that after breakfast he
would help me in the not very enviable task of removing
<span class='pageno' id='Page_148'>148</span>the decaying flesh from the bones. But
after one whiff from the windward side, he asked
a pertinent question, was I fond of trout, and
upon my answering yes, remarked that he knew of
a creek where he could get some beauties, and immediately
disappeared. I saw him no more that
morning.</p>
<p class='c000'>At the first thrust of my knife into the bear, the
stench was so horrible that I grew deathly sick. I
filled my pipe and tried to find relief in smoking, but
even then the odor was overpowering, and I smoked
and sickened through the livelong day, until I had
cleaned the filthy flesh from the bones, and they had
been tied up in gunny-sacks and hung in a tree to
dry. Then into the creek I went and with soap and
sand scrubbed and scoured my body; but the horrid
smell still hung about me, and I could eat neither
supper nor breakfast the next morning, although at
dinner I managed to stow away a good square meal.
But even now, after thirty years, if you say “bear”
to me, I can smell that bear.</p>
<p class='c000'>At Klamath I hired for my assistant a man named
George Loosely. I also bought two saddle ponies
and one to carry the pack; and with a government
tent and other outfit and rations purchased at the
commissary,—we had our flour baked into bread by
the post baker,—we started for Silver Lake, although
no one at the post could give us any directions.
<span class='pageno' id='Page_149'>149</span>I had a department map, sent to me by Professor
Cope, which recorded, mistakenly as we
found later, that Sprague River rose in Silver Lake.
The government road to the east crossed the Williamson
River on a government bridge, and came to
an abrupt end in an Indian village on the western
bank of Sprague River. So we decided to take the
road as far as we could and then follow up the river
to its source in the lake.</p>
<p class='c000'>When we reached the Williamson River, we
found there the lodge of a Snake Indian, who appeared
dressed in red paint and a breech-cloth, and
demanded toll. But as American citizens we had
paid taxes to help pay for that bridge; so we refused
to pay toll for the use of our own property, and rode
across in spite of the threats hurled at us.</p>
<p class='c000'>We reached Sprague River that same evening,
and went into camp a short distance from a large
Indian town. The houses, built by government
contractors of rough logs, consisted of a single room
with a shake roof. The Indians had torn out the
board floors, and instead of using the fireplaces and
chimneys which the builders had erected for their
convenience, they had cut holes in the roofs, and
built their fires in the middle of the floor, sleeping
around them at night as their fathers used to do in
their lodges or Sibley tents.</p>
<p class='c000'>George, who was more familiar with them than I
<span class='pageno' id='Page_150'>150</span>was, learned that a chief lay dying in one of the
houses, and after supper he left me and went to
witness the death ceremonies. After stowing away
the bread and coffee between our mattresses and
covering them with blankets, and hiding the bacon
at the bottom of the mess box with tin dishes piled
on top of it so that I should hear the rattle if a
thieving Indian attempted to get at it, I, being tired,
dropped off to sleep.</p>
<p class='c000'>About three o’clock in the morning, George appeared,
having been shut up in the house with the
dying chief all night. When the medicine man
began his incantations, the doors and windows were
closed, while the steaming Indians danced in a circle
around the dying chief, forcing the unwilling
George to take part in the ceremonies. All night
long they moved around in their death dance to the
music of their drums and the wild gesticulations of
the medicine man, and when George finally got
away, he was about exhausted. He was soon lost in
sleep, and as I habitually lie on my sound ear,
neither of us heard anything through the night.
But the next morning, when George had put on the
coffee to boil and went into the mess box for the
bacon, it had disappeared. The dishes had been
carefully replaced.</p>
<p class='c000'>After a breakfast of bread and coffee, we were
early in the saddle, taking a heavy trail that led north
<span class='pageno' id='Page_151'>151</span>and skirted Sprague River. By the merest chance,
we met a white man, the first we had seen since leaving
the post, and we stopped to ask the way to Silver
Lake. A number of Snake Indians were standing
around at the time. The man told us to go north
on the trail to a sheep camp in Sican Valley, where
we would receive further directions, and thanking
him, we rode confidently forward.</p>
<p class='c000'>Just as the sun was sinking, we entered a splendid
forest of fir and spruce, and soon found that our
trail forked. The heavy, well-traveled branch
turned a little west of north; the other, leading due
north, had apparently not been used since last year,
as it was covered with old leaves. We did not
know what to do, as the man whom we had met in
the morning had not mentioned this fork. While
we were talking about it, we heard the jingling bells
of a pack horse or Indian cayuse, and soon a boy
hove in sight, driving a couple of pack ponies.
Moving to one side to let him pass, I asked him
where he was going.</p>
<p class='c000'>“To Sican Valley, to a sheep ranch,” he answered,
and immediately was lost to sight among
the giant trees. We meekly fell in behind and
hurried after him.</p>
<p class='c000'>Suddenly we came out into a natural park, the end
of our trail. Five Indian lodges stood about in the
open space, and five valiant braves, in their usual
<span class='pageno' id='Page_152'>152</span>attire of paint and breech-cloths, with the inevitable
Winchester, stepped forward to inform
us that “white man was lost in the woods,”
and that they would show him the trail for two
dollars.</p>
<p class='c000'>“Where is that miserable papoose?” I demanded,
but they only grinned and repeated, “We will show
you the road for two dollars.”</p>
<p class='c000'>It was my habit, in a crisis of this kind, to smoke,
for I regret to say that I was for many years a lover
of the soothing weed; so, drawing out of my saddlebag
a pound of fragrant “Lone Jack,” I proceeded
to fill my pipe and decide upon my further course.
Instantly the Indians crowded around me, and dropping
the butts of their guns to the ground, pulled out
their tobacco pouches, and opening them wide, held
them up to be filled, crying in chorus, “Me tobac!
Me tobac!”</p>
<p class='c000'>But the memory of the deceitful boy was still
rankling in my mind. I told George to follow me
with the pack horse, and deliberately lighting my
pipe and filling my lungs with smoke to their utmost
capacity, I blew a cloud of it into the faces of the
expectant beggars. Then I drove my spurs into my
pony’s flanks and started off in a mad race against
time, as the long shadows warned me only too
plainly that the daylight, our only guide now, would
soon leave us. I did not look back, but George, who
<span class='pageno' id='Page_153'>153</span>did, saw the Indians, in anger, level their rifles as
they shouted to us to stop.</p>
<p class='c000'>That race with darkness was an exciting one,
but just before night overtook us, we reached the
trail which we had left to follow the lying Indian
boy. In our haste, our bread had been torn from its
sack by the outstretched limb of a tree, and was lost.
However, we were so thankful to have escaped
paying toll to those filthy Snakes, that we cheerfully
made our supper of coffee, and sought our
blankets.</p>
<p class='c000'>At the first streak of daylight, after another meal
of coffee, we were in our saddles; and we traveled
all day, until, just as the sun was setting, we heard
the welcome bleat of sheep and saw the herders
driving their flocks down the slopes of the neighboring
hills to their corrals in Sican Valley. Following
them, we soon spied the camp in the heavy
timber and smelled the delicious savor of a pot of
mutton that was boiling over the fire. And before
long, seated at the rude table, we were enjoying to
the uttermost the hospitality of the camp.</p>
<p class='c000'>We had learned on the journey that Sprague
River rises in the heart of the mountains, instead of
in Silver Lake, and we had crossed the divide between
it and the lake before reaching Sican Valley.
The next morning our sheepmen directed us on our
way; and that same evening we were skirting the
<span class='pageno' id='Page_154'>154</span>lake’s lovely shores. Its wide expanse of water put
me in mind of my boyhood days on Otsego Lake or
the Glimmer-glass.</p>
<p class='c000'>We soon reached the hospitable home of Mr.
Duncan, the postmaster of Silver Lake. He had
built a comfortable house of logs, with a large
chimney at one end and an old-fashioned fireplace,
around which, as the nights were cold, we gathered
and talked until far into the night.</p>
<p class='c000'>Mr. Duncan’s family consisted of his wife and
daughter, a dear, good girl, who will forgive me, I
am sure, if I tell a story at her expense. George
and I were sent to bed in a lean-to, and as our bedroom
was next to that of the Duncans and the stoppings
had fallen out of some of the chinks in the
wall between, we could hear everything that was
said in their room. In the middle of the night I
woke up and heard the old gentleman talking to his
wife about their daughter.</p>
<p class='c000'>“Mother,” he said, “I think John will be a good
husband for Mary, don’t you?”</p>
<p class='c000'>Before she could answer, Mary, who had a bed
at the other end of the parents’ room, called out
with great energy, “I think so too, father!”</p>
<p class='c000'>In an instant all was still, while George and I, in
our efforts to keep quiet, stuffed the bedclothes into
our mouths until we were almost suffocated.</p>
<p class='c000'>We unloaded our weary pack horse, and the next
<span class='pageno' id='Page_155'>155</span>day brought our supplies, and loaded them into Mr.
Duncan’s wagon. Then taking him with us for
guide, we started on our long drive to the boneyard,
fifty-six miles through the great sage-brush desert
of eastern Oregon.</p>
<p class='c000'>On we journeyed, through what seemed an interminable
expanse of sage-brush, greasewood, and
sand. The bunches of sage-brush topped conical
mounds of sand, whose sides were scoured and
polished by the winds that howled in and out
through the labyrinth of hills, laden with drifting
sand. If one could have gained an elevation above
the level of these sandhills, and looked out over the
landscape, one would have gazed upon a scene of
even greater desolation than that afforded by the
parched short-grass plains of western Kansas,—a
dreary, monotonous waste of olive green, stretching
away north, east, and south, as far as the eye could
reach, and shut in on the west by the great ranges of
the Sierras, whose flanks, dark below the timber
line with heavy forests, were deeply scarred above
with glistening white glaciers.</p>
<p class='c000'>We followed the California road to Oregon, for
in those days Oregon was practically an unknown
territory, with the exception of the Willamette Valley.
And I suppose that it is still so, for that moist,
fertile valley differs as widely from the vast semi-desert
east of the Cascade Range as the Santa Clara
<span class='pageno' id='Page_156'>156</span>Valley from the cactus-covered sandhills of southern
California.</p>
<p class='c000'>At night, after a day’s journey through sand and
sage-brush, we came to a ranch beside an alkaline
lake in the very heart of the desert. Here, in a
cabin built of logs from the neighboring mountains,
lived the hermit of this region, a man named Lee
Button. Had it not been that the road passed his
door, he would have seen only a hunter now and
then, out after the deer which abounded in the
desert, or perhaps the cattlemen when in winter they
turned their cattle loose in the desert to look out for
themselves. On all the neighboring ranches, the
cattle were turned into the desert for food and shelter
in winter. Here, protected from storms, they
fed upon the alkaline grass and sweet sage and upon
the thick leaves which fell in handfuls from the
greasewood bushes. These cattle had cut innumerable
paths at every conceivable angle, and one unaccustomed
to the country might easily become confused
and lose himself in the labyrinth of trails.
There was horror in the thought of being lost in that
solitude.</p>
<p class='c000'>Mr. Duncan put up his horses in the barn of the
ranch, which was well stocked with hay and oats,
and we picketed our ponies on a flat covered with
alkaline grass on the borders of the lake. Then
from under a certain post which he knew of, Mr.
<span class='pageno' id='Page_157'>157</span>Duncan dug up a tin can containing the key of the
cabin. Past experience had taught Mr. Button
caution. He had gone to California once, after a
herd of horses, leaving his door unlocked, and some
prowling immigrant had abused his hospitality and
robbed his cabin of its store of food and blankets.
So now, when he left home, he locked the door and
hid the key, giving, however, the secret of its hiding-place
to his neighbor, Mr. Duncan.</p>
<p class='c000'>His cooking utensils, consisting of a camp kettle,
a frying pan, a Dutch oven, and a coffee pot, were
brought out and cleaned, and the larder searched
for food. It was the custom of the country at that
day to consider food and shelter free to all. I was
offered the next year a house, blankets, flour, and
bacon, as much as I could use for nothing, if I
wanted to spend the winter on a ranch in eastern
Oregon. I was only expected to cut my own wood
and cook my own food.</p>
<p class='c000'>Soon a cheerful fire was blazing on the hearth,
and the burning sage-brush was filling the air with
that indescribable odor from which one is never free
while in the desert. We had traveled through great
droves of wild geese along the lake, and as they
were so tame that they simply stepped out of our
way like barnyard geese, we did not think it worth
while to waste ammunition on them. So I set three
traps, common steel traps such as are used for catching
<span class='pageno' id='Page_158'>158</span>coons, and strewed oats around them. The next
morning I found a brant in one, a magpie in another,
and the house cat in the third. We let the
cat and the magpie go, and breakfasted on the brant.
Our usual fare was bacon, bread, and coffee, and
sometimes dried apples. I worked for years in
Oregon with no other food, except an occasional
deer or mountain sheep.</p>
<p class='c000'>The next day, trusting entirely to Mr. Duncan’s
guidance, we pushed on without a trail, winding in
and out among the hillocks with no landmarks but
the mountains in the west. At sunset, we came out
into the open on the shore of a small alkaline lake.
“Fossil Lake,” I named it at once, and it goes by
that name to this day. This pond, as we should call
it in old New York, covered only a few acres then,
and is now entirely dried up.</p>
<p class='c000'>“There,” shouted Mr. Duncan, as he pointed
with his whip to the lake shore, “there is the
boneyard.”</p>
<p class='c000'>I instantly requested him to help George get supper
and pitch the tent, and seizing my collecting
bag, rushed down to the shore. The clay bottom of
the ancient lake had been dried out, and now formed
the shore of the remaining water. This old lake
bed had once extended over a much larger area, but
it had been partially buried beneath large piles of
drifting sand. Scattered through the loose sand
<span class='pageno' id='Page_159'>159</span>and on the clay bed were great numbers of the
bones and teeth of reptiles, birds, and mammals,
indiscriminately mingled. I had come upon a boneyard
indeed.</p>
<p class='c000'>I was down on the sand at once, picking up bones
and teeth and putting them in piles. No two bones
seemed to belong together, and the skulls and arches
had been crushed beneath the feet of animals, probably
cattle and deer, which had come down to drink
at the lake. What pleased me, however, was the
fact that scattered among these remains of an earlier
day, were arrow-heads and spear-points of polished
obsidian, or volcanic glass. I was too much excited
then to notice that I did not find a single bone or
tooth in its original position in the clay matrix, but
that all were loose, detached, and scattered, and that
the implements were lying about in the same way.</p>
<p class='c000'>As Mr. Duncan was to return to the post-office at
Silver Lake the next morning, I gathered a cigar-boxful
of loose teeth, arrow-heads, and spear-points,
and packed them to send off to Professor Cope.
And that night, by a sage-brush fire, I wrote the
letter which he saw fit to publish in the <cite>American
Naturalist</cite>, a magazine of which he was the editor,
under a title of his own, “Pliocene Man,” and
signed “E. D. Cope.”</p>
<p class='c000'>For weeks I sifted through my fingers the fine
sand of that lake shore, picking out bone after bone.
<span class='pageno' id='Page_160'>160</span>The only specimen which I found undisturbed in
the clay matrix was part of the skull of a hairy
mammoth, or <i>Elephas primigenius</i>.</p>
<p class='c000'>Dr. Shufeldt is the author of a valuable memoir
on the fossil birds of this region,—“The Fossil Avi-Fauna
of the Equus Beds of the Oregon Desert,”
published by the Philadelphia Academy of Sciences.
He worked over the collection made by the late Professor
Condon of the Oregon State University, the
collection which Professor Cope made a few years
after mine, and mine.</p>
<p class='c000'>In these three collections, he finds five species of
grebes, and nine of gulls, of which two species are
new to science, Professor Condon being the discoverer
of one, while I found the other. Of cormorants,
there are two species, one discovered by
Cope. One species, quite common among the fossil
remains, is now extinct. There is a new swan also,
described by Professor Cope, who writes of it:
“This swan was discovered by ex-Governor Whitaker
of Oregon [who discovered the Fossil Lake
locality] in the Pliocene formations of the state.
The same bird was afterwards procured by my assistant,
Charles H. Sternberg.” Altogether there
are nineteen species of Anseres, i. e., geese, ducks,
swans, etc., of which two are new.</p>
<p class='c000'>One of my discoveries was a flamingo, which was
dedicated to Professor Cope under the title <i>Phœnicopterus
<span class='pageno' id='Page_161'>161</span>copei</i>. Dr. Shufeldt says: “It is a fact of
no little interest that a flamingo inhabited the lakes
of the Silver Lake region of Oregon during the
Pliocene Epoch.” The collections include a heron
and a couple of coots also. Among the fowl are
four grouse, discovered by Cope, and an entirely
new genus and species which I had the honor of
finding. Of eagles, there are two species. There
are also a great horned owl, a blackbird, and a
raven.</p>
<p class='c000'>Among the other fossil remains taken from this
region are six genera of fish, a majority of them
new, and fifteen species of fossil mammalia, including
two llamas, three horses, an elephant, a dog, an
otter, a beaver, a mouse, a great sloth, <i>Mylodon</i>, as
large as a grizzly bear, and other forms.</p>
<p class='c000'>“Thomas Condon,” writes Dr. Shufeldt in his
memoir, “was the first scientific man to visit the
Fossil Lake region, with the results already stated.
Cope and his assistant Charles Sternberg came later,
and gathered many hundred bones and bone fragments.”
And in the preface to his “Tertiary Vertebrata,”
Vol. III, page xxvii, Professor Cope
writes: “The Tertiary formations explored in 1878
were the John Day, Loup Fork, and Equus beds.
These were examined by Charles H. Sternberg
both in Washington and Oregon; in the former near
to Fort Walla Walla, and in the latter, in the desert
<span class='pageno' id='Page_162'>162</span>east of the Sierra Nevada. The basin of an
ancient lake, originally discovered by Governor
Whitaker of Oregon, was found strewn with the
bones of llamas, elephants, horses, sloths, and smaller
animals, with birds, and all were collected by Mr.
Sternberg and safely forwarded to Philadelphia. I
examined this locality myself in 1879 and obtained
further remains of extinct and recent species of
mammalia found mingled with numerous worked
flints.”</p>
<p class='c000'>The reader will notice that Cope puts my expedition
in ’78 instead of ’77 and that Dr. Shufeldt gives
Cope’s visit to Fossil Lake as before mine, when, in
reality, it was two years later.</p>
<p class='c000'>On p. 420 of his memoir, Dr. Shufeldt writes:
“We must believe that it still remains problematical
whether man was there, and further comparative
search is demanded to decide whence came, and at
what time, those stone implements of human manufacture,
commingled as they are with the bones of
the animals, many of which are long since extinct.”
And Professor Cope says on the same subject:
“Scattered everywhere in the deposit were obsidian
implements of human manufacture. Some of these
were of inferior workmanship, and many of them
covered with a patin of no great thickness, which
completely replaced the luster of the surface. Other
specimens were bright as when first made. The
<span class='pageno' id='Page_163'>163</span>abundance of these flints was remarkable, and suggested
that they may have been shot at the game,
both winged and otherwise, that in former times
frequented the lake.”</p>
<p class='c000'>After I had written the letter already mentioned,
having carefully gone over all the ground in the
vicinity of Fossil Lake, and longing for new worlds
to conquer, I started out one day on my pony
through the desert, hoping to find another locality in
which the wind had uncovered a fossil bed. I spent
the greater part of the day in fruitless search, and
was about to return home when I was attracted by
the top of a dead spruce tree sticking out of a sandhill.
The rest of the tree had been completely buried
by the sand.</p>
<p class='c000'>My curiosity was aroused, and I climbed to the
top of the hill to examine the spruce. When I
reached the top, however, I found myself looking
down into a pleasant little valley, which had been
scooped out by the wind, and, descending, I discovered
that I had stumbled upon the former site of
an Indian village. Places near where the lodges
had stood were marked by piles of the bleached
bones of existing species of antelope, deer, rabbits,
etc. None of these bones were petrified like those
at Fossil Lake.</p>
<p class='c000'>Near the site of each lodge stood a large mortar,
made of volcanic rock, with a pestle lying in it.
<span class='pageno' id='Page_164'>164</span>They had probably been used by the squaws for
grinding up acorns and other materials for bread-making.
Doubtless a storm of sand had forced the
villagers to flee for their lives without giving them
time to save even these valuable mortars.</p>
<p class='c000'>I found a spring of cold water which had built
up a mound of white sand, and from the side of a
sandhill I pulled out the back part of a human skull.
I could not tell how large the village had been, as it
extended into the sandhill.</p>
<p class='c000'>I soon found where the ancient arrow-maker had
had his shop by the great quantities of cast-off
obsidian chips that covered the ground, as well as
by the broken and perfect arrow-heads and spear-points,
beautifully polished and finished, and the
knives, drills, and the like that lay about. I did not
find a vestige of anything made of iron.</p>
<p class='c000'>Having secured a number of the obsidian points,
which I afterwards sent to Cope, I started for camp;
but I had delayed too long, and night overtook me
before I reached home. My pony and I came near
being lost in the desert. I gave him the lines, but I
was much worried at not seeing the welcome glow
of the camp fire, when I had thought that I must be
near my tent. Finally I shouted, and at last heard
a faint answer. But even then, owing to my deaf
ear, I could not locate the camp, and had to wait
until George came up and piloted me in.</p>
<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_165'>165</span>Now without doubt the arrow-heads and spear-points
mingled with the bones at Fossil Lake are of
the same manufacture as those which I found at this
Indian village, although the latter are not so much
weathered, having evidently been recently covered
with sand. I conclude, therefore, that the implements
mingled with the bones are no older than the
village, perhaps a hundred years old. They were
probably shot by the Indians of the village at the
wild animals which doubtless came in great numbers
to the lake to drink. Then some powerful wind,
like that which covered the village, drifted away the
sand that lay over the fossil bones, and the flints,
being too heavy to be carried away with the sand,
dropped down and mingled with the bones. This
seems to me the only possible explanation. And I
am glad to say that so high an authority as Professor
J. C. Merriam of the University of California,
after the most careful study and explorations, agrees
with me in this. He has recently been over the
Fossil Lake region, and he assures me that it is a
mistake to suppose that the human implements
found there were contemporary with the extinct
animals of the Equus Beds.</p>
<p class='c000'>Whenever George and I had collected a load of
fossils, we took them in to Button’s ranch. One
day we were late in starting, and realized that we
should have to hurry to reach the ranch before dark.
<span class='pageno' id='Page_166'>166</span>As so often happens, this was the very occasion upon
which we were fated to be delayed.</p>
<p class='c000'>At a certain place on our route, we had to pass
some mud springs, circular wells filled to the brim
with thick, yellowish mud of the consistency of
mortar. In wet weather they continually boiled up
without overflowing, but to-day they were covered
with a hard coating of dry mud, cracked deeply in
all directions.</p>
<p class='c000'>I called to George, who was driving the pack
horse, to watch him and see that he did not jump
into the spring that we were just passing; but the
words were hardly out of my mouth when the miserable
wretch made a running jump, and landing in
the middle of the crust, broke through and went
down into the thick, nasty mud. As he was going
down, he seemed to realize what he had done, and
managed to get his front feet over the rim of solid
earth. And there he hung, the broad pack—we
had brought along our tent and blankets—helping
to buoy him up.</p>
<p class='c000'>We sprang from our horses, and made a rush to
save our precious fossils, beside which everything
else, including the mischievous pony, was of no account.
We had to cut the ropes that bound the fossils
and camp outfit to the animal, and when we had
them safe on solid ground, tie a rope around his
neck and pull him out. Of course he was thoroughly
<span class='pageno' id='Page_167'>167</span>frightened, and did everything in his power to help
us. Such a looking horse you never saw as he was
when we got him out. His whole body was covered
with a coat of sticky, yellow mud, which we could
not scrape off. We had to take him into a creek
and give him such a scrubbing as, I think, no
member of the genus <i>Equus</i> ever had before or
since.</p>
<p class='c000'>All this took time, and it was late at night before
we reached the ranch. It was our habit, when we
got to the cabin and felt that it would be too much
trouble to open our pack and get out our own supplies,
to help ourselves from Mr. Button’s store.
So, after we had put the horses in the barn and
given them a liberal feed of oats and plenty of hay,
we went into the larder to get something for our
own supper, for by that time we were pretty
hungry.</p>
<p class='c000'>After supper I lay down on the absent lord’s
blankets, and was smoking the pipe of peace, when
a knock was heard at the door. It surprised me, as
it was the custom of the country to walk in without
the formality of knocking. I shouted, “Come in!”
and a short, heavy-set man entered. He said that
he had been overtaken by night, and as both he
and his team were in need of food, rest, and shelter,
he wanted to know whether we would take
him in.</p>
<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_168'>168</span>“Why, certainly,” I answered. I have noticed
that most men are liberal with other men’s property.
“I don’t own the ranch, but we have just put our
horses in the barn, where there is plenty of hay and
oats, and there is plenty of food here. George will
show you the way to the barn and help you
unhitch, and I will have supper ready when you
return.”</p>
<p class='c000'>He thanked me, and while they were putting up
the team, I got a hot supper with materials from
Mr. Button’s larder. This meal was greatly relished
by our midnight guest.</p>
<p class='c000'>I returned to the bed and my pipe, and was entering
into a lively conversation with the stranger,
when the thought suddenly flashed into my head,
What if this man owns the ranch? I sprang from
the bed on the instant, and fired pointblank the
question, “Do you know Lee Button?”</p>
<p class='c000'>“Yes, I’ve seen him,” was the answer.</p>
<p class='c000'>“That’s your name, isn’t it?” I asked.</p>
<p class='c000'>“Yes,” said the stranger, and I felt so cheap that
I would have sold out for nothing. But this was
Mr. Button’s chance to show what sort of a man he
was, and when I apologized for the freedom with
which we had made ourselves at home in his house
and used his goods, he told me that we had done
exactly right, and that he would have felt hurt if
we had acted otherwise.</p>
<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_169'>169</span>He became a true friend and helper, and his log
cabin proved a valuable place of shelter for my party
during some of the cold October nights. If these
lines should ever reach his eyes, they carry to him
my cordial thanks for his hospitality.</p>
<div class='chapter'>
<span class='pageno' id='Page_170'>170</span>
<h2 class='c005'>CHAPTER VII<br/> <span class='large'>EXPEDITION TO THE JOHN DAY RIVER IN 1878</span></h2></div>
<div class='c006'>
<ANTIMG class='drop-capi' src='images/i_209.jpg' width-obs='100' alt='' /></div>
<p class='drop-capi_8'>
During the winter 1877–’78 I camped on
Pine Creek, Washington, exploring the
swamps in the neighborhood and fighting
against water to secure specimens. We
had dug a large shaft down to the bed of gravel,
twelve feet below the surface, in which bones were
to be found, but every morning we found that the
hole had filled with mud and water over night, and
we had to spend hours bailing it out. When we
finally got it clear again, we had little time or
strength left for securing fossils. This performance
had to be repeated day after day, and of course
the farther we excavated, the more water there was
to be bailed out. I don’t think that we were
dry a single day that winter. But luckily the
water was warm, and we did not suffer from
colds.</p>
<p class='c000'>On the twenty-third of April I started with a
team and wagon from Fort Walla Walla, accompanied
by my two assistants, Joe Huff and
<span class='pageno' id='Page_171'>171</span>“Jake” Wortman, the latter at that time an intelligent
young man from Oregon, who had been introduced
to me the winter before by my brother,
Surgeon George M. Sternberg, at that time post
surgeon of Fort Walla Walla. During the past
six months Wortman had been my guest at my camp
on Pine Creek. Afterwards he became known to
science as Dr. J. L. Wortman.</p>
<p class='c000'>We skirted the Blue Mountains in a southwesterly
direction, traveling through the beautiful wheat-fields
of that fertile region; and striking south at
Cayuse Station on the Umatilla Reserve, we climbed
the long slopes of the mountains and plunged down
into the Grande Rounde, once the bed of an ancient
lake, but now a lovely valley nestling among the
hills. From this point we drove south to Baker
City, and leaving behind us the jagged peaks of the
Powder River Mountains, struck the John Day
River at Canyon City.</p>
<p class='c000'>On the second of May we camped on the other
side of the mountains in a large meadow. The boys
went hunting and got a deer. On the third, our
road led us again through rugged mountains,
covered in places with ice, and we had to cut footholds
for our horses, as they were smooth-shod.
We passed through a large mining gulch, where
men were at work placer-digging for gold. The
whole surface of the country had been dug over,
<span class='pageno' id='Page_172'>172</span>and was disfigured with holes and ditches and heaps
of earth.</p>
<p class='c000'>On the fifth of May, after passing through Canyon
City, we started for the John Day Basin. It
snowed nearly all day. On the road we met a man
who told us of a rich fossil leaf locality, on the Van
Horn ranch; and after a sixteen-mile drive we found
the place and secured some very fine specimens.
The leaf impressions were found in a soft, shaly
clay-stone, and were very abundant, representing
well-preserved Tertiary flora. That night we
feasted on a large salmon trout which I caught in an
irrigation ditch.</p>
<p class='c000'>On the sixth (I am following my notebook) we
worked all day. I collected two hundred specimens,
and Mr. Wortman eighty-five. They were all very
fine, and represented the oak, the maple, and other
species. I secured some fish vertebræ also. This
is another case in which I lost credit for early discoveries.
I was told by Professor Cope, a few
years before his death, that these specimens had
never been examined.</p>
<p class='c000'>In this same locality there is a bed of rock so light
that it floats. I threw a large mass of it at some
object in the water, and was amazed to see it float
off down the stream. It was the first time that I
had ever seen a rock lighter than water.</p>
<p class='c000'>On the seventh of May, after a journey of fifteen
<span class='pageno' id='Page_173'>173</span>days from Walla Walla, we reached Dayville, a mile
below the crossing of the South Fork of the John
Day River. One of the first men I met was a certain
Bill Day, whom I soon after hired as assistant.
He had for years been making collections of the
fossil vertebrates here, usually sending them to
Professor Marsh. I was able to secure a large and
fine collection from him and another mountain man,
a Mr. Warfield, who had also spent much time collecting
fossils. Both men had been employed by
Professor Marsh during his expedition in this
region, and were very careful workmen.</p>
<p class='c000'>We camped on Cottonwood Creek and prepared
to pack into the Basin, or Cove as it has been called.
For a hundred and fifty miles of its course, the John
Day flows east, skirting the Blue Mountains, but
here at Cottonwood or Dayville, it has turned north
and cut a great canyon, four thousand feet deep,
through the heart of the mountains, the so-called
Grande Coulée, since known as the Picture Gorge.
At the foot of this canyon, the mountains swing
away from the river in a great horseshoe bend, closing
in upon it again several miles below. This
amphitheater, three miles wide and thirteen long,
is a scene of surprising beauty. The brilliantly
colored clays and volcanic ash-beds of the Miocene
of the John Day horizon paint the landscape with
green and yellow and orange and other glowing
<span class='pageno' id='Page_174'>174</span>shades, while in the background, towering upward
for two thousand feet, rise rows upon rows of
mighty basaltic columns, eight-sided prisms, each
row standing a little back of the one just below, and
the last crowned with evergreen forests of pine and
fir and spruce. But no pen can picture the glorious
panorama.</p>
<p class='c000'>Ever since Cretaceous times, when a quiet inland
sea laid down the thousand feet of Kansas chalk,
here in the John Day region vulcanism has held
sway; almost until to-day. Indeed I have often
seen the summit of old Mount Hood wreathed with
menacing clouds of smoke, as if she were preparing
to pour forth again her floods of molten lava and
devastate the region.</p>
<p class='c000'>When volcanic action first began, great masses of
ashes must have been thrown out over the country,
settling in the lakes and covering the remains of
animals which had been accumulating there for ages.
Then floods of lava, one after another, poured out
over the forests, until they lay buried beneath two
thousand feet of volcanic rock. Where did this
immense mass of molten rock come from, and how?
A dike crosses the Basin, and for fifteen miles the
basaltic columns lie along its edges like cordwood;
so we know that some of the lava at least was
squeezed up out of the earth’s crust through narrow
cracks.</p>
<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_175'>175</span>I remember once, as I was standing with Uncle
Johnnie Kirk, the hermit of the Cove, in front of his
cabin, he pointed to the basaltic cliffs that towered
above us, and observed gravely, “All vegetable
matter.” He had found at the base remains of the
forests which the lava had engulfed, and had concluded
that the whole mass represented similar
remains.</p>
<p class='c000'>Before moving the outfit into the fossil beds I
took my pony and started off to spy out the land.
Following a horse trail that led up the gentle slope
west of the canyon represented in Dr. Merriam’s
picture of the Mascall Beds I reached a tableland,
which proved to be the divide between Cottonwood
and Birch creeks. Here I found that the trail leading
down to the mouth of Birch Creek was very
steep—one could have greased one’s boots and slid
the whole distance of several hundred feet. I was
afraid to ride down and led my pony, but I soon
learned that an Oregon pony has long, well-developed
legs and can climb up and down better than
I could myself.</p>
<p class='c000'>When I reached the river at the mouth of the
Grande Coulée, I found to my dismay that all the
rich-looking green and brown fossil beds were on
the other side, where the amphitheater which I have
mentioned is cut out of the flank of the mountains.
As a boy I had learned to swim dog-fashion, and as
<span class='pageno' id='Page_176'>176</span>the river was not over thirty or forty feet wide, and
I was determined, after coming so far, to find some
fossils and a good camping ground, I decided to
strip, jump out as far as I could, and paddle the rest
of the way across.</p>
<p class='c000'>No sooner thought than done. In I sprang, discovering
too late that I had reckoned without my
host and that the river, which had been penned in
for miles by the walls of the canyon, was here flowing
away from its prison with amazing swiftness
and power. My weak little body was as helpless as
a straw in its grasp: down I went, and striking a
boulder at the bottom, was flung up five feet into the
air, I took in breath and closed my mouth as I went
down again; tossing me hither and thither like a
cork, beating me against rocks and hurling me high
into the air, the river bore me swiftly on, until at
last, thank God! it tired of its toy, and threw me to
one side into deep water, under a willow whose welcoming
branches I eagerly clasped. There I hung
until I had regained my strength enough to pull myself
out.</p>
<p class='c000'>But the fossil vertebrates of the John Day beds
were still across the river and the questions which I
had crossed the mountain and risked my life to
answer were still waiting for replies. Unwilling to
return home beaten I walked up and down the river
shore, and was delighted to find an old boat caught
<span class='pageno' id='Page_177'>177</span>in a pile of driftwood. I dug it out with my bare
hands, only to find that its seams had parted and that
its bottom was as full of holes as a sieve. Not dismayed,
I found a bed of sticky clay with which I
calked my ship, and venturing again into the flood,
managed to get to the other shore before the boat
sank.</p>
<p class='c000'>I found a place to camp lower down, at the mouth
of a canyon which opened out into the level country,
and on a little creek that ran in front of Uncle
Johnnie’s cabin. I was very well pleased with my
explorations in the fossil beds also, for I found the
skull of an Oreodon, a hog-like creature which,
judging from the abundance of skulls and skeletons,
must have lived in droves during the time when this
rock was being deposited in the lakes of this region.
These animals were herbivorous in habit. Uncle
Johnnie always referred to them as bears. He often
brought a skull into camp with the remark, “Here’s
another bar’s head. I’ve killed hundreds of ’em in
ole Virginia.”</p>
<p class='c000'>I returned to camp much elated, and was planning
to pack the outfit into the Basin the next day, when
to my disgust Joe Huff, who owned the horses, refused
to pack them, as he did not want to run the risk
of injuring them. It was useless to tell him that he
had been hired to do what I wanted, etc.; he was not
to be moved. So I paid him off, and saw him start
<span class='pageno' id='Page_178'>178</span>for his home near Moscow, Idaho, riding bareback.
I felt sorry for him, but he had a stubborn fit on,
and there was no doing anything with him. After
I had hired Bill Day, he wanted me to overlook the
past and re-employ him, but it was too late then.</p>
<p class='c000'>I suppose Bill Day must have weighed about a
hundred and eighty pounds, but he was an expert
hunter and a keen observer. He owned a herd of
ponies and furnished me with all that I wanted, and
as he knew every inch of the fossil beds and all the
best camping grounds, his services were invaluable.
He kept our larder supplied with venison, also. I
think my success in that region was largely due to
his assistance. I was also indebted to a Mr. Mascall,
a man who lived on the second bottom of the river.
He had an extra log cabin behind the one he lived in,
and he let us use it as a storeroom for our extra
supplies of food and for our fossils, when we began
to secure them.</p>
<p class='c000'>This Mr. Mascall had a wife and daughter, and
when we came in from the fossil beds, after several
weeks of camping out, it seemed almost like coming
home to be able to put our feet under a table, eat off
stone dishes, and drink our coffee out of a china
cup, and to sleep on a feather bed instead of a hard
mattress and roll of blankets. Then Mr. Mascall
was a good gardener, and always had fresh vegetables,
a most enjoyable change from hot bread,
bacon, and coffee. I shall not soon forget his
hospitality.</p>
<div id='fig_26' class='figcenter id001'>
<ANTIMG src='images/fig_26.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
<div class='ic001'>
<p><span class='sc'>Fig. 26.—Skull and tusks of Imperial Mammoth</span>, <i>Elephas imperator</i>.<br/><br/>In American Museum of Natural History.</p>
</div>
</div>
<div id='fig_27' class='figcenter id003'>
<ANTIMG src='images/fig_27.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
<div class='ic001'>
<p><span class='sc'>Fig. 27.—Fossil-bearing Cliffs.</span> (After Merriam.) Upper John Day exposure.</p>
</div>
</div>
<div id='fig_28' class='figcenter id003'>
<ANTIMG src='images/fig_28.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
<div class='ic001'>
<p><span class='sc'>Fig. 28.—Fossil-bearing Cliffs.</span> (After Merriam.) Middle John Day exposure.</p>
</div>
</div>
<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_179'>179</span>When all was ready, we were taken across the
river in Mr. Mascall’s boat, swimming our horses.
Then the packs were adjusted, and the wearisome
climb up the face of the mountains began. It usually
took us half a day to reach the summit. Then
we climbed down steep slopes and over spurs of the
hills, until we reached Uncle Johnnie Kirk’s hospitable
cabin, a 12 × 14 structure of rough logs with a
shake roof. He kept bachelor’s hall and lived all
alone, except when some cowman or fossil hunter
came along. We pitched our tent near his house.</p>
<p class='c000'>Not far away there was a tract of bad lands,
called the Cone, the largest in the John Day Basin,
covering, I should judge, a section of land. It was
cut into the usual fantastic forms, peaks, ridges, and
battlements, and slender spires sometimes a hundred
feet high, and as thickly clustered as those of some
old Gothic cathedral. Their summits were crowned
with hard concretions, which protected their almost
perpendicular sides from destruction by the elements.</p>
<p class='c000'>The drainage canals spread out through this territory
like the ribs of a fan, converging at the entrance,
and woe to the man who chanced to be
caught in one of them during a rain, for the steep
slopes shot the water down into them with such
<span class='pageno' id='Page_180'>180</span>amazing rapidity that before he could turn around
he would be engulfed in fathoms of water. We
always climbed up to some high point the minute
we heard the rain strike the rocks above us, and
waited until the storm was over and the water had
run out. A ditch containing twenty feet, sometimes,
of water would dry up as soon as it stopped
raining, so steep was the slope of its bed.</p>
<p class='c000'>I was continually impressed in this region by the
power of running water. Not only is this manifested
in the mighty canyons which have been
carved out during the course of ages from the solid
rock, but I stood transfixed with astonishment once,
at the mouth of the little creek in front of Uncle
Johnnie’s cabin, on finding it dammed by a mass of
basaltic rock, weighing at least twenty tons, which
had been brought from its native hills, three miles
away, by a flood of water, and left stranded here.
All the side canyons that empty into the John Day
River have dumped their loads of boulders there, in
some places damming the stream or creating a series
of rapids.</p>
<p class='c000'>I soon found that all the ground in the fossil beds
which was easy to get at had been gone over. Here
and there we would run across a pile of broken
bones and a hole from which a skull had been taken.
When I asked Bill what he had meant by leaving
the bones of the skeleton behind, he answered, “We
<span class='pageno' id='Page_181'>181</span>were only looking for heads, though we sometimes
saved knucks and jints.” This accounts for the
scarcity of skeletons among the first collections
made. I saw to it that my party should care for
every bone discovered.</p>
<p class='c000'>I realized then, that if we were to make our expedition
a success, we should have to climb where
no one before us had dared to go. It was a serious
matter to scale those almost perpendicular heights;
one took one’s life in one’s hand in attempting it.
They were, of course, entirely bare of vegetation,
and where the slope was not too steep, they were
covered with angular fragments of rock which
rolled from under one’s feet and were likely to
send one flying into the gorge below. But I laid
the situation before my two men, explaining to them
that unless they were willing to face the danger, we
should have to give up the expedition, as we had
explored the safe ground without results; and they
courageously agreed to follow where I led.</p>
<p class='c000'>So every morning we started out for a day of
perilous enterprise, each with a collecting bag over
his shoulder and a well-made pick in hand. The
latter was used not only for digging out fossils, but
was absolutely indispensable as an aid in climbing,
and as an anchor in case we began to slip. We
were never sure when we left camp in the morning
that we should all meet there at night, since a single
<span class='pageno' id='Page_182'>182</span>misstep on those cliffs would mean death or worse
than death on the pitiless rocks below; but every day
we gained confidence and grew more skilful in the
use of our picks.</p>
<p class='c000'>Far above the pick-marks of the fossil hunters
who had preceded us, far above the signs of the
mountain sheep that inhabited these wilds, we made
our way, cutting niches for our feet as high above
us as we could reach, and drawing ourselves up with
bodies pressed to the rock. At each niche we rested,
and scanned the face of the cliff for the point of a
tooth or the end of a bone, or for one of those concretions,
among the thousands that everywhere
topped the pinnacles or projected from the rocky
slopes, whose skull-shaped form revealed the treasure
that was hidden away within. When a fossil
was found we first cut out of the face of the cliff a
place large enough to stand upon, and then carved
out the specimen.</p>
<p class='c000'>I could tell of a hundred narrow escapes from
death. One day I was standing on a couple of oblong
concretions, about a foot in length, with a
chasm, fifty feet deep and three or four feet wide,
immediately in front of me. After I had searched
carefully the surface of all the rocks in sight, I
started to jump over to a narrow ledge on the other
side of the gorge. Suddenly both concretions flew
from under my feet, and I was plunging head downward
<span class='pageno' id='Page_183'>183</span>into the gorge when by a violent struggle in
mid-air I managed to throw my elbows on the
ledge; and I hung there until I could find a foothold
and pull myself out onto solid rock.</p>
<p class='c000'>Another time I was climbing a steep slope which
was capped by a perpendicular ledge. I thought,
however, that I could climb over it to the top of a
ridge that ran back into the hills, where I could find
a way down. For understand, we could never go
back the way we had come, as we could not relax
our muscles sufficiently to enable us to find with the
tips of our toes the niches by which we had climbed
up. So we had to be sure that we could get to the
top and find a way down from there. On this occasion
I was so busy searching the face of the rock
for fossils that I worked for hours, climbing up
niche after niche, without noticing very much where
I was going, until chancing to look upward, I discovered
that an escarpment of the top ledge leaned
over the slope that I was scaling, rendering it impossible
for me to reach the top. I fully expected
that I should have to cut out a place to sit in and
wait until the boys missed me and looked for me.
They could then reach the top of the ledge by some
other way, and lower a rope to me. But I was delighted
to find at last a perpendicular seam in the
rocky ledge, which proved wide enough to admit my
body. So I climbed to the top as a man climbs a
<span class='pageno' id='Page_184'>184</span>narrow well, with my back braced against one side
and my feet planted against the other.</p>
<p class='c000'>But such experiences as these, instead of making
us timid, only spurred us on to more dangerous
attempts. To show how reckless we became, I remember
that once Bill found a skull in a perpendicular
cliff of solidified volcanic mud, the termination
of a ridge that ran far back into the hills. The skull
was located about twenty feet up the face of the
cliff, and too far below the surface of the ridge to be
reached from above; so that there was no way to
get at it but by scaling the cliff. I cut niches on one
side, and Bill on the other, and we climbed up until
we could reach the specimen with our picks, clinging
to a niche with one hand and wielding the pick
with the other. I worked with my right hand and
Bill with his left.</p>
<p class='c000'>The rock was very hard, and it took a long while
to hew out the specimen. While we were at work,
we heard a mountain sheep bleating for her young.
By reaching up we could get our hands over the
edge of the cliff, and pull ourselves up so that we
could just peek over. Sure enough, the sheep was
coming down the ridge toward us in great excitement,
rending the air with calls for her lamb. I
began to imitate the bleat of her offspring, and she
increased her speed toward us with every sign of
relief.</p>
<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_185'>185</span>“What if she should butt us off?” I said to Bill,
and the position we were in, clinging to the face of
the rock with our toes and fingers, made the idea so
inexpressibly funny that he began to laugh, louder
and louder the more I tried to hush him up. When
I had led the sheep up to within ten feet of us, she
concluded that we were not her lost lamb, and turning
like a flash, started on a run for the mountains a
mile away. Out of a side canyon came the lamb,
and fell in behind its mother; and we could see the
dirt flying out behind them until they appeared to be
about the size of a rabbit and a ground squirrel.</p>
<p class='c000'>One day Bill and I were out together in the beds,
and when we got back to dinner, Jake did not show
up. We were not much concerned about him, as
we concluded that he had found a specimen and was
digging it out; but when we came in at night and
there was still no Jake, we made up our minds that
he had either fallen and killed himself or that he
was lying in some gulch with a broken limb. In
great anxiety we started out into the Bad Lands to
find him.</p>
<p class='c000'>It was a dangerous enough expedition in the daytime,
but doubly so at night, and we risked our lives
many times; but we did not give up until we had
made the desolate region ring with our calls. At
last, about midnight, with fear and sorrow in our
heart, we returned to camp. By the moonlight I
<span class='pageno' id='Page_186'>186</span>saw what appeared to be a human form in Jake’s
bed. I rushed to it and threw off the blankets, and
there, sleeping peacefully, lay Jake. We had a
great mind to take him out into the Bad Lands and
pitch him off into a canyon. It seems that he had
been to the mountains, three miles away, where a
small exposure of the John Day beds could be seen
from camp; and when he returned and we were not
in, he had not worried about us, but had eaten his
supper and gone to bed, while we were making
ourselves hoarse shouting for him. This incident
illustrates a peculiarity of youth—its thoughtlessness
as to the anxiety which it may be causing its
elders.</p>
<p class='c000'>Among the fossil remains which we secured in
these John Day beds, were the limbs of a huge
<i>Elotherium humerosum</i>, so named by Cope on account
of the great process on the humerus. We
found the specimen in Haystack Valley, lying on
its side, with its toes sticking out of the face of a
slope. There were thousands of feet of volcanic
rock above it. Following in with pick and shovel,
we cleaned up the floor, to find, when we reached the
center of the humeri and femora, that they had been
cut through as smoothly as if it had been done with
a diamond saw. I knew, of course, that there had
been a fault here, and that the earth in slipping
down had severed the bones. The question that interested
<span class='pageno' id='Page_187'>187</span>me was which side had gone down and how
far. If the side toward the open valley, then the
rest of the skeleton must have been destroyed by the
wash, as the slope above the bones lay at an angle of
45 degrees to the floor on which they lay. If, on the
other hand, the mountain side had gone down, and
the slip had not been too great, I should be able to
find the rest of the bones. Inspired by this hope,
we put in several days of hard work, and were delighted
to find the severed bones three feet below
the original level.</p>
<p class='c000'>What a shaking and trembling of the earth’s crust
there must have been, when miles of the mountain
mass slipped down three feet toward the center of
the earth! No wonder that when a similar fault occurred
at San Francisco, the puny works of man
fell in ruins. The bones of this <i>Elotherium</i> are
now on exhibition in the American Museum, which
purchased the Cope collection, including the material
that I secured through eight seasons in the field in
charge of his expedition.</p>
<p class='c000'>I had found in the Cottonwood beds that lie on
top of the John Day Miocene the cannon-bone, or
long cylindrical foot bone, of a large camel. As I
closely studied this bone, which is composed of opposite
halves, separated by a thin septum of bone in
the center, with a medullary canal on each side, the
conviction came to me that the two halves had once
<span class='pageno' id='Page_188'>188</span>been distinct, like the metacarpals and metatarsals
of the pig. With this idea in mind, I was constantly
looking for a camel in the older beds, and I
cannot express my delight when one day, as I was
exploring the John Day beds, I came across a skeleton
which had been weathered out and lay in bold
relief on the face of a slope. I knew before I picked
up the cannon-bone that my belief was verified, and
when I took up the two bones separately, the fact
was proved beyond a doubt that in this ancestor of
the living form the metacarpals of the fore foot and
the metatarsals of the hind foot were respectively
distinct. As the species represented by this specimen
was new to science, Professor Cope named it in
my honor <i>Paratylopus sternbergi</i>. A skull of this
species was afterwards found by Dr. Wortman, and
both specimens are now on exhibition in the
American Museum.</p>
<p class='c000'>I arrived at this conclusion with regard to the
cannon-bone of the ancient camel as Darwin, Marsh,
and Huxley arrived at the conclusion that the
ancient horse had three toes. They recognized that
the splint bones of the horse represented the side toes
of rhinoceroses, one on each side of the middle
metacarpals and metatarsals respectively, and they
decided that they were the remnants of side toes in
the ancestor of the horse. And later we also found
a three-toed horse.</p>
<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_189'>189</span>I secured also in these beds the skull of a peccary
and an oreodont, both new, and used as the types of
Cope’s description, and a couple of carnivores; one,
called by Cope <i>Archælurus debilis</i>, about the size of
the American panther, the other a dog about the size
of a coyote. Cope gave the name <i>Enhydrocyon
stenocephalus</i> to this genus and species. A splendid
skull of the rhinoceros <i>Diceratherium nanum</i> Marsh,
was another of my discoveries here. All the
specimens, with the skull of a rodent from the
same beds, are now on exhibition in the American
Museum.</p>
<p class='c000'>Of course these are but a few of the many specimens
secured in these beds; hundreds are stored
away in the drawers and trays of the Museum. I
was told that it would cost twenty-five dollars to get
a typewritten copy of the list of John Day fossils in
the Museum. In that list are many specimens which
my party secured or which I purchased from Warfield
and Day. Professor Cope once wrote me that
my collection there represented about fifty species of
extinct mammals.</p>
<p class='c000'>One day in July I left Jake Wortman in the field
and started for Dayville, leading a pack pony. I
intended to stay all night with Mr. Mascall, leave
my load of fossils, and take back a load of provisions.
Bill Day had lost one of the horses, and
as a large band of Umatilla Indians was encamped
<span class='pageno' id='Page_190'>190</span>on Fox Prairie at the summit of the mountains,
about six miles east of our camp in the Cove, he had
gone off in that direction to look for it.</p>
<p class='c000'>When I reached the high mountain above Dayville,
I could look down into the narrow valley of
the John Day. Although it was noon, there was
no smoke rising from the chimneys of the houses.
The fields of wheat were ripe for the cradle—they
had no machines in that region, and not only cradled
their grain, but threshed it with horses, who
tramped it out—but no one was working in them,
and there was no stock in the pastures. What could
it mean? I asked myself; and as I followed the
long trail down to the river, my heart was full of
fearful forebodings. Had a pestilence killed all
these people whom I knew so well? Or had they all
fled, with their horses and cattle, from Indians on
the warpath?</p>
<p class='c000'>Without expecting to hear a response, I called,
when I reached the river, for Mr. Mascall to come
over with his boat and take me across. To my delight,
I saw him come out of his house and take the
trail down to the boat through the woods that
covered the first river bottom. All the while that he
was unlocking the boat and rowing across, I kept
shouting, “What’s the trouble? Where are all the
people?” But not until I had got aboard with my
pack and saddle, and we had started back, would he
<span class='pageno' id='Page_191'>191</span>answer the questions which I had been asking myself
ever since I left the top of the mountain.</p>
<p class='c000'>It seems that three hundred Bannocks, or Snakes,
under their chosen leader, Egan, had left the Malheur
Agency, several hundred miles south, and after
stealing six thousand horses, mainly from the
French brothers’ ranch, were now on their way
north to join Homely, the chief of the Umatillas, at
Fox Prairie. General Howard, who was in hot
pursuit, had sent a courier ahead of his command to
the settlers in the John Day valley, advising them to
gather at some central locality, build a stockade, and
take their women and children into it for protection
from the treacherous redskins. Everyone in the
valley, except Mr. Mascall and an old man who kept
the mail station on Cottonwood Creek, a mile to the
south, had taken this advice and gone to Spanish
Gulch, a mining town on top of the mountains about
ten miles southwest.</p>
<p class='c000'>Near sundown Bill Day came in, having heard the
news at the Indian camp. He instantly insisted that
we leave everything and go to Spanish Gulch. It
was foolish, he said, to risk our lives going back to
warn Jake. On the long trail up the mountain we
should be in full sight of the South Fork, down
which the Indians were expected to come, and it
would take us half a day to climb those four thousand
feet and hide ourselves in the canyons on the
<span class='pageno' id='Page_192'>192</span>other side. I refused, however, to be moved by his
arguments. I told him that I meant to go back, and
that he was to go with me. We could not leave
Jake there in camp, entirely unconscious of the fate
that might be approaching him. He knew nothing
of the proximity of hostile Indians, and it was our
duty to warn him.</p>
<p class='c000'>“Well,” Bill said, “I am going to look out for
number one. I have not lost any Indians. If you
have, go and hunt trouble. Let Jake look out for
himself.”</p>
<p class='c000'>All my shells, perhaps three hundred, were empty,
but I had plenty of powder and lead, and the best
long-range rifle I had ever owned, a heavy Sharp’s
weighing fourteen pounds, and shooting a hundred
and twenty grains of lead and seventy grains of
powder. I set to work cleaning and oiling it; and
then spent the whole night in front of the fireplace,
melting lead, casting bullets, and loading shells.
Bill also stayed awake, and with his needle-gun kept
guard at a porthole which commanded a good view
of the open ground around the house.</p>
<p class='c000'>The next morning I started alone on my pony to
follow the trail to the Cove, where Jake, unconscious
of danger, was at work in the fossil beds. It seemed
an interminable journey, and I thought that there
was an ambuscade behind every bush and pile of
rocks that guarded the road. But, greatly relieved,
<span class='pageno' id='Page_193'>193</span>I got out of sight at last in the deep canyons on the
other side, and soon saw Jake’s pony near a fossil
bed and found Jake himself deeply interested in a
splendid discovery he had made.</p>
<p class='c000'>When I told him the news, he wanted to drop
everything until the war was over, and fly for safety
to the stockade. But no; my tent, with many fine
fossils in it, was in an open valley in plain sight for
miles, and would quickly attract any marauding
hostile, who might set fire to it and destroy the work
of months. I insisted, therefore, upon caching, the
Pacific coast term for hiding, everything. So we
took down the tent, and putting it, with the fossils
and all the rest of the outfit, into a secret place, we
covered them with a big brush pile. Then I was
ready to fly as fast as our ponies could carry us.</p>
<p class='c000'>When we reached the river, Bill was still with Mr.
Mascall, and brought over the boat. Then both men
insisted that we go without further delay to the
Gulch, as we had risked our lives long enough.
But there was a large collection of valuable fossils
in the log house behind Mr. Mascall’s cabin, and as
the specimens were wrapped in burlap, they would
be destroyed if the Indians burned down the house,
which they would be sure to do if they came. I had
no boxes, but I had a quantity of new lumber, which
we had secured from a mill in the vicinity; so, refusing
to be moved, I took off my coat and went to
<span class='pageno' id='Page_194'>194</span>work sawing up the lumber and making boxes.
The other men never let their guns leave their
hands, and kept guard all night, expecting every
moment to hear the whoop of the Indians.</p>
<p class='c000'>By daylight I had every fossil neatly packed, each
in a little box, and then we all took hold, and carrying
the boxes down to the first river bottom, hid them
under a great grapevine, which completely covered
them. After throwing dead leaves over our trail,
I was satisfied that we had done all that we could,
and as we could not induce Mascall to abandon his
property, we left him and went over to the Gulch.
We found nearly all the settlers keeping house inside
the stockade, which was built of pine logs and
covered enough ground to hold their teams, wagons,
and cattle, as well as themselves.</p>
<p class='c000'>As I realized that it would be impossible for us to
do any work in the John Day beds, fearing every
moment to be surprised by Indians, I concluded that
this would be a good time to go to the Dalles and
try to find out what had become of the collection of
Fossil Lake material which had been sent off the
year before, and had been lost somewhere. I had a
receipt for the specimens from a Mr. French, who
was, I supposed, the agent for the Oregon Steam
Navigation Company. His letterhead read “Forwarding
Agent for the O. S. N. Co.,” but I had
repeatedly written to the agent at the Dalles, and
<span class='pageno' id='Page_195'>195</span>had received no answer, while Cope, from his end
of the line at Philadelphia, had sent tracers out over
every route he could think of, trying to locate the
fossils.</p>
<p class='c000'>A Mr. Wood, the owner of a large herd of horses,
was driving the herd to a point near the Dalles for
protection from the Indians, and I joined his party.
But the several hundred horses raised such a volume
of dust that, after a few days of suffocation, I concluded
that I might as well lose my scalp as be
choked to death, and leaving the herd, went on
alone. All along the way, men, women, and children
were fleeing for safety to the Dalles, and
dozens of homes and ranches were being deserted
just at the time when the people should have been
saving their grain. I never in my life saw so much
excitement and fear. As many white men were
fleeing for their lives as there were Indians on the
warpath, and every man of them was blaming
General Howard for not having exterminated the
hostiles before they started.</p>
<p class='c000'>I met the man who had hauled my Fossil Lake
collection in to the Dalles, and for the first time
learned the truth about them. It seems that they
had never been shipped. Mr. French simply had
a warehouse, and forwarded goods by the Steam
Navigation Company, and mine had been covered
up in the warehouse and entirely forgotten. I was
<span class='pageno' id='Page_196'>196</span>in splendid spirits when I knew that they were
safe.</p>
<p class='c000'>Having rescued this valuable material from the
warehouse, I returned to the Gulch without seeing
an Indian, to find the people still in a state of great
excitement. General Howard had sent word that
the men could put themselves under the leadership
of Colonel Bernard, each citizen furnishing his own
mount and arms, but receiving his rations from the
Government. I tried to raise a company of men to
accept this offer, but not a man cared to go. At
last, heartily tired of staying in camp, I asked for a
volunteer to go with me to the John Day valley to
find out how Mr. Mascall and the old man at the
stage station were getting on. No one would go at
first, but later Mr. Leander Davis, who was for
many years a fossil hunter for Professor Marsh,
agreed to go with me; and packing a horse with
blankets and supplies, we started.</p>
<p class='c000'>We were relieved to find both men well, and no
sign of Indians. Continuing our journey east, we
crossed the south fork of the John Day, and all
doubts as to the movements of the Indians were removed.
For a wide trail, cut deeply into the dry
soil by six thousand horses and the three hundred
Indians who were driving them north, led down the
slope and followed up the main fork on the Canyon
City road.</p>
<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_197'>197</span>As we sat on our horses, looking south along the
heavy trail, we saw some half-dozen horsemen coming
toward us. We knew that they must have seen
us, and concluded to stay where we were until we
could make them out. Before long we saw the glitter
of sabers and the flash of gold buttons, and soon
General Howard and his staff rode up at a gallop.
I recognized him by his brigadier general straps and
by his empty sleeve. He had lost an arm fighting to
preserve the Union.</p>
<p class='c000'>We saluted, and he asked me whether we had seen
his pack train. When I answered no, he asked me
if we knew where he could find some bacon, as he
and his staff, as well as the troops behind them, had
been living for three days on fresh beef without any
salt. I told him of a smokehouse across the bridge,
and he sent his scout to examine it. The man returned
shortly with the report that not only was the
smokehouse full of bacon, but that the table in the
dwelling house was set for a meal, with cold coffee
in the cups, bread, cold bacon, and potatoes, all
ready to eat. The people had evidently just sat
down to dinner when someone had rushed in with
the news that the Indians were coming, and they had
all thrown back their chairs and fled for their lives.</p>
<p class='c000'>While the General and his staff sat down to a
hearty meal, Leander and I continued to follow the
trail. At one place, where a farmer made cheese,
<span class='pageno' id='Page_198'>198</span>we found that a number of large cheeses had been
taken out into the road and rolled along for some
distance with a stick. We followed up the trail
which they had made in the deep dust, and put one
of them on our pack. We went into one of the
houses on the road, and found that the Indians had
broken up all the furniture, including the sewing-machine,
etc. In the front room they had poured
out a barrel of molasses, spread over it several sacks
of flour, and stuck a little woolly dog in the mixture.
The poor little fellow was dead. A little farther
on, a sheepman’s house had been burned, and near
by two thousand sheep had been mutilated and
thrown into piles to die. The herders were found
scalped a few days later. At one farmhouse a fine
brood mare had been killed because she could not
keep up with the herd.</p>
<p class='c000'>Some days later, on the twenty-ninth of July, I
believe, there was a total eclipse of the sun. The
heavens were like brass, and there was a peculiar
condition of the atmosphere such as I have never
experienced before or since. A report was spread
abroad that the Indians had returned and burned all
the farmhouses along the river. I was at the time
with Leander Davis, and we rode up to Perkins
ranch, where a lot of men had congregated and were
taking turns standing guard for fear of the Indians.
When we rode up they were standing about, uncertain
<span class='pageno' id='Page_199'>199</span>as to what it all meant. The dogs had gone
under the stoop and the chickens to roost. The air
was motionless, and an unusual stillness was over
everything. The men welcomed us in hushed
voices.</p>
<p class='c000'>I sprang from my horse and asked Perkins
whether he had any pieces of broken glass. He said
that there were plenty under the west window, and
I went and got a supply, followed by all the men,
who were greatly relieved by my explanation of the
phenomenon. We got a candle and blackened
the pieces of glass, and watched the progress of
the eclipse through them.</p>
<p class='c000'>It had a more disquieting effect upon the hostile
Indians. It seems that the soldiers had cut them
off from crossing the Columbia by capturing all the
small boats and patrolling the river night and day;
so that with Howard’s troops on the trail behind
them, troops from Walla Walla on their flanks, and
the river in front, they were in a bad way. Moreover,
the French brothers and the governor of Oregon
had offered a reward of two thousand dollars
for Egan’s head.</p>
<p class='c000'>The Umatilla Indians were accused of pretending
to help the whites in the daytime, and really helping
the Snakes at night. So the commander sent out a
party of soldiers to capture the squaws and little
children of Homely and the other chiefs and hold
<span class='pageno' id='Page_200'>200</span>them as hostages for the good behavior of their
braves. When the latter asked the commander to
release their families, the answer was given that if
they would capture Egan and deliver him up to the
authorities, they would not only get back their wives
and children, but would receive the two-thousand-dollar
reward. Otherwise their families would still
be held as hostages.</p>
<p class='c000'>It appeared that Egan had an appointment with
Homely at a certain hour. As he rode out from his
camp, with a brave behind him, Homely, similarly
attended, went out to meet him. When they met
between the two camps, they turned at right angles
and rode toward the point agreed upon for the
powwow. But as they were riding thus, side by
side, Homely, with a word to his brave, suddenly
raised his rifle and shot Egan, while his brave shot
the attending Snake. They then immediately
severed the heads of the dead men, and riding back
with them to the whites, claimed the reward. About
the same time, the eclipse came on, and the poor
Snakes, deprived of their leader, thought that the
world was coming to an end, and leaving their great
herd of stolen horses, fled in small bands toward
the Malheur Reservation, and were all eventually
captured.</p>
<p class='c000'>The war thus ended, as soon as I could get things
in shape and my party together, I returned to the
<span class='pageno' id='Page_201'>201</span>Cove, got my outfit and fossils, and moved over into
Haystack Valley. I remained there all winter, and
the next season secured another large collection.
Many of the specimens in it are described by Professor
Cope in Vol. III of the “Tertiary Vertebrata.”
On p. xxvi and the two following pages
of the preface, he pays his collectors a high
compliment, which I give myself the pleasure of repeating
here in his own words: “The same year
[’77] I employed Charles H. Sternberg to conduct
an exploration of the Cretaceous and Tertiary formations
of Kansas. After a successful search, I
sent Mr. Sternberg to Oregon. The Tertiary formations
explored in 1878 were the John Day and
Loup Fork of Oregon. The John Day formation
was chiefly examined on the John Day River and
the Loup Fork beds at various points in the same
region. These yielded about fifty species, many of
them represented in an admirable state of preservation.”</p>
<p class='c000'>After mentioning the work of his other explorers,
he goes on to say: “Mr. Sternberg’s expedition of
1878 was interrupted by the Bannock war, and both
himself and Mr. Wortman were compelled to leave
their camp and outfit in the field and fly to a place of
safety on their horses. It is evident that an enthusiastic
devotion to science has actuated these explorers
of our western wilderness, financial considerations
<span class='pageno' id='Page_202'>202</span>having been but a secondary inducement.
And I wish to remark that the courage and disregard
of physical comfort displayed by the gentlemen
above referred to are qualities of which their
country may be proud, and are worthy of the
highest commendation and of imitation in every
field.”</p>
<p class='c000'>Before leaving this interesting field, I wish to
show my readers Cope’s figure of the great saber-toothed
tiger, <i>Pogonodon platycopis</i> (Fig. <SPAN href='#fig_31'>31</SPAN>),
which was secured in 1879 by Leander Davis. I
do not remember who first discovered the specimen,
but for weeks each of us collectors, Wortman, Davis,
and I, tried to devise some means of securing it
The skull topped a pinnacle, perhaps thirty or forty
feet high, and tapering like the spire of a church.
At the top it was only a foot in diameter. We
knew that it would not be strong enough to support
the weight of a ladder, and it was too steep to scale.
Moreover, if we blew it up with powder, the skull,
whose rows of teeth seemed to grin at us defiantly,
would be shattered to bits.</p>
<div id='fig_29' class='figcenter id003'>
<ANTIMG src='images/fig_29.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
<div class='ic001'>
<p><span class='sc'>Fig. 29.—Fossil-bearing Cliffs.</span> (After Merriam.)<br/><br/>Mascall Formation.</p>
</div>
</div>
<div id='fig_30' class='figcenter id003'>
<ANTIMG src='images/fig_30.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
<div class='ic001'>
<p><span class='sc'>Fig. 30.—Fossil-bearing Cliffs.</span> (After Merriam.)<br/><br/>Clarno Formation.</p>
</div>
</div>
<div id='fig_31' class='figcenter id003'>
<ANTIMG src='images/fig_31.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
<div class='ic001'>
<p><span class='sc'>Fig. 31.—Skull of Great Sabre-toothed Tiger</span>, <i>Pogonodon platycopis</i>.<br/><br/>Discovered in John Day River, 1879, by Leander Davis. (After Coke.)</p>
</div>
</div>
<p class='c000'>By whatever method it was secured, it represented
a feat of the greatest possible bravery, and Cope did
only justice to Leander Davis in publishing his understanding
of the manner in which it was done.
That description is attached to the skull to-day, and
thousands have read of Davis’ heroic act in securing
<span class='pageno' id='Page_203'>203</span>it for science. Professor Cope says that he cut
niches and climbed to the top of the spire. My remembrance,
however, is that he threw a rope around
the spire and let it settle down to where he thought
the rock would be strong enough to support his
weight. He then climbed up hand over hand to the
loop, stood erect, picked up the skull, and without
putting any pressure on the rock, got back to his
rope and down to safety below. He then secured
the rope by jerking off the top of the pinnacle.</p>
<p class='c000'>It matters little how he got the skull, but I am
ready to testify that it was the bravest undertaking
I ever saw accomplished in the John Day beds; and
as long as science lasts, this noble specimen of one
of the largest tigers that ever lived should be associated
with the name of Leander Davis. I am glad
that the great dike across the Cove is named after
him also.</p>
<p class='c000'>What is it that urges a man to risk his life in
these precipitous fossil beds? I can answer only for
myself, but with me there were two motives, the
desire to add to human knowledge, which has been
the great motive of my life, and the hunting instinct,
which is deeply planted in my heart. Not the desire
to destroy life, but to see it. The man whose love
for wild animals is most deeply developed is not he
who ruthlessly takes their lives, but he who follows
them with the camera, studies them with loving
<span class='pageno' id='Page_204'>204</span>sympathy, and pictures them in their various haunts.
It is thus that I love creatures of other ages, and
that I want to become acquainted with them in their
natural environments. They are never dead to me;
my imagination breathes life into “the valley of dry
bones,” and not only do the living forms of the
animals stand before me, but the countries which
they inhabited rise for me through the mists of the
ages.</p>
<p class='c000'>The mind fills with awe as it journeys back to
those far-distant lands. Stop, reader, and think!
In this John Day region, ten thousand feet, or nearly
two miles, of sedimentary and volcanic rock lie
above the Niobrara Group of the Cretaceous, from
which I dug last summer the beautiful skull of a
Kansas mosasaur, <i>Platecarpus coryphæus</i>, which lies
before me now, its glistening teeth as perfect as in
the days when they dripped with the blood of its victims.
How many ages were those ten thousand feet
in building? How long has it taken the running
water, with its tools of sand and gravel, to carve out
the Grande Coulée and the river valley, and expose
all the various formations, with their records of the
life of the past? And yet all this has taken place
since my mosasaur, which seems to watch me as I
write, fought its last battle and sank to rest beneath
the waves of the Cretaceous sea.</p>
<div class='chapter'>
<span class='pageno' id='Page_205'>205</span>
<h2 class='c005'>CHAPTER VIII<br/> <span class='large'>MY FIRST EXPEDITION TO THE PERMIAN OF TEXAS, 1882</span></h2></div>
<div class='c006'>
<ANTIMG class='drop-capi' src='images/i_248.jpg' width-obs='100' alt='' /></div>
<p class='drop-capi_8'>
My first expedition to the Permian of Texas
was made in 1882, while I was in charge
of collecting parties for the Museum
of Comparative Zoology of Harvard
University.</p>
<p class='c000'>I left the station at North Cambridge about the
fifteenth of December, and reached Dallas on the
twenty-first, with the address of A. R. Roessler; but
I was told at the post-office that there was no such
man and no such address in the city. I had been
depending absolutely upon the information which I
hoped to receive from this Mr. Roessler, as I myself
had no more idea as to the whereabouts of the
Permian beds than a new-born child. Dr. Hayden
had written me to follow up Red River until I found
the red beds, which had colored the whole flood-plain
of the valley, and I had seen the red mud at
Texarkana as I entered the state; but it would take
years to explore the whole valley of that great
stream. I felt that I had come upon a wild-goose
<span class='pageno' id='Page_206'>206</span>chase, and I suppose showed my dismay in my face,
for the postmaster asked if he could help me. I
told him my troubles, and he said that there was a
man in town, a Professor W. A. Cummins, who had
been Cope’s assistant the year before.</p>
<p class='c000'>Greatly cheered, I went to the man’s house posthaste,
to be met at the door by his wife, who told
me that the Professor was in Austin. Whereupon
my spirits dropped below zero again. But if a girl’s
face is her fortune, so is a man’s sometimes, for I
gained Mrs. Cummins’ sympathy at once. When I
told her why I had come to Texas, she answered,
“Why, I was with Professor Cummins on his expedition
to the Permian beds,” and proceeded to
give me all the information which I thought necessary.</p>
<p class='c000'>I learned that they had made their headquarters
at Seymour, in Baylor County, between the Brazos
and Wichita rivers, and I supposed that anyone in
Seymour could tell me the exact localities from
which the fossils came. Later I found to my sorrow
that this was not the case; and I wasted months
of careful exploration over barren beds before I
found the horizon that yielded the wonderful
batrachians and reptiles of which I had come in
search.</p>
<p class='c000'>Much elated, I took the train for Gordon, a cattlemen’s
town south of Seymour, and the point nearest
<span class='pageno' id='Page_207'>207</span>to it by rail. I arrived there on Christmas Eve. I
was the only passenger to leave the cars and was
welcomed by about twenty cowboys, who were just
beginning to paint the town red. The leader asked
me where I came from, and I answered promptly,
“From Boston.”</p>
<p class='c000'>“Where do you want to go?” he asked.</p>
<p class='c000'>“To the best hotel in town,” said I.</p>
<p class='c000'>“All right!” he said. “We’ll take you there.”
And sure enough, they did. They formed in double
file and put me in the middle of their ranks. Then
the two men ahead of me laid their Winchesters
over my shoulders from in front, and the two men
behind crossed these guns with their own, and at the
word, “Fire at will!” the whole command opened
fire and kept it up all the way to the hotel. There
a girl appeared, carrying a lamp with no chimney,
and the men, facing the porch, allowed me to go into
the waiting room. I turned first, and made a little
speech, thanking them for their kind reception and
remarking that if I were not so poor, I should stand
treat for the whole crowd. This satisfied them, and
shouting “All right!” they went off to continue
their nonsense until they were all drunk.</p>
<p class='c000'>I hired the son of the hotel keeper, a Mr. Hamman,
put my baggage in his wagon, and started on
the journey north to my headquarters at Seymour,
which we reached eight days later. Here I got off
<span class='pageno' id='Page_208'>208</span>the track again, for although everyone in town
knew Professor Cummins, no one could tell where
he had found his fossils. “Over in the brakes,” was
all the information anyone could give. Finally a
man named Turner asked me to come over to his
cattle range on the middle fork of the Wichita, as
the country was cut up into canyons and ridges and
denuded, so that I should be likely to find fossils.
He knew of some mastodon bones in the vicinity,
he said. So I went with him.</p>
<p class='c000'>At one place the road led us across the narrows,
where there is scarcely room for a wagon road between
the brakes of the Brazos and the Big Wichita.
Looking south, shallow ravines led to the valley of
the Brazos, while to the north were deep gulches and
mounds capped with white ledges of gypsum with
red beds of clay below. I had reached at last the
red beds of Texas.</p>
<p class='c000'>An interesting phenomenon is to be observed
here—the bed of the Big Wichita is one hundred
and seventy-five feet lower than that of the Brazos.
North of the Brazos, along a line that extends
through Baylor County, the country has been lifted
up and disturbed by pressure from below, while
south of that line, the only disturbance in the strata
has been due to erosion. Everywhere in the red
beds of the Wichita valley are signs of an elevation
of the earth’s crust, and for miles down the
<span class='pageno' id='Page_209'>209</span>stream one comes upon miniature mountains with
the strata turned up at all angles. The river valley
occupies a fault.</p>
<p class='c000'>Very beautiful indeed was the view when we got
in sight of the brakes of the Big Wichita. As far as
the eye could see stretched miniature Bad Lands,
with rounded knobs, deep canyons, bluffs, and
ravines. The prevailing color of the strata was Indian
red, but beds of white gypsum and of greenish
sandstone relieved the sameness. Sometimes seams
of gypsum filled cracks in the strata, forming dikes a
few inches in thickness.</p>
<p class='c000'>Between the hills grew patches of grass, a welcome
sight to our horses, for we had passed through
a country devoid of vegetation. The fall before,
the army worm had eaten the ground clean of everything
that was eatable. We pitched our camp near
a ditch that had been cut through the sediment
which overspread the flood-plain.</p>
<p class='c000'>The day after pitching camp, I heard George
Hamman calling me, and crossing the bridge, saw
him beckoning me to follow him. He gathered his
pockets full of cobblestones as he went along, and
when he reached the edge of the ditch a little way
below the crossing, he began to throw the stones at
something. I ran up to him, and heard the rattle of
snakes, but could not see any until, resting my hand
on his shoulder, I lifted myself on my toes and saw,
<span class='pageno' id='Page_210'>210</span>on the other side of the ditch, a cave with a broad
floor. Lying singly or knotted together in gorgon
spheres, with heads sticking out in all directions,
were hundreds of large rattlesnakes, which had
come out of the cracks in the earth to bask in the
sun on this sheltered floor. They had become terribly
irritated by the blows of the stones which
Hamman was hurling at them, and were rattling in
chorus and striking out in all directions, biting themselves
and each other. Suddenly one rattled in the
high grass at our very feet, and looking down, we
saw a big fellow making ready to strike. As quick
as a flash Hamman threw himself over backward,
knocking me down, and the instant he touched the
ground, turned a complete somerset. While I lay
there, overcome with laughter, he turned two more,
and finding himself on the road, started for camp on
a run. I was too hysterical with laughter to help
myself, and lay there, while the snake continued to
sound its rattle and dart out its forked tongue,
swinging its head back and forth above its coiled
body. When George saw my predicament, he was
brave enough to come back and pull me out of reach
of his lordship’s fangs. Then we were mean
enough to kill him. He measured five feet in
length.</p>
<div id='fig_32' class='figcenter id003'>
<ANTIMG src='images/fig_32.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
<div class='ic001'>
<p><span class='sc'>Fig. 32.—Skeleton of Fin-backed Lizard</span>, <i>Naosaurus claviger</i>.<br/><br/>Collected by Charles Sternberg in the Permian Beds of the Big Wichita Valley, Baylor Co., Texas, in the winter of 1896. By permission of Prof. H. F. Osborn of the American Museum of Natural History.<br/><br/>(Photo. by Anderson)</p>
</div>
</div>
<div id='fig_33' class='figcenter id003'>
<ANTIMG src='images/fig_33.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
<div class='ic001'>
<p><span class='sc'>Fig. 33.—Fin-backed Lizard</span>, <i>Naosaurus claviger</i>.<br/><br/>Restoration by Osborn and Knight. (From model in American Museum of Natural History.)</p>
</div>
</div>
<p class='c000'>The valley contained thousands of wild turkeys,
and it was a fine sight to see them come down in
<span class='pageno' id='Page_211'>211</span>great droves from the hills at night to roost in the
trees below. On the level prairie there were many
antelope, also; and wild cats and coyotes were seen
nearly every day. I remember one day, when crossing
a low level prairie covered with bushes a couple
of feet in height, seeing at my left a coyote which
was running along in a straight line, with its nose
pointed toward a certain spot, like a pointer dog
after a prairie chicken. My interest was aroused,
and to increase my curiosity, I caught sight of a
short-tailed cat, the Canadian lynx, crawling along
the ground in the same direction. I knew that they
were both trailing some prey which each, unknown
to the other, had scented, and imagining that it
might be a calf, I shouted, as I did not want to see
it torn to pieces. This startled the cat, and drove
her off at a tangent to her trail. The coyote continued
his course, but did not stop, for a Texas cow
had run to the point toward which he was traveling,
and stood with lowered horns, ready to repel his
assault; while her calf sprang up and deliberately
proceeded to take advantage of the situation to get
his dinner.</p>
<p class='c000'>In this region, as in the Kansas chalk beds, the
question of water gave us a great deal of trouble.
All the water in the river is that which goes by the
name of alkali in the West, being thoroughly impregnated
with salt and other mineral ingredients.
<span class='pageno' id='Page_212'>212</span>There are, moreover, no wells or springs in the red
beds. The surface rock is porous, and the water
sinks through it to the compact gray beds below,
from which it drains off into the river. These gray
beds are some distance below the surface, and so far
as I know, have never been reached in digging for
water. One is, therefore, forced to depend upon
rain water. This is collected either in artificial
tanks built by the cattlemen, or in natural tanks,
sometimes along the creek beds, but usually in the
flood-plain in old creek beds, where the fine red mud
has been puddled by cattle, perhaps, or in the olden
days, by buffalo. These ponds hold water for years,
although often they become very foul from the cattle
that frequent and wade into them in summer to
get away from the flies.</p>
<p class='c000'>It is an odd sight to a stranger in the valley of the
Big Wichita to see the rain come rushing down the
hills. It soon becomes as thick as cream with the
fine red clay, and to think of depending upon such
water for drinking and cooking purposes is revolting
to one who remembers the sparkling springs and
clear wells of the East or any mountainous country.
During quiet days, when the wind was not blowing,
the red mud would settle in the bottom of the tanks,
but one had to be careful not to pull out one’s pail
suddenly or the water would instantly thicken with
mud from the bottom.</p>
<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_213'>213</span>Nothing would settle this water but boiling it,
although it might be cleared a little by the pulp of
cactus leaves. I have sometimes gone to the trouble
of peeling the broad leaves of the prickly pear and
beating them into a mucilaginous pulp to throw into
a pail of muddy water. The mud attached itself to
this material and sank with it to the bottom; but
even then the clarified liquid remaining on top did
not make a very tempting drink. I soon got used
to the thick red water, however, as had the other
inhabitants of the country, and for six seasons drank
it thankfully, when I was thirsty. When a man is
thirsty, he drinks first and tastes the water afterwards.
I once asked an old cowman what he did
for drinking water on the range, and he answered,
“Wherever and whatever a cow can drink, I can.”
And cows will take filthy water, if they can get no
other.</p>
<p class='c000'>All that winter I worked in these desolate beds,
walking over thousands of acres of denuded rock,
searching without success for the fossil fields. The
dominant color of these beds is red, but the tints
vary so that the eye is dazzled and wearied by the
constant change. There are countless concretions
too, all of which had to be looked over. If fine
specimens had rewarded the labor, all would have
been well, but I know of no work more trying than
spending day after day in a fruitless search.</p>
<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_214'>214</span>At last Hamman, having fattened his horses on
two-dollar corn, started a quarrel with me, so that
he might have an excuse for deserting me, and drove
off with the team, which I had hired for some time
longer, leaving me alone, thirty miles from town.
Fortunately, however, I found a good, honest Irishman,
Pat Whelan by name, who became not only a
splendid assistant, but a true friend. Poor fellow!
I learned a few years ago that he had frozen to
death in Montana.</p>
<p class='c000'>One warm, sultry day I sent him in to town for
provisions. I had no tent at that time, but he left
me the wagon sheet, and I had camped on the south
side of a large tree, which was so effectually covered
with green briers as to be an almost impenetrable
defense against the north wind.</p>
<p class='c000'>I was in the field after Mr. Whelan left me, and
noticing the Texas cattle coming from the prairie to
the heavy timber, I concluded, although there was
not a cloud in sight, that they had scented a norther.
Rushing to camp, I began rapidly to make preparations
for the storm. First I cut a couple of crotches
and sank them well into the ground on the south
side of the brier-covered tree. Then I put up a
ridgepole and stretched over it the wagon sheet,
which I fastened securely to the ground on either
side. I also heaped dirt on the edges, to keep
out the snow. I thus had a dog tent, opening
<span class='pageno' id='Page_215'>215</span>toward the northern barrier and toward the
south.</p>
<p class='c000'>There was plenty of fallen wood lying about, and
I devoted every moment and all my strength to cutting
it up and dragging it to the tent. I must have
got several cords together before I heard the wind
howling in the heavy timber to the north. I piled
up this supply of fuel at the opening toward the
green brier thicket, and built a big fire at the mouth
of the tent.</p>
<p class='c000'>Soon an awful storm was upon me, all alone, thirty
miles from any human habitation. How the wind
moaned through the creaking branches! A dense
darkness spread like a pall over the heavens, and
the shrieks and wails of the tempest echoed through
the woods like the cries of lost souls. Then snow
and sleet began to fall in fitful gusts, and beat upon
the thin canvas that was my only shelter. At such a
time a man loses much of his confidence in himself.
Pretty small I felt myself when measured with that
storm, which bent the great cottonwoods and elms
like reeds before it.</p>
<p class='c000'>After supper, tired out with my unwonted exertions,
I fell asleep. Whenever the fire sank down
and the cold became severe, I roused myself and
piled fresh fuel on the dying embers, and when they
blazed up again, dropped off once more. Three
days and three nights that norther lasted. I understood
<span class='pageno' id='Page_216'>216</span>then why the people of the Southland speak
of them as they do and dread their coming. I
never once left my shelter until it cleared.</p>
<p class='c000'>Poor Pat Whelan! He had lost his horses in the
storm, and being sure that I would freeze to death
if he could not get back to me, he had spent every
hour of daylight looking for them. What he must
have suffered in that awful gale, while I was safe
and comfortable!</p>
<p class='c000'>My readers would grow weary if I told the whole
story of that winter’s search. There were so few
results that I became thoroughly disheartened and
anxious to give up the fight and go home, where my
wife and dear baby were waiting for me. There
was further cause for discouragement in the fact
that Pat had only agreed to stay with me until
spring plowing began, and the time for that was
rapidly approaching. But I would not give up. So
we worked on down the stream toward the Fort
Sill cattle trail, traveling on an average twenty
miles a day on foot, with the record “Nothing” in
my notebook night after night.</p>
<p class='c000'>But on the eleventh of February, after forty
days of unceasing effort, I discovered below the
forks of the Big Wichita a somewhat different horizon
from that of the beds over which I had been
working so persistently without success. Some of
the beds in this region are composed of red clay,
<span class='pageno' id='Page_217'>217</span>with small irregular concretions that are piled in
heaps at the base of the hills and roll under one’s
feet, rendering travel difficult In other strata are
deposits of small nodules, held together by silica.
These nodules are of various colors, and where held
securely and ground down, make beautiful mosaics.
Then there are beds of greenish sandstone, laid
down in thin layers; and in these beds, for the first
time since I came to Texas, I found the remains of
a Permian vertebrate. My notes say: “Although
it is not wise to shout before I am out of the woods,
yet I feel very much encouraged, and I earnestly
hope for the success I have worked for. I have
evidently worked too high in the red beds to find
fossils.”</p>
<p class='c000'>On the second day in these beds, I found fragments
of the great salamander <i>Eryops</i>, and on the
twenty-second of February, I found the first specimen
that I had ever seen of the long-spined reptile,
<i>Dimetredon</i>. Of this last I got seventy-five pounds
of bones and matrix, preserved in iron ore concretions.
The teeth are long, recurved, and serrated.
I knew little then about these most ancient of all the
vertebrates that it has been my fortune to collect,
but I shall have more to say about them later. The
authorities now place the time when these animals
lived twelve million years away. Indeed, “God is
not slack as some men count slackness, one day is
<span class='pageno' id='Page_218'>218</span>with the Lord as a thousand years, and a thousand
years as one day.”</p>
<p class='c000'>The only way in which we can realize the lapse of
millions of years is by a study of the work which
nature has accomplished in them, depositing vast
strata, lifting them up into mountain ranges, and
carving out in them flood-plains and mighty canyons.
More interesting still is a study of the countless
forms of life which, in ever-varying groups,
have each in turn dominated sea and earth and air.
First, as here in Texas, the batrachians reigned
supreme, a race of creatures which were supplied
with both gills and lungs, so that they could live
both on land and in water. Then came the reptiles,
and later still dawned the Age of Mammals, with
man as the crowning work of the Creator’s hands.</p>
<p class='c000'>I was now at last in the fossiliferous beds and
secured some fine material. Unfortunately about
this time Pat gave notice that he would soon be
obliged to leave me. I should then have no team,
and to work in these fossil beds without a means of
transportation would be as useless as to attempt to
dig up a forest with a hoe. I had, however, sent
north for an assistant, a Mr. Wright, and after
hunting for me a day and a half in the brakes of the
Big Wichita, he finally arrived in camp.</p>
<p class='c000'>On the sixth of March a violent norther struck
us. We were better off for protection than we had
<span class='pageno' id='Page_219'>219</span>been, however, as my tent had at last arrived from
Kansas; and although only an A-tent, it kept out
the storms of sleet and snow that fell for three days.
During all that time the cattle remained without
food in the dense woods. Such times as this, when
we were confined to the close quarters of our tent
and could accomplish nothing but keeping ourselves
warm, are in my opinion the most uncomfortable
which the fossil hunter is called upon to endure.</p>
<p class='c000'>On the ninth of March, the sun rose bright and
clear upon a scene of surprising beauty. Every
tree, bush, and blade of grass on the red beds was
covered with a milky white ice, whose silvery luster
was set with innumerable sparkling gems. It was
glorious at sunrise, but as the morning advanced, the
snow and ice began to melt, leaving patches of red
and white over the Bad Lands, and by noon had entirely
disappeared. The hills rapidly dried, as the
thick red water sought the drainage canals, and we
were soon at work once more.</p>
<p class='c000'>As a precaution against the very difficulty which
I had encountered,—I mean the impossibility of
keeping a man and team with me,—I had obtained
from the Secretary of War, through the efforts of
Professor Alexander Agassiz, a letter of introduction
to the commanders of western posts, requesting
them to assist me by every means in their power not
inconsistent with the public service. With this letter
<span class='pageno' id='Page_220'>220</span>from the Honorable Robert T. Lincoln, a son of
our martyred President, I started out on the twelfth
of March for Fort Sill, on a pony hired from a
livery stable. I was assured that it was only sixty
miles to the Fort, and that the pony could easily take
me there in a day, but I soon found that he was just
off grass, and weak and thin. I also discovered,
after night had overtaken me, that I had been put on
the wrong cattle trail. I reached a house in the
evening, that of a school-teacher, who, because of
his having had some education and possessing the
ability to talk intelligently, was known in that region
as “Windy” Turner, in distinction from “Bull”
Turner, a cowman. I found him to be a gentleman.</p>
<p class='c000'>The next morning he gave me directions as to
how to reach the old trail that led to the Fort. I
was to go to Wagoner’s cattle camp, where the trail
crossed Beaver Creek, and spend the night there. I
traveled nearly all day, and reached the ranch building,
the only house I had seen since I left the school-teacher’s,
only to find the camp deserted. Not a
man nor a cow was in sight. As I had had no
lunch, I was very hungry, and this being my first
visit to this region, I did not know where to turn for
food and shelter. At last, however, I saw a horseman
coming toward me from the northeast, and
rode to meet him. He was a cowboy. I inquired
where Wagoner had gone, and learned that he had
<span class='pageno' id='Page_221'>221</span>left a few days before for the Indian Territory. I
was told, moreover, that the nearest place at which I
could get a meal was back on Coffee Creek, which
I had left in the morning. When I complained of
being cold and hungry and of not liking to sleep in
my saddle blanket on the ground without supper, the
cowboy replied that he had not had a morsel to eat
for three days and that he had slept for three nights
in his saddle blanket. After that I said no more.</p>
<p class='c000'>I was unwilling to return all the way back to the
hospitable roof that had sheltered me the night before,
and continued my journey, with no expectation
of coming upon a human habitation until I
reached Red River the next night. It is hard to
express my delight, therefore, when, upon reaching
the divide between Beaver Creek and Red River, I
saw a lot of tents, some distance to the right of the
trail. I hurried to the encampment, and found that
it belonged to the locating engineer of the Denver
and Fort Worth Railroad. When I told the young
man from whom I had obtained this information
that I wanted to see the engineer, he grinned (I was
not a very pleasant-looking individual, covered as
I was with the dust of travel), but he opened the
door of the tent and said, “Here’s a man who wants
to see you.”</p>
<p class='c000'>As the occupant of the tent came forward, I
presented to him my letter of introduction from the
<span class='pageno' id='Page_222'>222</span>Secretary of War; and I saw the grin disappear
from the face of my guide as the engineer shook
hands with me cordially, and remarking, “That is a
good enough letter of introduction for me,” placed
himself at my service. When I told him that my
pony and I were hungry, he instructed the man who
had expected to see me refused the courtesies of the
camp to get up a good supper for me and to care for
my pony. Then, inviting me to make myself at
home, he entertained me royally, and after I had
made a hearty meal, opened a bale of new woolen
blankets, and provided me with a most comfortable
bed in his own tent. I hope if Major J. F. Menette
sees this story, he will accept at this late day my
thanks for his kindly treatment.</p>
<p class='c000'>The next night I reached the crossing on Red
River, where I found a house and stayed all night.
The next day, about nightfall I crossed Cach Creek,
and saw at my right, in a bend of the creek, an
elevated “bench” on which a tepee was pitched.
There were two Indians standing about, one a large,
fleshy, good-natured man, the other thin, with large,
prominent cheek bones, a typical Comanche. A
large flock of children ran out to greet me. I must
confess that I felt a little uneasy at being so entirely
alone and at the mercy of these Indians, but I made
the best of it, and as several turkeys were lying on
the ground, I told the good-natured man that I
<span class='pageno' id='Page_223'>223</span>wanted his squaw to cook me one for supper. This
she proceeded to do, removing the breast and putting
it on a wooden spit which she stuck in the
ground before a large bed of coals and constantly
turned until the meat was done. This, with a cup
of coffee which she made me and the bread crumbs
from my lunch, gave me quite a meal. I was too
hungry to be fastidious.</p>
<p class='c000'>The Indians were roasting camus, the bulb of the
wild hyacinth, which grew plentifully in the creek
bottom. They had dug a pit five feet deep and three
in diameter and kindled a fire at the bottom, using at
least a cord of wood to heat thoroughly the surrounding
ground. The ashes were then scraped
out, and the walls plastered with a mortar of mud,
over which green grass was thickly strewn to prevent
the bulbs from burning. The bulbs were then
put in and covered with grass and mud, and a fire
built on top of them. The next morning they were
done, and were as much relished by these Indian
children as popcorn or peanuts by the whites. I
tasted some. They had a sweetish taste, a little like
sweet potatoes, but they were so full of sand that
my teeth were not strong enough to grind them up.</p>
<p class='c000'>I put off going to bed until late, as I dreaded
sleeping in the high grass where I had left my
saddle. But at last the children, who had been
amusing me, went off to bed, and I decided to go
<span class='pageno' id='Page_224'>224</span>too. I spread half my saddle blanket under me, and
with my saddle for a pillow was just dozing off
when I heard a rustle in the dead grass, and the thin
Indian, whom I disliked, stuck his head almost into
my face. He had something in his hands which he
wanted to swap with me for some of my property,
and the more I argued, the more determined he was
to trade. He wanted my pony, my Winchester,
everything I had, and I was afraid that he would
take them whether or no. At last, however, he left,
crawling through the grass as he had come; but I
was just dropping off to sleep, when I heard the
snake-like rustle again. I was getting mad by that
time, and when the Indian parted the tall grass and
peered through the opening, he faced the muzzle of
my gun, while I told him with much vehemence that
if he did not go about his business and let me get to
sleep, I would bore a hole through him. This had
the desired effect, and but for the cold, which
wakened me often, I slept in peace the rest of the
night.</p>
<p class='c000'>I was wakened in the morning by a shot, and a
wild turkey fell from a tree near where I had been
sleeping. They were so tame and abundant that
they roosted in camp. The jolly Indian was anxious
to earn another quarter, and as I had ordered turkey
for supper, he had concluded that I wanted one for
breakfast. I was not quite so hungry this morning,
<span class='pageno' id='Page_225'>225</span>and detected the Indian smell which is left on everything
they touch; but I made a brave attempt not to
show my disgust to my host.</p>
<p class='c000'>After breakfast, as I started out for the trail, a
boy of fourteen walked down with me and stood
talking, with his hands tangled in my pony’s mane.
I had given him some tobacco, and he was smoking
a cigarette which he had made with a dry leaf. At
our feet the path divided and encircled a little
mound of earth covered with buffalo grass. When
the boy had finished his smoke, he threw the still
burning stump into this dead grass, which was damp
with dew and sent up a dense column of smoke.
This was all done so naturally that I thought
nothing of it until I got up on the level prairie,
where I could see for miles ahead. As far as the
eye could reach, column after column of smoke was
rising through the still morning air. It was thirty
miles from the crossing at Cach Creek to Fort Sill,
yet when I presented my letter to Major Guy Henry
in the office at nine o’clock the next morning, the
first question he asked was “Did you leave the
crossing at Cach Creek about sunrise yesterday
morning?” And when I answered that I had, he
said that probably about ten or fifteen minutes after
I left the creek, the Comanche chief had received
notice by smoke signal that one man was coming
over the trail toward the Fort.</p>
<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_226'>226</span>In coming to Fort Sill, I had inadvertently come
from one department into another, and the major
had no power to send men out of his department
without orders from General Sheridan, the commanding
general of the Army. So I had to wait at
Fort Sill until the matter could be arranged.</p>
<p class='c000'>The southern cowboys, who hated the army blue
and the darky soldiers who were stationed at the
Fort, were doing all that they could to irritate the
officers. While the latter were at dinner and the
soldiers off duty, a squad of cowboys would ride into
the post across the well-kept grass on the parade
grounds up to the flagstaff, and fire at the Stars and
Stripes. Another of their tricks was to shoot off
the glass insulators from the government telegraph
lines which connect the Fort with the headquarters
at Leavenworth and with the Department of the
Gulf. They had just accomplished this piece of
mischief when I arrived at the Fort, and before the
major could communicate with General Pope, Commander
of the Department of the Missouri, in which
Fort Sill was situated, he had to send out the signal
sergeant to repair the line.</p>
<p class='c000'>At last, however, all was arranged, and by general
order, Corporal Bromfield, three privates, a six-mule
team, and a wagon with a white teamster, and
fifty days’ rations, were detailed for my use. I
started out with this escort, elated by the knowledge
<span class='pageno' id='Page_227'>227</span>that I now had men and means of transportation
upon which I could depend.</p>
<p class='c000'>It is indeed a lovely drive from Fort Sill to Red
River. We were rarely out of sight of the impressive
Wichita Mountains, which rise from a sea of
green plains like an islet in a lake. We reached the
river on the second day, and had a mile of sand to
pull through. At one time I thought that we would
go down in the treacherous quicksands, but our
magnificent team of dark-colored mules and the skill
of the teamster carried us safely over. I have since
seen, in the sands of this same river, holes ten feet
deep which had been dug to rescue wagons loaded
with valuable goods, that had sunk down to bedrock
during high water.</p>
<p class='c000'>When we reached the beds of the Big Wichita, we
worked both Indian and Coffee creeks, a few miles
apart. Here at last, after so much toil and so many
hardships, I found myself in the very center of the
fossil-bearing strata, and secured a number of fine
specimens, among them the great salamander <i>Eryops</i>,
the wonderful fin-backed lizard <i>Naosaurus</i>,
that peculiar batrachian <i>Diplocaulus</i>, and other
forms.</p>
<p class='c000'>On arriving at the fossil beds, I showed Corporal
Bromfield where I wanted him to pitch my wall tent,
and went into the field with Mr. Wright, in search
of fossils. When I returned at night, I found that
<span class='pageno' id='Page_228'>228</span>the corporal had pitched my tent on a level and his
own A-tent as close to it as he possibly could.
“This will never do,” I said to myself. “Discipline
will go to the dogs, if I allow such close companionship.”
So I ordered him to take down his tent and
pitch it a hundred yards away, and to follow this
rule in future. The soldiers were very indignant,
but they obeyed orders. As a general rule I found
that I could handle them, although there were a few
breaches of discipline.</p>
<p class='c000'>I was so unfortunate on this expedition as to have
my tent burned, with nearly all my personal property.
When the men got to the flaming tent, the
first thing they did was to cut the guy-ropes and let
it blow over. They then, at my request, brought
water and threw it on the burning sacks that held
the fossils. This saved the fossils, but to do so we
had to let everything else go.</p>
<p class='c000'>On the twenty-fifth of April, we started with our
load for Decatur, the nearest railroad point. We
took the Henrietta road, and camped on the Little
Wichita, where, in the sandy shales of the Upper
Carboniferous or Permian, we found a locality rich
in the fossil flora of that region. We secured a
number of large fern fronds, etc.</p>
<p class='c000'>Wild turkey were, as usual, abundant. Lee Irving,
one of the escort, killed a hen and gobbler, and
gave us a change from our customary diet of bacon.
<span class='pageno' id='Page_229'>229</span>On the fourth of May, after a long journey, we
plowed through the valley named, and well named,
the Big Sandy, and passing through groves of splendid
live oaks, pecans, water elms, and locusts,
reached Decatur, the terminus of the Fort Worth
and Denver Railroad. Here I delivered to the agent
my precious load of fossils, which had cost me so
much expense, labor, and anxiety, and set out on the
return trip to Fort Sill; where, on the twelfth of
May, after a journey without incident, I turned over
my command to Major Henry. The next time I
heard of this splendid officer, he was a brigadier
general in command of Porto Rico.</p>
<div class='chapter'>
<span class='pageno' id='Page_230'>230</span>
<h2 class='c005'>CHAPTER IX<br/> <span class='large'>EXPEDITIONS IN THE TEXAS PERMIAN FOR PROFESSOR COPE, 1895, 1897</span></h2></div>
<div class='c006'>
<ANTIMG class='drop-capi' src='images/i_275.jpg' width-obs='100' alt='' /></div>
<p class='drop-capi_8'>
In the summer of 1895, sixteen years after
my last expedition for Professor Cope,
I was employed by him to make further
explorations in the brakes of the Big
Wichita. My assistant and cook was a farmer,
Frank Galyean by name, who lived on Coffee Creek
on the Vernon road, twenty-five miles north of Seymour.
I camped a mile above his house on the west
branch of the creek at Willow Springs, a favorite
camping ground, as it was one of the few places in
which water was always to be found. To the west
rose Table Mountain, a hill several hundred feet
high, and mountains of the same height extended in
a southwesterly direction to Indian Creek, about
four miles from camp.</p>
<p class='c000'>I worked for several weeks on Indian Creek and
Coffee Creek with very poor returns, but on the
nineteenth of September, Mr. Galyean, who was of
a sanguine temperament, announced that he had discovered
<span class='pageno' id='Page_231'>231</span>the complete skeleton of a huge beast. So,
filled with high ropes, I followed his lead along the
rough face of the mountains, until at last, when we
were completely exhausted by the ruggedness of the
way, he pointed out a pile of the weathered and
broken bones of a species so common that they were
not worth picking up.</p>
<p class='c000'>Dropping in a moment from my hill of expectancy
into a slough of despond, I turned homeward,
Mr. Galyean, who was as disappointed as I
was, leading the way to a short cut through a gap in
the mountains. As he got on the trail, which had
been made by animals on their way to the spring, he
stooped and picked up something, remarking,
“Why, here’s a bone!” I took it, and was astonished
to find it a complete skull, covered with a hard
siliceous matrix from a heavy bed of Indian red
clay, which was completely covered with concretions.
I had never carefully explored this horizon,
as I had taken it for granted that it was barren.
And I suppose that other collectors had imagined the
same, for although it was within a mile of Willow
Springs, where Boll and Cummins and other collectors
had camped through a series of years, I
was the first to discover this deposit of extinct
animals.</p>
<p class='c000'>We followed the trail over a slight rise into an
amphitheater a couple of acres in extent, and then
<span class='pageno' id='Page_232'>232</span>over a higher rise into another, a little larger, carved
out of the mountain side and entirely denuded of
soil. These two amphitheaters proved to be the
richest fossil beds I ever discovered in the Permian
of Texas. I quote the following entry from my
notebook regarding this discovery: “After finding
the perfect skull discovered by Galyean, we at once
got into the richest ground I have ever seen in these
beds. I got a perfect skull, and Galyean another.
We have worked too low, it seems. This rich bone
bed is on top of the beds I have been working, at
the heads of the ravines that cut into the face of the
mountains. The concretions in which the bones are
preserved are in red clay, and are of greenish and
other colors.”</p>
<p class='c000'>In my excitement over this rich find, I forgot my
disgust with Galyean for leading me on a wild-goose
chase, forgot how tired I was, forgot my dinner,
forgot everything, and set to work at once collecting
skulls and bones. I remember that I filled my collecting
bag with seventy-five pounds of skulls, from
less than an inch to over eight inches in length, and
all new to me and to science. This load I started to
carry down the steep trail to camp, a mile away.
The good-natured Galyean, when he saw me tottering
under the load, offered to relieve me of my
burden, but I answered with such vehemence that
no one should touch it, that I would break my back
<span class='pageno' id='Page_233'>233</span>first, that it was more precious than its weight in
gold, that he gave it up and fled down the mountains
to camp, so that he might at least have a warm meal
waiting for me when I arrived.</p>
<p class='c000'>How can any man who has not had the experience
himself, realize the glory of my triumphal march
down that rugged trail? Not Nebuchadnezzar,
when his chariot headed the army that was carrying
away the treasures of the Lord’s house from Jerusalem,
with the king of Judah, blinded and bound in
shackles of brass, in his train, could have known a
prouder joy than I did now over this discovery of a
new region, in the very heart of the old, which
promised so rich a harvest of rare fossil remains.
This is an instance of an experience which has been
very common in my life—when I have been most
completely hopeless and discouraged, I have made
my greatest discoveries.</p>
<p class='c000'>Of the remarkable batrachians and lizards which
twelve million years ago peopled the estuaries and
bayous of the Permian ocean shores, I found, during
that three months’ expedition, forty-five complete or
nearly complete skulls, many of them with more or
less perfect parts of the skeletons attached, and
forty-seven fragmentary skulls, ranging in size
from less than half an inch to two feet in length;
the whole collection containing one hundred and
eighty-three specimens of the extinct life of the
<span class='pageno' id='Page_234'>234</span>Texan Permian. The American Museum, which
secured this splendid material, was unable to describe
and publish it then, while the results of my
famous expedition to these beds in 1901 for the
Royal Museum of Munich were at once described by
Dr. Broili. Consequently the American Museum
lost much of the glory which attaches to the description
of new material. However, the Permian collection
in the American Museum is now being
worked out with results of great importance to
science.</p>
<p class='c000'>Encouraged by my success on this expedition, I
set out with high hopes on January twentieth of the
following year to continue my work for Professor
Cope in these beds. On reaching my headquarters
at Seymour, I succeeded in hiring an old man with
a team and wagon, and on the twenty-fifth of
January, I made my first camp on Bushy Creek, ten
miles north of Seymour.</p>
<p class='c000'>Three days later I found what I believed
promised to be a fine specimen of the ladder-spined
reptile, <i>Naosaurus</i>, called fin-backed by Cope. A
number of perfect spines were exposed, presenting
the possibility of securing a complete specimen. I
worked very carefully over this skeleton, hoping to
take it out whole and in good shape. It lay in red
and white sandstone, which easily disintegrated on
the surface into shale-like flakes. The spines and
<span class='pageno' id='Page_235'>235</span>transverse projections, which terminate in rounded
knobs, were all broken <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">in situ</span></i>, and were also flexed
and tilted with the strata, so that great care was
necessary in following them. They were about
three inches apart. I numbered the spines 1, 2, 3,
etc., not with reference to their natural position, but
to the order in which I came to them. A good
many of the rounded ends of the lateral spines were
missing, having been washed down the slope. I
hoped to find them later.</p>
<p class='c000'>As I studied these remarkable spines, many of
them, near the center of the body, three feet high,
with the lateral spines alternating or opposite, I instinctively
called the creature the ladder-spined reptile;
and I cannot see how Professor Cope could have
imagined that these spines had any resemblance to
the mast and yard-arms of a vessel, and that there
was a thin membrane stretched between them which
caught the breeze and acted as a sail. Later discoveries
show it to be a land animal. Professor
Osborn’s magnificent restoration of the <i>Naosaurus</i>
is shown. (Fig. <SPAN href='#fig_33'>33</SPAN>.)</p>
<p class='c000'>As I have said, it was a long and trying task to
take up the skeleton, as it was in thousands of fragments.
If I had dug them up as one would dig
potatoes, no one would ever have had the patience
to put them together again. So I took up each
spine in sections, wrapping say fifty fragments together,
<span class='pageno' id='Page_236'>236</span>and numbering them No. 1, spine 1, package
1, etc.; so that when the whole collection came to be
put together, the sections could be mended separately
first and then joined to one another.</p>
<p class='c000'>The broken condition in which I found the skeleton
prevented me from realizing then how complete
and valuable it was; but as I look now at the fine
photograph of the mounted specimen,—the only
mounted specimen of the <i>Naosaurus</i> in the world
(Fig. <SPAN href='#fig_32'>32</SPAN>), I can see that this expedition was indeed
a success, in spite of the discouragement which I
went through at the time.</p>
<p class='c000'>After the discovery of the <i>Naosaurus</i>, I was
obliged to spend weeks of work without results,
growing more and more disheartened because I myself
was fully persuaded that the search was useless.
Professor Cope was convinced that there was a
fossil-bearing stratum between the Permian and
Triassic, which would yield an entirely new fauna,
and he had reasoned out that this ideal bed must be
located northwest of the productive bed already
known, in the very region, in fact, which I had gone
over with such care for the Museum of Comparative
Zoology of Harvard in 1882, and found barren. I,
therefore, protested as strongly as I could against
making the trip; but he insisted, and his more powerful
will won the day. So I was forced to spend a
month of extremely trying labor at the head of
<span class='pageno' id='Page_237'>237</span>Crooked Creek and in the other creek valleys, northwest
of the productive beds.</p>
<p class='c000'>Here were thousands of acres of denuded bluffs of
red clay, cut into fantastic shapes, often resembling
old fashioned straw bee-hives or crumbling towers
and battlements. As far as the eye could reach,
they spread out along the divide in ever-varying
shapes. The beds disintegrated easily into red mud.
There were no concretions, although the rock was
full of concentric rings, from the sixteenth of an
inch to an inch in diameter, consisting of a round
white spot with a red rim. The narrow dikes which
cross the thick deposits of clay are filled with fibrous
gypsum. Underneath the clay lie strata of red and
white sandstone and compact concretionary rock, all
barren.</p>
<p class='c000'>But the discouragement which attended my unsuccessful
search was only one of the trials with
which I had to contend that winter. In the first
place, the weather was against me. It snowed or
rained continually, so that the ground was never
dry, and I took up ten or fifteen pounds of red mud
on each foot as I walked. I came down with a
severe attack of grippe, too; and to make matters
worse, my teamster, who was also my cook, took a
particular dislike to my stove, which had been manufactured
under my own supervision and had always
proved satisfactory with other men, and insisted
<span class='pageno' id='Page_238'>238</span>upon doing all his cooking in a trench outside the
tent, so that I lost the heat which I might have had
but for his obstinacy.</p>
<p class='c000'>Every morning I climbed out of bed with aching
bones, and started on my long tramp. At first I
would hardly be able to drag myself along, but
gradually, as I warmed to the work, I would move
faster, until usually I got so far away from camp
that I should not have been able to return for dinner
without taking more time than I could afford, and so
went without that meal. After working as long as
I could see, I would return to my uncomfortable
camp, to go through the same performance on the
following day. I had suffered from fever and ague
in the fossil fields of Kansas, and had supposed that
it would be impossible to suffer more, but I found
the grippe even more relentless than the ague.</p>
<p class='c000'>To add to my worries, the people at my post office
had taken in a family with a malignant form of sore
eyes, and although I supplied them with curatives,
they would get careless. The peevish old man
whom I had employed gave me a great deal of
trouble too, at one time threatening to leave me alone
in the brakes. In general, my experiences with
hired men have taught me the advisability of owning
my own outfit, whenever it is possible. A hired
man knows how helpless one is in the fossil fields
without transportation, and takes advantage of the
power which that helplessness gives him; or he looks
at things from the hired man’s point of view, and if
he can better his wages by leaving his employer,
thinks that he has a perfect right to do so, even if he
has made a contract to remain.</p>
<div class='figcenter id003'>
<ANTIMG src='images/i_284.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' /></div>
<div class='figcenter id003'>
<ANTIMG src='images/i_285.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' /></div>
<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_239'>239</span>After working for weeks in accordance with
Cope’s instructions, although it was as useless as
carrying bricks from one side of a yard to the other
and back again, I returned, worn and discouraged,
to the beds which produced at least a few fossils. I
determined, moreover, to give up the field at the end
of my contract, and go home, and wrote a despondent
letter to Cope, asking to be relieved when
the contract expired, as I needed rest. It was then
that I received the letter which I publish here in
facsimile, a letter which I shall always cherish, not
only because it shows the very best side of Cope’s
character, but because it makes me feel that he
realized that my life work could not be measured by
money. It gave me at the time the kind of encouragement
which I needed more than any other, and
on receipt of it, although I was just ready to give
up from exhaustion and homesickness, I decided to
remain another month in those barren fields. Cope
promised that he would never again send me into a
field against my own judgment; and by having my
own way again, I was so fortunate as to add many
new specimens to the collection.</p>
<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_240'>240</span>For I was rewarded, as I have always in my life
been rewarded, for my many days of fruitless toil,
by the discovery of a long stretch of beds whose
brilliant metallic color, the result of a large amount
of iron accumulated by a dank and luxurious vegetation,
testified that they had once formed the mud at
the bottom of a bayou. This old swamp proved to
have been the habitat of countless salamanders, and
thanks to this discovery I accomplished more during
the last month of my stay in Texas than during all
the rest of the time put together, leaving out of
account, of course, the fin-backed lizard.</p>
<p class='c000'>I take pleasure in showing my readers a splendid
skull (Fig. <SPAN href='#fig_34'>34</SPAN>) after Broili, both the palatine and
superior exposures of one peculiar species of these
salamanders, to which Cope gave the name <i>Diplocaulus
magnicornis</i>. The eyes are far down on the
face, but with a broad expanse of sculptured bone
behind, terminating in two long “horns,” fourteen
inches across from tip to tip, which are merely the
greatly prolonged corners of the back of the skull.
There are three rows of minute teeth in the roof of
the mouth, and a couple of occipital condyles. The
vertebræ have a double row of spines down each side
of the median line, and the body is long and slender
with weak limbs. The head was the largest part of
the creature. This species was the most common of
all those which I discovered in the Permian beds.
Professor Cope used to call the specimens “mud
heads,” as they were almost always covered with a
thin coating of silicified mud, which was very difficult
to remove. In fact, nearly all the bones in
this region were enclosed in a hard red matrix.</p>
<div id='fig_34' class='figcenter id001'>
<ANTIMG src='images/fig_34.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
<div class='ic001'>
<p><span class='sc'>Fig. 34.—Fossil skull of Giant Salamander</span>, <i>Diplocaulus magnicornis</i>.<br/><br/>Collected by Charles Sternberg in 1901. (After Broili.)</p>
</div>
</div>
<div id='fig_35' class='figcenter id001'>
<ANTIMG src='images/fig_35.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
<div class='ic001'>
<p><span class='sc'>Fig. 35.—Professor Henry Fairfield Osborn.</span></p>
</div>
</div>
<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_241'>241</span>In the spring of 1897, I was again working in the
Texas Permian for Professor Cope. He was deeply
interested in the ancient fauna of the region, and I
was sending him all the finer specimens by express,
as I had during the last two years. On the fifteenth
of April, I was camping on Indian Creek, having
just completed a long and trying journey of about a
hundred miles, around the Little Wichita and back
to the main river at Indian Creek. During the trip
we had encountered a terrible windstorm, which
had threatened to carry away our tent, but we had
weathered the gale and camped in the timber. I
had gone to bed, but was roused from my cot by the
arrival of a livery-man, who had been hunting for
me all the day before. He handed me a message
from Mrs. Cope, announcing the death of her husband
on the twelfth of April.</p>
<p class='c000'>I had lost friends before, and had known what it
was to bury my own dead, even my firstborn son,
but I had never sorrowed more deeply than I did
now over the news that in the very prime of life, in
the noonday of his glorious intellectual achievements,
as he was bending all his energies to the
<span class='pageno' id='Page_242'>242</span>study and description of the wonderful fauna of the
Texas Permian, the greatest naturalist in America
had passed away with his work undone. Death is
terrible always, but it seems especially so when it
strikes down men in the highest rank of intelligence,
who are adding every day to the world’s knowledge.</p>
<p class='c000'>I was Cope’s assistant in the field for eight seasons,
and while we did not always agree, I consider
the work which I did for him my most valuable
service to science. It has often been my good
fortune to supply him with some important link in
the line of descent of vertebrate life,—such as, for
instance, the famous batrachian genera <i>Dissorophus</i>
and <i>Otocœlus</i>, reptiles with a carapace, indicating the
line of descent of turtles from batrachians, or the
camel from the John Day beds, with the metacarpals
and metatarsals distinct,—and to furnish him with
a large number of other forms which, with the
material secured by his other collectors, helped him
to acquire what Dr. Osborn has so truthfully called
“a masterly knowledge of each type.”</p>
<p class='c000'>It is largely due to his efforts that the great
science of paleontology, which, within my remembrance,
had but few votaries, is now considered one
of the most interesting studies of modern times.
Well did he prophesy, “After us there will be more
demand for our wares”; how well one can fully
realize only when one remembers that the great
<span class='pageno' id='Page_243'>243</span>American Museum (whose department of paleontology
under the able management of Dr. Henry F.
Osborn (Fig. <SPAN href='#fig_35'>35</SPAN>) is now one of the glories of
science), that the Carnegie Museum in Pittsburg
and the Field Columbian in Chicago and the
Museums of Yale and Harvard and Princeton, besides
many others both here and in Europe have
been largely built up since he wrote those words.
One thing is certain—as long as science lasts, and
men love to study the animals of the present and of
the past, Cope’s name and work will be remembered
and revered.</p>
<p class='c000'>I am glad to be able to show a good photograph
of this lamented naturalist (Fig. <SPAN href='#fig_15'>15</SPAN>). Peace be to
his ashes!</p>
<div class='chapter'>
<span class='pageno' id='Page_244'>244</span>
<h2 class='c005'>CHAPTER X<br/> <span class='large'>IN THE RED BEDS OF TEXAS FOR THE ROYAL MUSEUM OF MUNICH, 1901</span></h2></div>
<div class='c006'>
<ANTIMG class='drop-capi' src='images/i_293.jpg' width-obs='100' alt='' /></div>
<p class='drop-capi_8'>
Warned by my experiences in the red
beds of Texas without a team of my
own, when I made a contract to conduct
an expedition there under the direction of
Dr. von Zittel of the Paleontological Museum of
Munich, I resolved to ship my own horses and outfit
to the field. I gave them into the charge of my son
George, who was rapidly becoming a most valuable
assistant, and saw him put them aboard a freight car
and get in himself. The next time I saw him was
at Rush Springs in the Indian Territory, on top of a
freight car, skilled in all the lore of a brakeman.</p>
<p class='c000'>We reached the old camp at Willow Springs on
the thirtieth of June, 1901. The heat had already
set in, promising the hottest season that I had ever
experienced in the valley of the Big Wichita. It
grew more and more intense as the months passed,
the mercury often rising to 113 in the shade. All
the water dried up in both the natural and the artificial
tanks, and the short buffalo grass in the pastures
<span class='pageno' id='Page_245'>245</span>curled up and blew away. We were camped
in Wagoner’s great pasture, twenty-five miles wide
by fifty long, and I saw cattle die of thirst and starvation.
Some had become so hungry that they had
eaten the prickly pear, spines and all, and their
mouths were full of putrefying sores where the
spines had worked out.</p>
<p class='c000'>The ground was hot, and the air like the breath of
a furnace; and we had to haul all the water we used
in camp from six to twenty miles. To add to our
troubles, one of our horses, Baby, almost cut off her
foot in a wire fence while striking at the flies,
which, during the day, never ceased to torture man
and beast. Even at night the horned cattle were not
free from them, for they clustered around the base
of the horns, fifteen or twenty deep, like hives of
swarming bees, for rest.</p>
<p class='c000'>The country was indeed a desert and deserted.
All the people who had settled this valley on Coffee
Creek or other streams, had gone never to return;
the cowman had bought up all the homesteads.
The schoolhouse in which I had so often attended
worship had been moved from its foundations, and
the houses that had once echoed to the merry cries
of children, stood empty and desolate.</p>
<p class='c000'>How can I describe the hot winds, carrying on
their wings clouds of dust, which were so common
that year and the next? I once went to Godwin
<span class='pageno' id='Page_246'>246</span>Creek, south of Seymour, passing on the way a
hundred-acre field of corn. It belonged to an old
man, who had cultivated it until it was perfectly
clean, and the long rows of living green were beautiful
to see. When I passed it again on my way back,
a hot wind was blowing, so hot that I had to shield
my face and eyes to keep them from burning. The
beautiful field, upon which the old man had looked
with so many hopes of a rich harvest, had been
scorched and seared as if by a blast of fire.</p>
<p class='c000'>So the weeks lengthened into months, and the
merciless sky still refused us rain. At our camp
on Coffee Creek the heat was so terrible that we
could not keep eggs, butter, or milk, or many other
edibles necessary to comfort and health. The result
was that my stomach soon got out of order,
and a severe attack of biliousness set in, attended by
an incessant longing for a drink of cold, pure water.
I thought by day and dreamed by night of the well
on my farm at home, with the clear water dripping
from the bucket; for our only drink, except coffee,
was the warm, foul-tasting water which had been
brought in a barrel from twenty miles away and had
soon become stale. Even that was always giving
out at inconvenient times. Whenever we came to a
new fossil locality, and the hope was strong within
me that now we would make a rich find, George was
sure to say, “Papa, we’re out of water,” and we
had to make the long journey through the awful
heat over the dust-laden roads to the well at Seymour,
twenty miles away. When we reached it at
last, how we buried our faces in the bucket and the
cool water!</p>
<div class='figcenter id003'>
<ANTIMG src='images/i_298.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' /></div>
<div class='figcenter id003'>
<ANTIMG src='images/i_299.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' /></div>
<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_247'>247</span>But I will not dwell on this side of the picture,
because there is another side. We were finding in
wonderful abundance the material which we had
come to secure, and the hardships were forgotten in
the joy of success. In spite of the many obstacles
with which we had to contend, we secured the collection
described in that great letter from Dr. von Zittel
which I publish here in facsimile and which I
prize more than any letter I ever received.</p>
<p class='c000'>Before I accepted von Zittel’s offer that I should
conduct an expedition for him in the brakes of the
Big Wichita, I wrote to him, telling him how my
work for science had had, from a material standpoint,
no great returns. My life, I said, had been a
constant struggle to secure sufficient funds to carry
on the work, and the men who had bought my
material had for the most part felt that they were
doing good service to their museums by securing it
at the lowest possible price, without taking into consideration
that even a fossil hunter has to live.</p>
<p class='c000'>It was with pleasure indeed that I received the
answer of this great German, whose works on paleontology
are used as text-books in our universities.
<span class='pageno' id='Page_248'>248</span>Dr. von Zittel wrote: “I am sorry that from your
letter you do not consider yourself in a position to
work for the Munich Museum in Texas this spring.
I can readily understand that after your long activity
in scientific fields without material results you
are somewhat discouraged and embittered, and feel
that your services in this direction have not been
sufficiently appreciated. For my part, I have done
my best to give you credit for the scientific side of
your work, and your collections from Kansas
and Texas in the Munich Museum will always be
an everlasting memorial to the name of Charles
Sternberg.”</p>
<p class='c000'>Such a letter, from a man like von Zittel, put new
life and courage into my veins, as a similar letter
from Professor Cope had once before, and made me
feel that a little suffering more or less mattered
nothing when measured with such enduring results.
Cope is dead and von Zittel is dead, so far as such
men can die, but I have preserved their letters as
heirlooms for my children’s children; for they
testify that “no matter what the common herd may
say about me,” I have accomplished the object which
I set before myself as a boy, and have done my
humble part toward building up the great science of
paleontology. I shall perish, but my fossils will last
as long as the museums that have secured them.</p>
<p class='c000'>But to return to the Texas Permian. I will follow
<span class='pageno' id='Page_249'>249</span>my notebook for a while, as that, perhaps, is
the best way to give my readers an idea of our life
there.</p>
<p class='c000'>On the eleventh of July 1 was in Seymour. I
write: “A big dust storm struck the town, and this
evening a rain is falling. This is indeed a great relief
to me, as it will make the air cooler and give me
water in the brakes, so that I can visit localities I
could not before. My wagon, brought from Kansas,
is a narrow-gauge one, and all the roads in
Texas are cut by broad-gauge wagons. This forces
my team to pull with one set of wheels in the rut
and the other outside. Consequently the labor is
wearing them out, in connection with the awful
heat. I am, therefore, having new axles made, a
long and tedious work, and I am resting out of the
heat. Jesse S. Williamson has told me to occupy
the building owned by himself and Will Minnich.
It is a little cabin within a mile of the bone bed near
Willow Springs. It has a tank of water for the
horses, and is but a mile away from the schoolhouse,
where a well has been dug. A few bucketsful a
day, enough for camp use, trickles into it.” This
cabin proved to be a great accommodation, especially
as the owners had a stack of sorghum, which was
placed at my disposal and saved me the trouble of
hauling out hay.</p>
<p class='c000'>As one of my spindles was broken, I had to send
<span class='pageno' id='Page_250'>250</span>to Lawrence for another, and it was not until the
sixteenth that I got my wagon from the shop. I
then drove out to my old camp on Grey Creek in
Mr. Craddock’s pasture. Here, too, was the center
of a field from which I had reaped a rich harvest for
Professor Cope.</p>
<p class='c000'>On the seventeenth, my notebook states that I was
in the field all day and found fragments of skeletons
and skulls, all broken to pieces and mixed up together.
I could not find the horizon from which
these specimens came. They were all piled together
with concretions in a long, narrow wash, while
above there was a level denuded tract covered with
concretions. The only way in which I can account
for the mixture of fragmentary specimens is that a
bone bed lay above the level stretch, and in the disintegration
of the deposit, the fragments were carried
by floods into the narrow gulch, until not a sign
of the original bed was left to mark its site.</p>
<p class='c000'>I had sent a large collection from this same locality
to Professor Cope, and he had been much interested,
but had also been extremely tantalized by the
fact that there were great numbers of fragmentary
skulls, and that although the fragments looked
freshly broken, none of the pieces could be united to
form a perfect skull. I now found the same trouble
again. Possibly some of the missing fragments of
the skulls in Cope’s collection, now in the American
<span class='pageno' id='Page_251'>251</span>Museum, may be in the lot sent to Munich, and vice
versa.</p>
<p class='c000'>On the nineteenth, I found the nearly perfect skull
of a new species, and on the twentieth, another very
fine skull near the locality from which I had secured
the many fragments a day or two before. It was a
skull of the great salamander, <i>Eryops megacephalus</i>
Cope. There were six pairs of large teeth in
the roof of the mouth, and a single row of various
sizes in the mandibles. Some of the points had
been broken off and were lost. The skull is over
twenty inches long. All the bones are beautifully
sculptured on the external surface. A few years
before I had found a nearly complete skeleton of
this creature, some twelve feet in length, lying at
right angles to the Chisholm Trail. It was preserved
in hard concretions, and had weathered out on the
slope of a hill. The feet of countless cattle, just
starting out on their weary journey for Kansas and
the North, had worn away the solid siliceous
envelope to the bones.</p>
<p class='c000'>How the salamander tribe has degenerated since
the days of these powerful creatures! Supplied
with both gills and lungs, they dominated land and
water, and increasing and multiplying in the tropical
atmosphere, filled the swamps and bayous of this
region. To-day we pull from some well or spring a
weak creature called a mud puppy, and it is hard to
<span class='pageno' id='Page_252'>252</span>realize that its ancestors, twelve million years ago,
were strong and mighty, the monarchs of creation.</p>
<p class='c000'>To return to Mr. Craddock’s pasture; on July
twentieth my notes read: “I am suffering from the
heat, my tongue badly coated. However, I have got
some splendid material. If I succumb to the awful
heat and die, my discoveries will have done much
toward enriching the collection at Munich.”</p>
<p class='c000'>On July twenty-first, I continue: “It is fearfully
hot to-day, and I cannot work the beds without great
suffering. I found a little skull.”</p>
<p class='c000'>The hot weather continued, and I went out to the
cabin on Coffee Creek. Pet, our four-year-old, got
away, and when George took her from a herd of
horses, he found a big hole in her shoulder. “Both
horses are failing fast,” my notes read. “Have to
send George in for feed. It is hard on the team to
have to haul a load this weather through dust knee-deep,
with no water fit to drink.”</p>
<p class='c000'>On the twenty-sixth, I was left alone, and went a
mile north to the bone bed and began to dig into the
face of a hard greenish layer of clay-stone, near a
place where I had found some fragments in former
years. I was delighted to find a pocket with two
good skulls <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">in situ</span></i>, and the next day George returned
with his load, and I had some fresh water,
which soon, however, grew lukewarm. We found
two more skulls in the pocket referred to, one of
<span class='pageno' id='Page_253'>253</span>which was the <i>Labidosaurus hamatus</i> Cope, one of
the earliest of reptiles. Another was that of a new
genus and species which I found later, when we
went back to Grey Creek to get a camp ready to receive
Dr. Broili. He was to come directly from
Munich to my camp in the red beds.</p>
<p class='c000'>On the first of August, as we were out of provisions,
we went into town. I rented a large room
over a store building, and made tables and unpacked
specimens for Dr. Broili’s inspection. While I was
working there, a storm of grasshoppers struck the
building, beating against it like hailstones; and the
next morning the ground was covered with them.</p>
<p class='c000'>On the fifth, we drove out to our old camp on
Grey Creek, and pitched two tents with the fly
stretched between. The walls were elevated, and
we were able to make a shade against the rays of the
relentless sun. I went a couple of miles north, over
the table mountain above camp, and found two extremely
beautiful skulls of the long-horned amphibian,<SPAN name='r2' /><SPAN href='#f2' class='c015'><sup>[2]</sup></SPAN>
<i>Diplocaulus magnicornis</i> Cope, a strange
animal of which I have already spoken. I found
also a specimen of the gar-pike, that ancient fish
which has left its enameled scales in the rocks of
many formations, whose descendants are still living
in our rivers.</p>
<div class='footnote' id='f2'>
<p class='c000'><span class='label'><SPAN href='#r2'>2</SPAN>. </span>See Fig. <SPAN href='#fig_34'>34</SPAN>.</p>
</div>
<p class='c000'>On the eighth of August, in spite of the debilitating
<span class='pageno' id='Page_254'>254</span>heat, I started on a long trip to the head of
Brushy Creek, on horseback. I climbed Table
Mountain, which was, perhaps, three hundred feet
above the camp, and struck west along the divide
between the two creeks. I frequently left the horse
tied to a fence, while I plunged down into the gorges
on either side. At last, about three miles northwest
of camp, at the bend of a branch of Brushy Creek, I
noticed a denuded tract of the kind of bed I have
already described, to which an abundance of bog
iron lent a metallic luster; the very place to look
for fossils.</p>
<p class='c000'>The first thing I found was the perfect skull, six
inches long, of a batrachian (<i>Diplocaulus copei</i>
Broili); then, lying on the surface, another beautiful
skull (<i>Varanosaurus acutirostris</i> Broili), with
many of the bones of the skeleton, from which the
hard red matrix had been washed off clean. The
upper and lower jaws were locked together, and the
long row of glistening teeth shone in the fierce light.
The eyes were set far back, and the nose openings
were near the front. It was so different from anything
I had ever seen before that I was sure it must
be new. Dr. Broili, in describing it, speaks of it
as the most perfect specimen ever found in these
beds. Nearly all the other skulls I had secured are
compressed vertically, while this was compressed
laterally.</p>
<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_255'>255</span>I found in this bed hundreds of fragments of rock
filled with the glittering scales of fishes, as brilliant
now as in the days when they covered the bodies of
these old fish. Here, also, I discovered a huge
specimen of the long-horned species (<i>Diplocaulus
magnicornis?</i>), and others much smaller, which
proved to be the new <i>Diplocaulus copei</i>. “This,”
my notes say, “promises to be one of the finest
localities I have found, and pays for the days of
search under trying conditions.”</p>
<p class='c000'>When I reached camp, I found that George also
had had a red-letter day, and had found a bone bed
of minute animals on some brakes of Grey Creek
under the roots of the grass in a washout. He
brought in a skull, the smallest I had ever collected,
with a great many broken bones and teeth. One
specimen, which Dr. Broili named in my honor
<i>Cardicephalus sternbergi</i>, was not over half an inch
long. I secured here six skulls of the new <i>Diplocaulus
copei</i>, also.</p>
<p class='c000'>On Monday, the twelfth of August, Dr. Broili
reached Seymour, and George and I met him at the
station. A tall, strong, fine-looking German, with
a full beard, he impressed me very favorably. The
great difficulty was that, owing to my deaf ear, it
was very hard for me to understand his broken
English, and unfortunately I could not speak a word
of German. I judged that he had learned his
<span class='pageno' id='Page_256'>256</span>English from an Englishman and not from an
American, as he used a peculiar brogue with which
I was not familiar. George learned to understand
him better, and they became the best of friends.</p>
<p class='c000'>We went back to camp, where we had the pleasure
of Dr. Broili’s company for two weeks, during
which I formed a friendship which I have always
deeply appreciated. He was delighted with my
work and the material we had secured, but, as he
says in the introduction to his great work describing
my material, he could not stand the heat.</p>
<p class='c000'>He describes part of my material in his splendid
work on the Permian Stegocephala and reptiles,
published in Stuttgart, with one hundred and twenty
pages of text and thirteen fine plates. He says on
p. 1: “The excellent results of the expedition of Mr.
Sternberg in the spring of 1901 to Texas, which
brought many very valuable specimens of <i>Eryops</i>,
<i>Dimetredon</i>, and <i>Labidosaurus</i> to the Paleontological
Museum’s collection, caused the conservator of
the Royal Paleontological Collection, Councillor von
Zittel, to send out in the year of 1901 a second expedition
to the Permian beds of the same territory,
he being again successful in securing Mr. Charles
Sternberg, the excellent collector from Lawrence,
Kansas. Already in June of the same year he was
in the midst of his sphere of activity in the Wichita
Permian beds, near the small town of Seymour,
Baylor County, located on a branch of the Fort
Worth and Denver Railroad. On my arrival in the
camp, through the assistance of the Royal Bavarian
Academy of Science, it was made possible for me to
take part in the collection from the beginning to the
end of August. I found already a very good collection
of very rich materials, which, besides parts of
<i>Dimetredon</i>, <i>Labidosaurus</i>, <i>Pariotichus</i>, and other
Theromorphs, included an excellent collection of
different examples of <i>Diplocaulus</i>, of which some
still possessed the greater part of the vertebræ.
During my stay in that territory, our work principally
consisted in making collections from our camp.
We were compelled, on account of scarcity of water
from the great heat, to keep near Seymour.”</p>
<div id='fig_36' class='figcenter id001'>
<ANTIMG src='images/fig_36.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
<div class='ic001'>
<p><span class='sc'>Fig. 36.—Dr. Karl von Zittel.</span><br/><br/>Born September 25, 1839. Died January 5, 1904.<br/><br/>(After Pampeckj.)</p>
</div>
</div>
<div id='fig_37' class='figcenter id001'>
<ANTIMG src='images/fig_37.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
<div class='ic001'>
<p><span class='sc'>Fig. 37.—Shell of</span> <i>Toxochelys bauri</i>?<br/><br/>Discovered by Charles Sternberg in Gove Co., Kansas. (After Weiland.)</p>
</div>
</div>
<div id='fig_38' class='figcenter id001'>
<ANTIMG src='images/fig_38.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
<div class='ic001'>
<p><span class='sc'>Fig. 38.—Niobrara Group, Cretaceous chalk with cap rock of Loup Fork Tertiary, known as Castle Rock, Gove Co., Kansas.</span> (Photo, by McClung.)</p>
</div>
</div>
<div id='fig_39' class='figcenter id003'>
<ANTIMG src='images/fig_39.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
<div class='ic001'>
<p><span class='sc'>Fig. 39.—Chalk of Kansas, known as the Coffee Mill. Hell Creek.</span></p>
</div>
</div>
<div id='fig_40' class='figcenter id003'>
<ANTIMG src='images/fig_40.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
<div class='ic001'>
<p><span class='sc'>Fig. 40.—Bones of</span> <i>Platecarpus coryphæus</i>.<br/><br/>As found by Charles Sternberg. Sent for mounting to Tübingen University.</p>
</div>
</div>
<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_257'>257</span>I am a patriot, and it would have pleased me to
see all these splendid examples of ancient life enrich
our home museums; but Germany is my fatherland,
at least it was the fatherland of my fathers, and I
am glad to have been able to build up there the best
collection of Kansas and Texas forms in Europe.</p>
<p class='c000'>One of the greatest prizes of the Munich Collection
is a skeleton of <i>Labidosaurus</i>, now mounted
there and collected by myself. <i>Labidosaurus</i> is important
because it belongs to a very ancient and
primitive group of reptiles, which, according to
Prof. H. F. Osborn and other authorities, were the
ancestors of all the later forms of reptiles.</p>
<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_258'>258</span>After Dr. Broili left to return to Munich, I continued
my work, camping on east Coffee Creek.
Here again our search was rewarded. I found another
bone bed of very small lizards, some of them,
I think, not over six inches long. The skulls ranged
in size from less than half an inch to an inch in
length. Cope has given them the name <i>Lysorophus
tricarinatus</i>. Drs. Broili and Case in their valuable
papers have shown that this <i>Lysorophus</i> is one of the
most interesting genera of all this wonderful fauna,
since in the structure of the skull it is a veritable
“missing link” between the batrachia and reptilia.</p>
<p class='c000'>The deposit in which I found the <i>Lysorophus</i>
was large, containing thousands of bones and many
fine skulls. I am convinced that these creatures
must have hibernated, as many of them were coiled
in a circle in an envelope of hardened mud, and
appear to have lain down never to wake again, each
tiny reptile and its nest having been preserved
through all the ages since. The flesh, of course,
decayed soon after death, but by the process of
petrification the bones have been replaced by stone.</p>
<p class='c000'>Now I have always wanted to explain to a popular
audience what this process of petrification really is.
The word petrification should be dropped from our
vocabulary, because it signifies an impossibility. I
remember, as a boy, translating from the Latin a
sentence like this—“His bones became stone,” that
<span class='pageno' id='Page_259'>259</span>is, turned to stone, and one often hears the expression
petrified wood as meaning wood which has
turned to stone; as if there were a process in nature
by which one substance could be turned into another,
as the philosopher’s stone would have changed iron
to gold. As a matter of fact, the process denoted
by the word petrification is a process of replacement,
not of transmutation. After the death of these
ancient animals and the decay of their flesh, the
water that passed through the bones carried from
the cells of which they were made up the organic
contents which decay, and left in their place deposits
of the silica or lime which it held in solution. The
same process continued when the lagoon bed was
elevated above the water as solid rock. The rain-water,
seeping down through rock and fossil alike,
left in the bone cells the mineral matter it was carrying,
until they were filled with it. Then, in process
of time, the cell walls are broken down and rebuilt
with silica or lime, and complete fossilization, or
petrifaction as it is called, takes place, as in the case
of the fossil bones in the Texas Permian. I found
one specimen of the ladder-spined reptile in which
the bones had been entirely replaced by iron ore, and
others made up of silica.</p>
<p class='c000'>How long does it take for the mineral matter to
replace entirely the original bones? Ages upon
ages. I found on the plains of Kansas a quarry of
<span class='pageno' id='Page_260'>260</span>elephant bones, from which I took over two hundred
teeth of the Columbian mammoth, some of the
larger ones weighing fourteen pounds each. The
broken bones were scattered by the ton through the
matrix. I had them analyzed by Dr. Bailey, the
head of the chemical department of Kansas State
University, and he found only ten per cent. of silicified
matter in them; that is, they were only ten per
cent. less rich in phosphate of lime than Armour’s
ground bone meal. This great elephant lived about
the time of the Ohio mastodon, whose bones have
been found in such a position as to indicate that they
were buried when Niagara Falls were six miles below
their present site. So if we knew how long it
has taken the river to dig six miles of its big ditch,
we could tell how long it has taken to impregnate
the bones of the mammoths in central Kansas with
ten per cent. of silica. How foolish, then, to speak
of completely petrified men, when man had probably
not made his appearance in America at the time
of the mammoths.</p>
<p class='c000'>The rocks of the Texas Permian, as I have already
mentioned, are of red clay filled with concretions
of every conceivable form. I remember once
rounding a butte and seeing before me hundreds of
cocoanuts, some whole and others with the brownish
shells broken, showing the white meat within. Absent-mindedly,
I sprang from my horse to feast
<span class='pageno' id='Page_261'>261</span>upon them, to find that they were concretions which
had so closely imitated cocoanuts in shape and color
that even I, an experienced collector, had been momentarily
deceived. I knew, too, of a man who exhibited
a collection of large concretions as fossil
Hubbard squashes, and I heard no one doubting that
they were all that their labels claimed.</p>
<p class='c000'>There are two distinct formations in the Permian
of this part of Texas which give character to the
surface of the country. They are as different as if
separated by hundreds of miles. I visited one locality
on Pony Creek, where the red beds lay on top
of the gray beds conformably. Looking to the
west, a vast panorama, desolate and forlorn, of
crumbling and denuded bluffs, narrow valleys, and
beetling crags, spread out before me, with the usual
red color dominant everywhere, its monotony relieved
only here and there by the green of some
stunted mesquite or patch of grass. To the east
stretched the narrow valley of Pony Creek, whose
topography is the same as that which is so familiar
to the residents of eastern Kansas—a ledge of gray
sandstone forming a narrow escarpment on either
side and following the trend of the hills around the
ravines, with grass coming down in gentle swells to
meet it or rising to it from the bottom lands below.
The greatest thickness of this sandstone, as I observed
it, was at the head of a narrow gulch near my
<span class='pageno' id='Page_262'>262</span>camp in the creek bottom, eight miles north of Seymour.
I made a section there and sent samples of
the rock to Munich.</p>
<p class='c000'>I observed this rock under peculiar circumstances,
and found that it solved an interesting problem—that
of the water supply of the red beds. I discovered
why the water that falls where these beds
only are exposed runs off soon after a shower, except
when caught in natural or artificial tanks, so
that there are no wells or springs in the red beds,
while in the gray beds there are always springs and
streams of running water.</p>
<p class='c000'>In the September of my 1901 expedition, the
heaviest rain since May fell in torrents for an hour
and a half; water lay everywhere on the surface of
the ground. But soon after the rain stopped, it had
all disappeared. My son had discovered across the
creek a locality which was rich in fossil invertebrates,
consisting chiefly of straight and coiled
nautilus-like shells; and shortly after the downpour
I went over to set to work collecting them, as Dr.
Broili had told me that the Munich Museum was
anxious to secure such a collection. I had not been
long at work before George shouted to me that if I
did not want to swim I would better cross the creek
again at once. I followed his advice so hastily that
I left my tools behind. Instantly, a raging, boiling
flood of water covered the rocks in the bed of the
<span class='pageno' id='Page_263'>263</span>creek, over which I had just crossed dry-shod, and
rapidly rose to a height of eight feet, threatening to
submerge my camp.</p>
<p class='c000'>Looking for a good place to work on my side of
the creek, the west, I found the gulch which I have
referred to above. There was a level floor, formed
by the first stratum of the gray beds, extending
about five hundred yards to a ledge of red sandstone,
eight feet thick. The floor was covered with
debris washed from the red beds. To my astonishment,
although the surface was dry, a flood of water
was rushing out from under the upper deposits and
tumbling in a miniature waterfall over the gray
ledge, which was nearly five feet thick, into the
ravine below.</p>
<p class='c000'>The rock I found to be composed of four layers
of sandstone. The upper layer, eight inches thick,
is composed of fine-grained sand, which seems to
have been ground to an impalpable powder by the
beating of the waves. It is very compact and
heavy, and upon exposure, breaks into rectangular
blocks, so perfect in shape that they can be used for
building purposes without being touched by hammer
or chisel. The second layer breaks into large blocks
of many tons’ weight. It is coarser grained than
No. 1, and is about twenty inches thick. It contains
a few casts of invertebrate fossils. No. 3 is twelve
inches thick, and is of the same general character as
<span class='pageno' id='Page_264'>264</span>the other layers. It is literally packed with casts of
straight and coiled shells related to our living nautilus.
They are mingled in great confusion. I believe
some of the coiled shells are a foot in diameter.
This stratum is not so compact as the others, and
seems to contain more lime. No. 4 is a very solid
gray sandstone, eight inches thick, its upper surface
crossed at various angles by elevated ridges of
harder material.</p>
<p class='c000'>From these observations, I am led to the conclusion
that the pervious nature of the red beds,
which in the valley of the Wichita are about three
hundred feet thick, allows the water to sink rapidly
down through them until it reaches the impenetrable
gray sandstone; from which it runs off at whatever
angle the rocks may be tilted.</p>
<div class='chapter'>
<span class='pageno' id='Page_265'>265</span>
<h2 class='c005'>CHAPTER XI<br/> <span class='large'>CONCLUSION</span></h2></div>
<div class='c006'>
<ANTIMG class='drop-capi' src='images/i_320.jpg' width-obs='100' alt='' /></div>
<p class='drop-capi_8'>
I may begin this closing chapter by mentioning
some other specimens which I
have discovered, or which my sons have,
for, thank God, I have raised up a race of
fossil hunters. My second son, Charles M. Sternberg,
has in his person recently fulfilled a dream of
forty years of my own, by discovering the most complete
skeleton known of Professor Marsh’s great
toothed-bird, <i>Hesperornis regalis</i>, the Royal Bird
of the West. Unfortunately the skull is missing,
otherwise the nearly complete skeleton is present,
and strange to say in normal position, showing that
Dr. F. A. Lucas is right in his restoration of the
Martin specimen as mounted in the National
Museum, i. e., as a loon, a diver instead of a wader,
as had been supposed. Our specimen, however,
shows a much longer neck than he had imagined.
Strange indeed was this long-necked diver with its
tarsus at right angles with the body and its powerful
web-footed feet. The body was narrow, a little
over four inches wide, with a backbone like the
<span class='pageno' id='Page_266'>266</span>keel of a boat. The head was ten inches long and
armed with sharp teeth. By keeping the body horizontal
it could explore a column of water six feet
high and wide, for any unfortunate fish within the
zone of its activity. I would name this great loon
the Snake-Bird of the Niobrara Group. This specimen
I longed to find for so many years, but was glad
to give the credit to my son. It is to be mounted in
the American Museum, and I picture it as it left my
laboratories (Fig. <SPAN href='#fig_41'>41</SPAN>).</p>
<p class='c000'>A word also about that great flying machine of
the Cretaceous, the flying lizard <i>Pteranodon</i>. The
skeleton and a very fine skull, which my son found
on Hackberry Creek in 1906, is now mounted in the
British Museum, where my warm friend Dr. A.
Smith Woodward assures me “my specimens are
greatly admired.”</p>
<p class='c000'>Especially have I been fortunate in the Kansas
Chalk where my son, George Fryer, has charge as I
write these lines of my twentieth expedition to
those beds, and where he has discovered, and safely
collected and shipped to my laboratory, a great
plate of the beautiful stemless Crinoid <i>Uintacrinus
socialis</i>. I sent one section to Professor M. Boule,
of the National Natural History Museum of France,
at Paris. Hundreds of these rare animals are
represented in this slab (Fig. <SPAN href='#fig_42'>42</SPAN>).</p>
<div id='fig_41' class='figcenter id001'>
<ANTIMG src='images/fig_41.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
<div class='ic001'>
<p><span class='sc'>Fig. 41.—Skeleton of</span> <i>Hesperornis regalis</i>, <span class='sc'>the Giant Toothed-bird of the Kansas Cretaceous</span>.<br/><br/>Discovered by Charles M. Sternberg. In American Museum of Natural History.</p>
</div>
</div>
<div id='fig_42' class='figcenter id003'>
<ANTIMG src='images/fig_42.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
<div class='ic001'>
<p><span class='sc'>Fig. 42.—Slab of Fossil Crinoids</span>, <i>Unitacrinus socialis</i>, <span class='fss'>CONTAINING 160 CALYCES, COVERING FOUR BY SEVEN FEET</span>.</p>
</div>
</div>
<p class='c000'>Before these pages go to press, and a year after I
<span class='pageno' id='Page_267'>267</span>began work on them, I am pleased to be able to tell
my readers of two noble specimens of the Pleistocene
Age I have just secured from the plains of Kansas,
that great treasure house of the animals of the past.
One is a majestic Bison, whose head towering above
that of his fellows supported a pair of horn cores
measuring six feet from tip to tip. Along the curve
the distance is eight feet. The length of the head is
two feet, the distance between the horns sixteen
inches, and from the center of the orbits, one foot.
These splendid horn cores were uncovered through
a fortunate chance. It seems that the Missouri
Pacific Railway, wishing to shorten the creek in the
vicinity of Hoxie, Sheridan County, Kansas, cut a
new right-of-way for it across a bend. Their excavation
came within two feet of the bones buried below,
thirty-five feet from the surface of the earth; a
friendly freshet washed them out, and they were
discovered by Mr. Frank Lee and Harley Henderson,
of Hoxie, Kansas, June 15, 1902. I was so
fortunate as to secure them in June, 1908. I have
filled them with white shellac, and they are now in
condition to be preserved always, a specimen of the
grand old bison of the Pleistocene time. Now their
burial places are three thousand feet nearer the stars
than the day they were buried there, as then the
climate was semi-tropical and the land they roamed
over near sea level. The largest pair of horn cores
<span class='pageno' id='Page_268'>268</span>of a similar bison are preserved in the Cincinnati
Natural History Museum. I copy from one of
their records: “The most conspicuous figure on
Plate IX, with immense horn cores, is of the long
extinct broad-fronted bison. This specimen, by far
the finest of its kind in existence, is the greatest
prize in the Cincinnati Museum. It was found in
1869 on Brush Creek, Brown County, Ohio, and
through the efforts of Dr. O. D. Norton it was acquired
by the Museum in 1875.” It gives me great
pleasure to show my readers a photograph of the
Kansas form that measures along the curve of the
horn cores a foot and a half more than the famous
Ohio specimen. (Fig. <SPAN href='#fig_43'>43</SPAN>.)</p>
<p class='c000'>The great Columbian Elephant, whose jaw I illustrate
and have still in my possession, represents
one of the largest, or the largest, of its kind ever discovered.
It was found near the town of Ness City,
in Ness County, Kansas. This giant lived at the
same time the great Bison existed. The last molars
have pushed out the worn premolars and the other
two molars, and occupy the entire jaw, having a
grinding surface of 5 × 9 inches. The lower parts
of the teeth flare out like a fan, and measure twenty
inches along the top of the roots. The greatest circumference
of the jaws is 26½ inches, and the
length 32 inches. Unfortunately, the articulations
are worn away, likely by rolling in some river bed.
I secured this noble representative of American
Elephants in June, 1908 (Fig. <SPAN href='#fig_44'>44</SPAN>).</p>
<div id='fig_43' class='figcenter id003'>
<ANTIMG src='images/fig_43.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
<div class='ic001'>
<p><span class='sc'>Fig. 43.—Skull and Horns of Giant Bison from Hoxie, Kansas.</span><br/><br/>Spread of horn cores six feet, one inch; length along curve, eight feet.</p>
</div>
</div>
<div id='fig_44' class='figcenter id001'>
<ANTIMG src='images/fig_44.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
<div class='ic001'>
<p><span class='sc'>Fig. 44.—Jaw of Columbian Mammoth</span>, <i>Elephas columbi</i>.<br/><br/>Discovered in Ness County, Kansas.</p>
</div>
</div>
<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_269'>269</span>How rich are the strata that compose the earth’s
crust only a fossil hunter can fully realize. Take,
for instance, western Kansas, where the soil beneath
our feet is one vast cemetery. I know of a ravine
in Logan County which cuts through four great formations.
The lower levels, of reddish and blue
chalk, are filled with the remains of swimming lizards,
with the wonderful Pteranodonts, the most
perfect flying machines ever known, with the
toothed bird <i>Hesperornis</i>, the royal bird of the
West, and the fish-bird <i>Ichthyornis</i>, with fish-like biconcave
vertebræ, with fishes small and great (one
form over sixteen feet long), and huge sea-tortoises.
Above are the black shales of the Fort Pierre Cretaceous,
thousands of feet of which are exposed in
the bad lands of the upper Missouri. In this formation
the dinosaurs reign supreme. Still higher are
the mortar beds of the Loup Fork Tertiary, where
the dominant type changes from reptiles to mammals.
Here, in western Kansas, are found great
numbers of the short-limbed rhinoceros, the large
land-turtle, <i>Testudo orthopygia</i>, several inferior
tusked mastodons, the saber-toothed tiger, the three-toed
horse, and a deer only about eighteen inches
high. Higher still, where the grass roots shoot
down to feed on the bones, are the Columbian mammoth,
<span class='pageno' id='Page_270'>270</span>the one-toed horse, like our species of to-day,
a camel like our South American llama, and a bison
far larger than the present species.</p>
<p class='c000'>The living bison has become almost extinct itself,
through the agency of man. And in the layer of
soil which covers all these formations, an old arrowhead
and the crumbling bones of a modern buffalo
give an object lesson in the manner in which these
relics of the earlier world have been preserved. So
races of animals, as of men, reach their highest state
of development, retrograde, and give place to other
races, which, living in the same regions, obey the
same laws of progress.</p>
<p class='c000'>My readers will be pleased, I am sure, to know
that just before these pages go to press I am permitted
to tell the story of our last great hunt in Converse
County, Wyoming, during July, August, and
September, 1908, for the largest skull of any known
vertebrate, the great three-horned dinosaur, <i>Triceratops</i>
(Fig. <SPAN href='#fig_45'>45</SPAN>). Only thirteen good specimens are
known to American museums, 7 of which are in Yale
University Museum, and were collected, I believe, by
J. B. Hatcher. From his field notes Mr. Hatcher
has made a map of this region with crosses to indicate
the localities in which skulls have been found,
and 30 are so indicated, but I soon learned that he
noted broken and poor material, as well as the more
perfect. With my three sons I entered the region
with enthusiasm on the hunt for one of these skulls
for the British Museum of Natural History.</p>
<div id='fig_45' class='figcenter id003'>
<ANTIMG src='images/fig_45.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
<div class='ic001'>
<p><span class='sc'>Fig. 45.—Three-horned Dinosaur</span>, <i>Triceratops</i> sp.<br/><br/>Restoration by Osborn and Knight. (From painting in American Museum of Natural History.)</p>
</div>
</div>
<div id='fig_46' class='figcenter id003'>
<ANTIMG src='images/fig_46.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
<div class='ic001'>
<p><span class='sc'>Fig. 46.—Duck-billed Dinosaur</span>, <i>Trachodon mirabilis</i>.<br/><br/>Restoration by Osborn and Knight. (From painting in American Museum of Natural History.)</p>
</div>
</div>
<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_271'>271</span>I was not employed by that institution, but the
agreement was, in case I secured a good specimen,
it was to go to them. I must acknowledge I felt
rather dubious when Dr. Osborn of the American
Museum wrote me that he had had parties in these
beds four years, searching without success for a
specimen. For weeks and weeks we four examined
every bit of exposed rock in vain. The rock consisted
of clay and sandstone, the latter both massive
and cross-bedded. Scattered through the great deposits
of sandstone were peculiar-shaped masses of
very hard flinty rock, with the same physical characteristics
but with superior hardness. These added
strange forms to the land sculptury. Almost every
form the mind can imagine is found here, from
colonies of giant mushrooms, to human faces so
startling as to secure instant attention from the
observer. (Figs. 38 and 39.)</p>
<p class='c000'>A general view of the country from an elevated
butte shows many cone-like mounds, resembling
table mountains or even haystacks in the hazy distance!
As the rocks, and even the flint-like material,
readily disintegrate, the creeks that run east into the
Cheyenne River soon radiate like the rays of a fan
and deeply scar the narrow divides into rather deep
canyons and narrow ravines. Perhaps a thousand
<span class='pageno' id='Page_272'>272</span>feet of these fresh-water beds, are laid down in a
basin surrounded, on all sides, by the marine, Fort
Pierre, and Fox Hills Cretaceous.</p>
<p class='c000'>Buck Creek on the south, Cheyenne River on
north and east, and a line through the mouth of
Lightning Creek would roughly give the area of the
Laramie Beds we explored. They cover about a
thousand square miles. Here in a country given up
entirely to cattle and sheep ranges with but little of
the country fenced, meeting no one but now and
then a lonely sheep herder, my tribe of fossil hunters
entered with bounding hope that we might find
some of these famous dinosaurs.</p>
<p class='c000'>Here is the border land between the Age of Reptiles
and of Mammals, where mammals first appear
as small marsupials. We secured several teeth of
these early mammals. Day after day hoping
against hope we struggled bravely on. Every night
the boys gave answer to my anxious inquiry, What
have you found? Nothing. Often we ran out of
palatable food, as we were 65 miles from our base,
and did not always realize how our appetites would
be sharpened by our miles of tramping over the
rough hills and ravines. One day in August, Levi
and I started in our one-horse buggy to a camp we
had made near the cedar hills on Schneider Creek.
As we passed a small exposure which I had not gone
over, I left him to drive and went over the beds of
<span class='pageno' id='Page_273'>273</span>reddish shale, the remnant of an old peat-bog. I
found the end of a horn core of <i>Triceratops</i>, and
further excavation showed I had stumbled upon the
burial place of one of these rare dinosaurs. How
thankful we were that after so much useless labor
we had at last secured the great object of our hunt.
It will prove a beautiful skull when prepared and
mounted under the direction of Dr. Smith Woodward,
Keeper of Geology in the British Museum,
where so many of my discoveries have gone.</p>
<p class='c000'>Unfortunately the skull was somewhat broken up,
and one horn core is missing. But one side of the
face with the large horn core, the back of the head,
and the great posterior crest, seems entire, as well as
large pieces of the other side of the face, and a fine
specimen will be made of it. The total length of
the skull is 6 feet 6 inches. The horn core over the
eye is 2 feet 4 inches high; while the circumference
in the middle is 2 feet 8 inches, and it is 15 inches in
diameter at the base.</p>
<p class='c000'>This was a fully matured animal. As the bony
ossicles of the head armature are co-ossified with the
margin and remain as undulations more or less
sharply defined, I am inclined to believe that they are
ornaments. They might assist a little in defense
but not offense.</p>
<p class='c000'>In the mean time my oldest son, George, told me
of a region he had explored a half-mile from our
<span class='pageno' id='Page_274'>274</span>camp near the head of a ravine. Here we had
found a natural cistern full of rain-water, protected
from the sun and cattle by a couple of great concretion-like
masses of rock that covered it. Over the
divide where I had found the great skull, between
Boggy and the breaks of Schneider near its
mouth in Cheyenne River, George took Levi and
myself. The evening before, I took the skull in to
Lusk for shipment. George pointed out a locality
in which he had found a bone-bed, where we later
secured many teeth of reptiles and fishes, scales of
ganoid fishes, bones of small dinosaurs and crocodiles
and the beautifully sculptured shells of turtles,
Trionyx, etc. As there was still a tract of a few
hundred yards to be explored the two boys started
to go over it, while I went to the bone-bed. They
soon joined me with the information that they had
found some bones sticking out of a high escarpment
of sandstone. George had found part of the specimen
in one place and Levi another part soon afterwards.
I requested George to carefully uncover
the floor on which the bones lay.</p>
<p class='c000'>While we were taking in our skull, George and
Levi ran nearly out of provisions, and the last day
of our absence lived on boiled potatoes. But in
spite of this they had removed a mass of sandstone
12 feet wide, 15 feet deep, and 10 feet high.</p>
<p class='c000'>Shall I ever experience such joy as when I stood
<span class='pageno' id='Page_275'>275</span>in the quarry for the first time, and beheld lying
in state the most complete skeleton of an extinct
animal I have ever seen, after forty years of experience
as a collector! The crowning specimen of
my life work!</p>
<p class='c000'>A great duck-billed dinosaur, a relative of <i>Trachodon
mirabilis</i>, lay on its back with front limbs
stretched out as if imploring aid, while the hind
limbs in a convulsive effort were drawn up and
folded against the walls of the abdomen. The head
lay under the right shoulder. One theory might be
that he had fallen on his back into a morass, and
either broken his neck or had been unable to withdraw
his head from under his body, and had choked
to death or drowned. If this was so the antiseptic
character of the peat-bog had preserved the flesh
until, through decay, the contents of the viscera had
been replaced with sand. It lay there with expanded
ribs as in life, wrapped in the impressions of the
skin whose beautiful patterns of octagonal plates
marked the fine sandstone above the bones. George
had cut away the rock, leaving enough to give the
impression that even the flesh was replaced by sandstone,
giving an exact picture of him, as he breathed
his last some five million of years ago.</p>
<p class='c000'>A more probable explanation, judging from the
shape of the skin outline which covers the abdomen
and is sunken into the body cavity at least a foot,
<span class='pageno' id='Page_276'>276</span>is that the great creature died in the water. The
gases forming in the body floated the carcass, which
was then carried by currents to the final burial place.
When the gases escaped, the skin collapsed and occupied
their place; the carcass sank head first and
feet upward, the former dragging under the shoulder
as the body came to rest on the mud of the
bottom.</p>
<p class='c000'>Quite different indeed is this grand example of
extinct life from the one restored and of which an
ideal picture is given in this book (Fig. <SPAN href='#fig_46'>46</SPAN>). In the
first place, in the specimen we discovered the ribs
are expanded, the great chest cavity measuring 18
inches deep, 24 inches long, and 30 inches wide. I
have no doubt but that with lungs expanded to their
full capacity, he often swam across streams of water
in the tropical jungle in which he lived and died.
Further, the front limbs are not mere arms, that
never touched the ground, but were used in locomotion,
as there are toes with hoof-bones, not so large
as those of the hind feet but with the same pattern,
and a divergent thumb, that had a round bone for
its ungual. Consequently the animal could use the
front feet as clumsy hands to hold down the limb
of a tree from which he was cropping the tender
foliage, or banners of moss. There were three powerful
hoofs on each hind foot.</p>
<p class='c000'>I do not question, in the presence of this individual,
<span class='pageno' id='Page_277'>277</span>which is complete excepting the hind feet,
tail and left tibia and fibula, but that the reptile often
stood erect, supporting his ponderous weight while
feeding on the leaves of the forest. But when it
walked it used its front limbs as well. A remarkable
character are the countless rods of solid bone
that lay along the backbone in the flesh, and appear
like ossified tendons similar to those in the leg of a
turkey. Hundreds of ossified rods appeared, row
after row, shaped like Indian beads, as thick as a
lead pencil in the center and beveled off to a small
round point. It has occurred to me that these were
for defense; that when a great <i>Tyrannosaurus rex</i>
leaped on his back, his powerful claws found no
lodgment in the flesh on account of these bony rods
that could not be penetrated. Thus our dinosaur
would shake off his enemy.</p>
<hr class='c014' />
<p class='c000'>How wonderful are the works of an Almighty
hand! The life that now is, how small a fraction
of the life that has been! Miles of strata, mountain
high, are but the stony sepulchers of the life of the
past.</p>
<p class='c000'>How rapidly has the field expanded which I
entered as a pioneer some forty years ago! In 1867
I knew only five paleontologists—Agassiz, Lesquereux,
Marsh, Cope, and Leidy, with but few followers;
while to-day, Harvard, Princeton, the
<span class='pageno' id='Page_278'>278</span>American, the Carnegie, the Field, and the National
Museums have all built up great collections of the
animals and plants of the past, and the number of
publications on fossil animals has reached an enormous
total.</p>
<p class='c000'>I had the pleasure of attending the meeting of the
American Association for the Advancement of
Science that met in the American Museum in New
York at the mid-winter session in 1906. Professor
Osborn introduced me to his splendid Head Preparator,
Mr. Hermann, who has mounted the skeletons
of the great <i>Brontosaurus</i>, <i>Allosaurus</i>, and so
many other examples of extinct animals. Mr. Hermann
was requested by the Professor to devote all
his spare time to showing me anything the exhibition
and storerooms contained, prepared or unprepared,
and to do all in his power to make my visit
pleasant. I certainly felt at home in that paradise
of ancient animals, many of which I had collected
for science on my own explorations. The magnificent
halls in which they are exhibited are a wonderful
tribute paid by the wealth and intelligence of the
citizen of Greater New York to science. How
admirable that Mr. Jesup should use his private
fortune as the means to take from the obscurity
of the private dwelling of the late Professor
Cope his great collection, to which I was a contributor
for eight years; and he has placed it under
<span class='pageno' id='Page_279'>279</span>Professor Henry F. Osborn, who with the assistance
of Drs. J. L. Wortman, W. D. Matthew, and
others, has brought order out of chaos and presented
in intelligible shape not only that collection but
many others from the fossil fields of the West.</p>
<p class='c000'>It is a glorious thought to me that I have lived
to see my wildest dreams come true, that I have
seen stately halls rise to be graced with many of the
animals of the past that lived in countless thousands,
and that I have had the pleasure of securing some of
the treasures, in the shape of complete skeletons,
which now adorn those halls.</p>
<p class='c000'>I stood on Columbia Heights that same year of
1906, and my heart swelled with pride when I
looked down on that teeming metropolis and remembered
that I too was a native of the Empire
State. Then I thought of my distant prairie state
of Kansas, and gloried in the thought that the best
years of my life had been spent in her ancient ocean
and lake beds, those old cemeteries of creation.</p>
<p class='c000'>That past life, at least a very small fraction of it,
I have sought to bring before my readers with pen
pictures. We have men among us who can put
their conceptions of the ancient inhabitants of land
and sea and air on canvas, and among them are Mr.
Charles R. Knight, of the American Museum, and
Mr. Sidney Prentice, of the Carnegie Museum.
Mr. Prentice I knew as a boy, and he has done me
<span class='pageno' id='Page_280'>280</span>the honor to assure me that my words of counsel
have done something at least toward assisting him
to make the choice of following the work not only
of an artist in a paleontological museum, but in
portraying with pencil and brush the ideal pictures
of the early denizens of earth as in life. His success
is shown in his restorations of <i>Clidastes</i>. The
results of Mr. Knight’s restorations of many of the
extinct animals brighten my pages, thanks to my
friend Professor Henry F. Osborn, so if I have
failed in my pen pictures to take my readers into
the misty past, these brilliant restorations will certainly
have the desired effect.</p>
<p class='c000'>I cannot hope in this short space to have given
more than a passing glance at the life of a fossil
hunter. It has been one of joy to me; I should not
like to have missed making the discoveries I have
made, and I would willingly undergo the same hardships
to accomplish the same results. And if my
story does anything to interest people in fossils, I
shall feel that I have not written in vain.</p>
<p class='c000'>When I requested Professor William K. Gregory
of Columbia University to be the final reader of the
manuscript of this book, “The Life of a Fossil
Hunter,” shall I ever forget his kind words? “I
hope you will not feel that you are under any personal
obligations whatever, because this slight
service is simply laid upon me by the necessities of
<span class='pageno' id='Page_281'>281</span>the case, i. e., by the fact that your whole life and
work have placed all paleontologists under lasting
obligations to you.” Surely “my cup runneth
over; I have a goodly heritage.” Greater than their
obligations to me, are mine to the men of science
who have described, published, but, above all, have
prepared and exhibited the noble monuments of
creative genius which I have been so fortunate
as to discover and make known to the civilized
world. My own body will crumble in dust, my soul
return to God who gave it, but the works of His
hands, those animals of other days, will give joy and
pleasure “to generations yet unborn.”</p>
<div class='nf-center-c1'>
<div class='nf-center c004'>
<div>FINIS</div>
</div></div>
<div class='chapter'>
<span class='pageno' id='Page_283'>283</span>
<h2 class='c005'>INDEX</h2></div>
<ul class='index c004'>
<li class='c016'><span class='pageno' id='Page_284'>284</span><i>Adocus</i>, <SPAN href='#Page_77'>77</SPAN></li>
<li class='c016'>Amphibian, Long-horned, <SPAN href='#Page_253'>253</SPAN></li>
<li class='c016'>Anderson, A. E., <SPAN href='#Page_58'>58</SPAN></li>
<li class='c016'>Anseres, Fossil, <SPAN href='#Page_160'>160</SPAN></li>
<li class='c016'><i>Aphelops megalodus</i>, <SPAN href='#Page_123'>123</SPAN></li>
<li class='c016'><i>Archælurus debilis</i>, <SPAN href='#Page_189'>189</SPAN></li>
<li class='c016'><i>Aspidophyllum trilobatum</i>, <SPAN href='#Page_19'>19</SPAN></li>
<li class='c004'>Bad Lands, Expedition to, <SPAN href='#Page_61'>61</SPAN>–98</li>
<li class='c016'>Bailey, Dr., <SPAN href='#Page_260'>260</SPAN></li>
<li class='c016'>Baird, Letter from Spencer F., <SPAN href='#Page_20'>20</SPAN></li>
<li class='c016'>Basin, John Day, <SPAN href='#Page_173'>173</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_190'>190</SPAN></li>
<li class='c016'>Batrachians, Fossil, <SPAN href='#Page_161'>161</SPAN></li>
<li class='c016'>Beds, Laramie, <SPAN href='#Page_272'>272</SPAN></li>
<li class='c016'>Benton, Fort, <SPAN href='#Page_79'>79</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_97'>97</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_98'>98</SPAN></li>
<li class='c016'><i>Betulites westii</i>, <SPAN href='#Page_30'>30</SPAN></li>
<li class='c016'>Bison, Giant Fossil, <SPAN href='#Page_267'>267</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_268'>268</SPAN></li>
<li class='c016'>Blackbird, Fossil, <SPAN href='#Page_161'>161</SPAN></li>
<li class='c016'>Bourne, W. O., <SPAN href='#Page_58'>58</SPAN></li>
<li class='c016'>Broili, Dr. F., <SPAN href='#Page_112'>112</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_234'>234</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_253'>253</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_254'>254</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_255'>255</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_258'>258</SPAN></li>
<li class='c016'>Bromfield, Corporal, <SPAN href='#Page_226'>226</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_227'>227</SPAN></li>
<li class='c016'>Brontosaurus, <SPAN href='#Page_78'>78</SPAN></li>
<li class='c016'>Brouse, A. W., <SPAN href='#Page_101'>101</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_121'>121</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_141'>141</SPAN></li>
<li class='c016'>Button, Mr. Lee, <SPAN href='#Page_157'>157</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_168'>168</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_169'>169</SPAN></li>
<li class='c004'>Camel, Fossil, <SPAN href='#Page_187'>187</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_188'>188</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_242'>242</SPAN></li>
<li class='c016'>Carboniferous, Upper, <SPAN href='#Page_135'>135</SPAN></li>
<li class='c016'><i>Cardicephalus sternbergi</i>, <SPAN href='#Page_255'>255</SPAN></li>
<li class='c016'>Chalk, Expedition to Kansas, <SPAN href='#Page_32'>32</SPAN>–60
<ul>
<li>Further Work in Kansas, <SPAN href='#Page_99'>99</SPAN>–119</li>
</ul>
</li>
<li class='c016'><i>Clidastes</i>, <SPAN href='#Page_53'>53</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_135'>135</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_280'>280</SPAN>
<ul>
<li><i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">tortor</span></i>, <SPAN href='#Page_44'>44</SPAN></li>
<li><i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">velox</span></i>, <SPAN href='#Page_51'>51</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_53'>53</SPAN></li>
<li><i>westi</i>, <SPAN href='#Page_135'>135</SPAN></li>
</ul>
</li>
<li class='c016'>College, Vassar, <SPAN href='#Page_53'>53</SPAN></li>
<li class='c016'><span class='pageno' id='Page_285'>285</span>Condon, Prof., <SPAN href='#Page_160'>160</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_161'>161</SPAN></li>
<li class='c016'>Coots, Fossil, <SPAN href='#Page_161'>161</SPAN></li>
<li class='c016'>Cope, Prof. E. D., Characteristics of, <SPAN href='#Page_45'>45</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_69'>69</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_74'>74</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_75'>75</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_83'>83</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_84'>84</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_89'>89</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_90'>90</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_91'>91</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_92'>92</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_93'>93</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_95'>95</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_239'>239</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_242'>242</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_243'>243</SPAN>
<ul>
<li>Expedition to Bad Lands with, <SPAN href='#Page_61'>61</SPAN>–89</li>
<li>Horned Dinosaurs Discovered by, <SPAN href='#Page_87'>87</SPAN></li>
<li>Letter from, <SPAN href='#Page_33'>33</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_142'>142</SPAN></li>
<li>News of Death of, <SPAN href='#Page_241'>241</SPAN></li>
<li>Speech Given by, <SPAN href='#Page_45'>45</SPAN></li>
<li>Memory and Imagination of, <SPAN href='#Page_75'>75</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_76'>76</SPAN></li>
<li>Wit of, <SPAN href='#Page_98'>98</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_99'>99</SPAN></li>
</ul>
</li>
<li class='c016'>Cormorants, Fossil, <SPAN href='#Page_160'>160</SPAN></li>
<li class='c016'>Coulée, Grand, <SPAN href='#Page_175'>175</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_204'>204</SPAN></li>
<li class='c016'>County, Converse, <SPAN href='#Page_270'>270</SPAN>
<ul>
<li>Gove, <SPAN href='#Page_34'>34</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_118'>118</SPAN></li>
<li>Logan, <SPAN href='#Page_35'>35</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_38'>38</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_50'>50</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_54'>54</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_57'>57</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_60'>60</SPAN></li>
</ul>
</li>
<li class='c016'>Coyote, <SPAN href='#Page_211'>211</SPAN></li>
<li class='c016'>Creek, Beaver, <SPAN href='#Page_138'>138</SPAN>
<ul>
<li>Bushy, <SPAN href='#Page_234'>234</SPAN></li>
<li>Butte, <SPAN href='#Page_50'>50</SPAN></li>
<li>Chapman, <SPAN href='#Page_101'>101</SPAN></li>
<li>Coffee, <SPAN href='#Page_245'>245</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_246'>246</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_252'>252</SPAN></li>
<li>Cottonwood, <SPAN href='#Page_273'>273</SPAN></li>
<li>Deer, <SPAN href='#Page_126'>126</SPAN></li>
<li>Dog, <SPAN href='#Page_68'>68</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_77'>77</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_79'>79</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_81'>81</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_88'>88</SPAN></li>
<li>Gray, <SPAN href='#Page_250'>250</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_253'>253</SPAN></li>
<li>Hackberry 34, <SPAN href='#Page_35'>35</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_38'>38</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_107'>107</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_135'>135</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_266'>266</SPAN></li>
<li>Hay, <SPAN href='#Page_60'>60</SPAN></li>
<li>Indian, <SPAN href='#Page_241'>241</SPAN></li>
<li>Pine, <SPAN href='#Page_170'>170</SPAN></li>
<li>Pony, <SPAN href='#Page_261'>261</SPAN></li>
<li>Prairie Dog, <SPAN href='#Page_126'>126</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_127'>127</SPAN></li>
<li>Sappa, <SPAN href='#Page_120'>120</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_121'>121</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_140'>140</SPAN></li>
</ul>
</li>
<li class='c016'>Cretaceous, Life of the, <SPAN href='#Page_54'>54</SPAN></li>
<li class='c016'>Crinoid, Stemless, <SPAN href='#Page_266'>266</SPAN></li>
<li class='c004'><span class='pageno' id='Page_286'>286</span>Davis, Leander, <SPAN href='#Page_196'>196</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_198'>198</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_202'>202</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_203'>203</SPAN></li>
<li class='c016'>Day, Bill, <SPAN href='#Page_173'>173</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_178'>178</SPAN></li>
<li class='c016'>Dayville, <SPAN href='#Page_189'>189</SPAN></li>
<li class='c016'>Desert, Expedition to the Oregon, <SPAN href='#Page_144'>144</SPAN>–169</li>
<li class='c016'><i>Diceratherium nanum</i>, <SPAN href='#Page_189'>189</SPAN></li>
<li class='c016'><i>Dimetredon</i>, <SPAN href='#Page_217'>217</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_256'>256</SPAN></li>
<li class='c016'>Dinosaur, <SPAN href='#Page_77'>77</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_273'>273</SPAN>
<ul>
<li>Duck-billed, <SPAN href='#Page_275'>275</SPAN></li>
<li>Horned, <SPAN href='#Page_87'>87</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_88'>88</SPAN></li>
<li>Three-horned, <SPAN href='#Page_270'>270</SPAN></li>
</ul>
</li>
<li class='c016'><i>Diplocaulus</i>, <SPAN href='#Page_227'>227</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_257'>257</SPAN>
<ul>
<li><i>copei</i>, <SPAN href='#Page_254'>254</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_255'>255</SPAN></li>
<li><i>magnicornis</i>, <SPAN href='#Page_240'>240</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_253'>253</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_255'>255</SPAN></li>
</ul>
</li>
<li class='c016'><i>Dissorophus</i>, <SPAN href='#Page_242'>242</SPAN></li>
<li class='c016'><i>Dolichorhynchus osborni</i>, <SPAN href='#Page_111'>111</SPAN></li>
<li class='c016'>Duncan, Mr., <SPAN href='#Page_154'>154</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_156'>156</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_158'>158</SPAN></li>
<li class='c004'>Eastman, Dr., <SPAN href='#Page_114'>114</SPAN></li>
<li class='c016'>Elephant, Columbian, <SPAN href='#Page_268'>268</SPAN></li>
<li class='c016'><i>Elephas primigenius</i>, <SPAN href='#Page_160'>160</SPAN></li>
<li class='c016'><i>Elotherium humerosum</i>, <SPAN href='#Page_186'>186</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_187'>187</SPAN></li>
<li class='c016'><i>Enhydrocyon stenocephalus</i>, <SPAN href='#Page_189'>189</SPAN></li>
<li class='c016'><i>Eryops</i>, <SPAN href='#Page_217'>217</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_227'>227</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_256'>256</SPAN>
<ul>
<li><i>megacephalus</i>, <SPAN href='#Page_251'>251</SPAN></li>
</ul>
</li>
<li class='c004'>Ficus, <SPAN href='#Page_23'>23</SPAN></li>
<li class='c016'>Flamingo, Fossil, <SPAN href='#Page_161'>161</SPAN></li>
<li class='c016'>Flora, Tertiary, <SPAN href='#Page_172'>172</SPAN></li>
<li class='c016'>Fossils, Formation of, <SPAN href='#Page_258'>258</SPAN>–260
<ul>
<li>Method of Excavating, <SPAN href='#Page_41'>41</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_42'>42</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_88'>88</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_109'>109</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_110'>110</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_130'>130</SPAN></li>
</ul>
</li>
<li class='c004'>Galyean, Frank, <SPAN href='#Page_230'>230</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_231'>231</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_232'>232</SPAN></li>
<li class='c016'>Gar-pike, <SPAN href='#Page_253'>253</SPAN></li>
<li class='c016'>Gorge, Picture, <SPAN href='#Page_173'>173</SPAN></li>
<li class='c016'>Grebes, Fossil, <SPAN href='#Page_160'>160</SPAN></li>
<li class='c016'>Gregory, Prof. William K., <SPAN href='#Page_280'>280</SPAN></li>
<li class='c016'>Group, Fort Pierre, <SPAN href='#Page_70'>70</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_135'>135</SPAN>
<ul>
<li>Loup Fork, <SPAN href='#Page_120'>120</SPAN></li>
<li>Niobrara, <SPAN href='#Page_50'>50</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_122'>122</SPAN></li>
</ul>
</li>
<li class='c016'>Grouse, Fossil, <SPAN href='#Page_161'>161</SPAN></li>
<li class='c016'>Gulls, Fossil, <SPAN href='#Page_160'>160</SPAN></li>
<li class='c004'>Hamman, George, <SPAN href='#Page_207'>207</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_209'>209</SPAN></li>
<li class='c016'><i>Haploscapha grandis</i>, <SPAN href='#Page_108'>108</SPAN></li>
<li class='c016'><span class='pageno' id='Page_287'>287</span>Hatcher, Prof. J. B., <SPAN href='#Page_70'>70</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_123'>123</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_133'>133</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_270'>270</SPAN></li>
<li class='c016'>Hayden, Dr., <SPAN href='#Page_78'>78</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_205'>205</SPAN></li>
<li class='c016'>Henry, Major, <SPAN href='#Page_229'>229</SPAN></li>
<li class='c016'>Hermann, Adam, <SPAN href='#Page_58'>58</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_278'>278</SPAN></li>
<li class='c016'>Heron, Fossil, <SPAN href='#Page_161'>161</SPAN></li>
<li class='c016'><i>Hesperornis regalis</i>, <SPAN href='#Page_265'>265</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_266'>266</SPAN></li>
<li class='c016'>Hill, Mr. Russell, <SPAN href='#Page_101'>101</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_141'>141</SPAN></li>
<li class='c016'>Hill, Smoky, <SPAN href='#Page_109'>109</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_113'>113</SPAN></li>
<li class='c016'>Holland, Dr. W. J., <SPAN href='#Page_115'>115</SPAN></li>
<li class='c016'>Hollick, Dr. A., <SPAN href='#Page_21'>21</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_22'>22</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_26'>26</SPAN></li>
<li class='c016'>Horse, Three-toed, <SPAN href='#Page_126'>126</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_188'>188</SPAN></li>
<li class='c016'>Howard, General, <SPAN href='#Page_191'>191</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_196'>196</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_197'>197</SPAN></li>
<li class='c016'>Hoxie, <SPAN href='#Page_267'>267</SPAN></li>
<li class='c016'>Huff, Joe, <SPAN href='#Page_170'>170</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_177'>177</SPAN></li>
<li class='c004'><i>Ichthyornis</i>, <SPAN href='#Page_269'>269</SPAN></li>
<li class='c016'><i>Inoceramus</i>, <SPAN href='#Page_135'>135</SPAN></li>
<li class='c016'>Isaac, J. C., <SPAN href='#Page_47'>47</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_48'>48</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_61'>61</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_65'>65</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_74'>74</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_79'>79</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_80'>80</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_81'>81</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_83'>83</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_86'>86</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_93'>93</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_94'>94</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_98'>98</SPAN></li>
<li class='c016'>Island, Cow, <SPAN href='#Page_79'>79</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_87'>87</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_89'>89</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_91'>91</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_98'>98</SPAN>
<ul>
<li>Long, <SPAN href='#Page_132'>132</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_134'>134</SPAN></li>
</ul>
</li>
<li class='c004'>Klamath, Fort, <SPAN href='#Page_142'>142</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_146'>146</SPAN></li>
<li class='c016'>Knight, Charles R., <SPAN href='#Page_279'>279</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_280'>280</SPAN></li>
<li class='c016'>Knowlton, Dr. F. H., <SPAN href='#Page_24'>24</SPAN></li>
<li class='c004'><i>Labidosaurus</i>, <SPAN href='#Page_256'>256</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_257'>257</SPAN>
<ul>
<li><i>hamatus</i>, <SPAN href='#Page_253'>253</SPAN></li>
</ul>
</li>
<li class='c016'>Lacoe, R. D., <SPAN href='#Page_24'>24</SPAN></li>
<li class='c016'>Lake, Fossil, <SPAN href='#Page_158'>158</SPAN>
<ul>
<li>Silver, <SPAN href='#Page_148'>148</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_149'>149</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_154'>154</SPAN></li>
</ul>
</li>
<li class='c016'>Leaves, Formation of Fossil, <SPAN href='#Page_28'>28</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_29'>29</SPAN>
<ul>
<li>Preparation of Fossil, <SPAN href='#Page_25'>25</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_26'>26</SPAN></li>
</ul>
</li>
<li class='c016'>Lesquereux, Dr., <SPAN href='#Page_19'>19</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_21'>21</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_22'>22</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_23'>23</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_24'>24</SPAN></li>
<li class='c016'>Lizard, Fin-backed, <SPAN href='#Page_227'>227</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_234'>234</SPAN>
<ul>
<li>Flying, <SPAN href='#Page_266'>266</SPAN></li>
</ul>
</li>
<li class='c016'>Loosely, George, <SPAN href='#Page_148'>148</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_152'>152</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_158'>158</SPAN></li>
<li class='c016'>Loup Fork Beds, Discovery of the, <SPAN href='#Page_120'>120</SPAN>–143</li>
<li class='c016'>Lucas, Dr. F. A., <SPAN href='#Page_265'>265</SPAN></li>
<li class='c016'>Lynx, Canadian, <SPAN href='#Page_211'>211</SPAN></li>
<li class='c016'><i>Lysorophus tricarinatus</i>, <SPAN href='#Page_258'>258</SPAN></li>
<li class='c004'><span class='pageno' id='Page_288'>288</span>Macbride, Letter from Prof. T. K., <SPAN href='#Page_27'>27</SPAN></li>
<li class='c016'>Mammoth, Columbian, <SPAN href='#Page_260'>260</SPAN>
<ul>
<li>Teeth of Columbian, <SPAN href='#Page_134'>134</SPAN></li>
<li>Skull of Hairy, <SPAN href='#Page_160'>160</SPAN></li>
</ul>
</li>
<li class='c016'>Marsh, Prof. O. C., <SPAN href='#Page_32'>32</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_77'>77</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_87'>87</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_129'>129</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_133'>133</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_173'>173</SPAN></li>
<li class='c016'>Marsupials, <SPAN href='#Page_272'>272</SPAN></li>
<li class='c016'>Martin, H. T., <SPAN href='#Page_112'>112</SPAN></li>
<li class='c016'>Mascall, Mr., <SPAN href='#Page_178'>178</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_179'>179</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_190'>190</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_191'>191</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_193'>193</SPAN></li>
<li class='c016'>Mastodon, <SPAN href='#Page_123'>123</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_125'>125</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_127'>127</SPAN>
<ul>
<li>Jaws of, <SPAN href='#Page_124'>124</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_125'>125</SPAN></li>
</ul>
</li>
<li class='c016'>Matthew, W. D., <SPAN href='#Page_279'>279</SPAN></li>
<li class='c016'>Menette, Major J. F., <SPAN href='#Page_222'>222</SPAN></li>
<li class='c016'>Merriam, J. C., <SPAN href='#Page_165'>165</SPAN></li>
<li class='c016'>Miocene, Upper, <SPAN href='#Page_131'>131</SPAN></li>
<li class='c016'><i>Monoclonius</i>, <SPAN href='#Page_87'>87</SPAN>
<ul>
<li><i>crassus</i>, <SPAN href='#Page_87'>87</SPAN></li>
<li><i>sphenocerus</i>, <SPAN href='#Page_87'>87</SPAN></li>
</ul>
</li>
<li class='c016'>Mosasaur, <SPAN href='#Page_27'>27</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_50'>50</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_204'>204</SPAN></li>
<li class='c016'>Mountains, Bear Paw, <SPAN href='#Page_97'>97</SPAN>
<ul>
<li>Judith River, <SPAN href='#Page_85'>85</SPAN></li>
</ul>
</li>
<li class='c016'>Mudge, Prof. B. F., <SPAN href='#Page_32'>32</SPAN></li>
<li class='c016'>Museum, American, <SPAN href='#Page_57'>57</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_78'>78</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_187'>187</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_188'>188</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_189'>189</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_234'>234</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_243'>243</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_250'>250</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_266'>266</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_278'>278</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_279'>279</SPAN>
<ul>
<li>British, <SPAN href='#Page_51'>51</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_125'>125</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_267'>267</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_271'>271</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_273'>273</SPAN></li>
<li>Cambridge, <SPAN href='#Page_123'>123</SPAN></li>
<li>Carnegie, <SPAN href='#Page_53'>53</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_54'>54</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_59'>59</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_115'>115</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_117'>117</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_133'>133</SPAN></li>
<li>French, <SPAN href='#Page_266'>266</SPAN></li>
<li>Harvard, <SPAN href='#Page_137'>137</SPAN></li>
<li>Munich, <SPAN href='#Page_112'>112</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_234'>234</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_244'>244</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_262'>262</SPAN></li>
<li>National, <SPAN href='#Page_134'>134</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_265'>265</SPAN></li>
<li>Princeton, <SPAN href='#Page_133'>133</SPAN></li>
<li>Roemer, <SPAN href='#Page_51'>51</SPAN></li>
<li>Senckenberg, <SPAN href='#Page_118'>118</SPAN></li>
<li>Yale, <SPAN href='#Page_133'>133</SPAN></li>
</ul>
</li>
<li class='c016'><i>Myledaphus bipartitus</i>, <SPAN href='#Page_78'>78</SPAN></li>
<li class='c016'><i>Mylodon</i>, <SPAN href='#Page_161'>161</SPAN></li>
<li class='c004'><i>Naosaurus</i>, <SPAN href='#Page_227'>227</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_234'>234</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_235'>235</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_236'>236</SPAN></li>
<li class='c016'>Ness City, <SPAN href='#Page_268'>268</SPAN></li>
<li class='c016'>Newberry, Dr. J. S., <SPAN href='#Page_21'>21</SPAN></li>
<li class='c004'><i>Oreodon</i>, <SPAN href='#Page_177'>177</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_189'>189</SPAN></li>
<li class='c016'>Osborn, Prof. H. F., <SPAN href='#Page_51'>51</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_57'>57</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_112'>112</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_115'>115</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_243'>243</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_257'>257</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_271'>271</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_278'>278</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_279'>279</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_280'>280</SPAN></li>
<li class='c016'><span class='pageno' id='Page_289'>289</span>Osborn and Lambe, <SPAN href='#Page_77'>77</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_78'>78</SPAN></li>
<li class='c016'><i>Otocœlus</i>, <SPAN href='#Page_242'>242</SPAN></li>
<li class='c016'>Overton, Mr., <SPAN href='#Page_128'>128</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_129'>129</SPAN></li>
<li class='c016'>Owl, Fossil, Great Horned, <SPAN href='#Page_161'>161</SPAN></li>
<li class='c004'><i>Paratylopus sternbergi</i>, <SPAN href='#Page_188'>188</SPAN></li>
<li class='c016'><i>Pariotichus</i>, <SPAN href='#Page_257'>257</SPAN></li>
<li class='c016'>Peccary, Fossil, <SPAN href='#Page_189'>189</SPAN></li>
<li class='c016'>Permian, Expeditions in the Texas, <SPAN href='#Page_230'>230</SPAN>–243</li>
<li class='c016'><i>Phœnicopterus copei</i>, <SPAN href='#Page_161'>161</SPAN></li>
<li class='c016'><i>Platecarpus</i>, <SPAN href='#Page_46'>46</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_51'>51</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_52'>52</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_53'>53</SPAN>
<ul>
<li><i>coryphæus</i>, <SPAN href='#Page_50'>50</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_204'>204</SPAN></li>
</ul>
</li>
<li class='c016'><i>Pogonodon platycopis</i>, <SPAN href='#Page_202'>202</SPAN></li>
<li class='c016'><i>Portheus molossus</i>, <SPAN href='#Page_54'>54</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_57'>57</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_58'>58</SPAN>
<ul>
<li>Collecting a Specimen of, <SPAN href='#Page_55'>55</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_56'>56</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_57'>57</SPAN></li>
<li>Description of, <SPAN href='#Page_59'>59</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_60'>60</SPAN></li>
</ul>
</li>
<li class='c016'>Prentice, Sidney, <SPAN href='#Page_53'>53</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_279'>279</SPAN></li>
<li class='c016'><i>Protophyllum sternbergi</i>, <SPAN href='#Page_18'>18</SPAN></li>
<li class='c016'><i>Protostega gigas</i>, <SPAN href='#Page_114'>114</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_115'>115</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_116'>116</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_117'>117</SPAN></li>
<li class='c016'><i>Pteranodon</i>, <SPAN href='#Page_266'>266</SPAN></li>
<li class='c016'><i>Pythonomorpha</i>, <SPAN href='#Page_44'>44</SPAN></li>
<li class='c004'>Quarry, The Sternberg, <SPAN href='#Page_125'>125</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_126'>126</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_131'>131</SPAN>
<ul>
<li>Theory of Presence of Fossil Animals in, <SPAN href='#Page_131'>131</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_132'>132</SPAN></li>
</ul>
</li>
<li class='c004'>Rattlesnake, <SPAN href='#Page_210'>210</SPAN></li>
<li class='c016'>Raven, Fossil, <SPAN href='#Page_161'>161</SPAN></li>
<li class='c016'>Rhinoceros, <SPAN href='#Page_123'>123</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_133'>133</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_134'>134</SPAN>
<ul>
<li>Bones of, <SPAN href='#Page_127'>127</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_128'>128</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_138'>138</SPAN></li>
<li>Skull of, <SPAN href='#Page_189'>189</SPAN></li>
</ul>
</li>
<li class='c016'>River, Expedition to the John Day, <SPAN href='#Page_170'>170</SPAN>–204
<ul>
<li>Loup Fork, <SPAN href='#Page_120'>120</SPAN></li>
<li>Soloman, <SPAN href='#Page_34'>34</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_121'>121</SPAN></li>
<li>Sprague, <SPAN href='#Page_149'>149</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_151'>151</SPAN></li>
</ul>
</li>
<li class='c016'>Rocks, Monument, <SPAN href='#Page_36'>36</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_46'>46</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_116'>116</SPAN></li>
<li class='c016'>Russ, Will, <SPAN href='#Page_129'>129</SPAN></li>
<li class='c004'>Salamander, Great, <SPAN href='#Page_217'>217</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_227'>227</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_251'>251</SPAN>
<ul>
<li>Fossil, <SPAN href='#Page_240'>240</SPAN></li>
</ul>
</li>
<li class='c016'><span class='pageno' id='Page_290'>290</span>Sandstone, Concretions of, <SPAN href='#Page_15'>15</SPAN></li>
<li class='c016'><i>Sassafras dissectum</i>, <SPAN href='#Page_19'>19</SPAN></li>
<li class='c016'>Sassafras, Fossil Leaves of, <SPAN href='#Page_18'>18</SPAN></li>
<li class='c016'>Seymour, <SPAN href='#Page_249'>249</SPAN></li>
<li class='c016'>Shark, Cretaceous, <SPAN href='#Page_113'>113</SPAN></li>
<li class='c016'>Shufeldt, Dr., <SPAN href='#Page_160'>160</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_161'>161</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_162'>162</SPAN></li>
<li class='c016'>Sill, Fort, <SPAN href='#Page_220'>220</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_226'>226</SPAN></li>
<li class='c016'>Sloth, Fossil, <SPAN href='#Page_161'>161</SPAN></li>
<li class='c016'>Snow, Prof., <SPAN href='#Page_104'>104</SPAN></li>
<li class='c016'>Springer, Mr. Frank, <SPAN href='#Page_117'>117</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_118'>118</SPAN></li>
<li class='c016'>Sternberg, Charles H., Adventure on a Cliff, <SPAN href='#Page_182'>182</SPAN>–184
<ul>
<li>Adventure with a Norther, <SPAN href='#Page_214'>214</SPAN></li>
<li>Buffalo Hunting, <SPAN href='#Page_6'>6</SPAN>–9</li>
<li>Dangerous Ride, <SPAN href='#Page_96'>96</SPAN></li>
<li>Discovery of the Texas Permian, <SPAN href='#Page_230'>230</SPAN>–233</li>
<li>Experience with a Cyclone, <SPAN href='#Page_121'>121</SPAN></li>
<li>Finding a Fossil Lake, <SPAN href='#Page_158'>158</SPAN></li>
<li>Narrow Escape from Death, <SPAN href='#Page_72'>72</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_73'>73</SPAN></li>
<li>Setting a Dislocation, <SPAN href='#Page_140'>140</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_141'>141</SPAN></li>
<li>Wild Ride through Bad Lands, <SPAN href='#Page_89'>89</SPAN>–92</li>
<li>Writing “Pliocene Man,” 159</li>
</ul>
</li>
<li class='c016'>Sternberg, Charles M., <SPAN href='#Page_263'>263</SPAN></li>
<li class='c016'>Sternberg, George, <SPAN href='#Page_109'>109</SPAN>–111, <SPAN href='#Page_118'>118</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_171'>171</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_246'>246</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_252'>252</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_255'>255</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_256'>256</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_262'>262</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_273'>273</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_274'>274</SPAN></li>
<li class='c016'>Sternberg, Levi, <SPAN href='#Page_272'>272</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_274'>274</SPAN></li>
<li class='c016'>Swan, Fossil, <SPAN href='#Page_160'>160</SPAN></li>
<li class='c004'><i>Teleoceras fossiger</i>, <SPAN href='#Page_134'>134</SPAN></li>
<li class='c016'><i>Testudo orthopygia</i>, <SPAN href='#Page_122'>122</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_138'>138</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_269'>269</SPAN></li>
<li class='c016'>Texas, Expedition to Permian of, <SPAN href='#Page_205'>205</SPAN>–229
<ul>
<li>In the Red Beds of, <SPAN href='#Page_244'>244</SPAN>–264</li>
</ul>
</li>
<li class='c016'>Tiger, Saber-toothed, <SPAN href='#Page_137'>137</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_202'>202</SPAN></li>
<li class='c016'><span class='pageno' id='Page_291'>291</span>Tortoise, Sea, <SPAN href='#Page_114'>114</SPAN></li>
<li class='c016'><i>Trachodon</i>, <SPAN href='#Page_77'>77</SPAN>
<ul>
<li><i>mirabilis</i>, <SPAN href='#Page_275'>275</SPAN>–277</li>
</ul>
</li>
<li class='c016'><i>Triceratops</i>, <SPAN href='#Page_270'>270</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_273'>273</SPAN></li>
<li class='c016'><i>Trilophodon campester</i>, <SPAN href='#Page_123'>123</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_124'>124</SPAN></li>
<li class='c016'><i>Trionyx</i>, <SPAN href='#Page_77'>77</SPAN></li>
<li class='c016'>Turtle, Land, <SPAN href='#Page_121'>121</SPAN>
<ul>
<li>Sea, <SPAN href='#Page_77'>77</SPAN></li>
</ul>
</li>
<li class='c016'><i>Tylosaurus</i>, <SPAN href='#Page_51'>51</SPAN>
<ul>
<li>Ram-nosed, <SPAN href='#Page_49'>49</SPAN></li>
</ul>
</li>
<li class='c016'><i>Tyrannosaurus rex</i>, <SPAN href='#Page_277'>277</SPAN></li>
<li class='c004'><i>Uintacrinus</i>, <SPAN href='#Page_118'>118</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_119'>119</SPAN>
<ul>
<li><i>socialis</i>, <SPAN href='#Page_117'>117</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_266'>266</SPAN></li>
</ul>
</li>
<li class='c016'>University, California, <SPAN href='#Page_165'>165</SPAN>
<ul>
<li>Harvard, <SPAN href='#Page_205'>205</SPAN></li>
<li>Iowa State, <SPAN href='#Page_50'>50</SPAN></li>
<li>Kansas State, <SPAN href='#Page_51'>51</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_111'>111</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_135'>135</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_112'>112</SPAN></li>
<li>Oregon State, <SPAN href='#Page_160'>160</SPAN></li>
<li>Yale, <SPAN href='#Page_77'>77</SPAN></li>
</ul>
</li>
<li class='c004'>Valley, Sican, <SPAN href='#Page_151'>151</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_153'>153</SPAN></li>
<li class='c016'><i>Varanosaurus acutirostris</i>, <SPAN href='#Page_254'>254</SPAN></li>
<li class='c016'>Village, Deserted Indian, <SPAN href='#Page_163'>163</SPAN>–165</li>
<li class='c016'>Von Zittel, Dr. Carl, <SPAN href='#Page_113'>113</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_244'>244</SPAN>
<ul>
<li>Letter from, <SPAN href='#Page_247'>247</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_248'>248</SPAN></li>
</ul>
</li>
<li class='c004'>Walla Walla, Fort, <SPAN href='#Page_170'>170</SPAN></li>
<li class='c016'>Water, Alkali, <SPAN href='#Page_41'>41</SPAN>
<ul>
<li>Desert, <SPAN href='#Page_211'>211</SPAN>–213</li>
</ul>
</li>
<li class='c016'>West, Judge E. P., <SPAN href='#Page_30'>30</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_135'>135</SPAN></li>
<li class='c016'>Whelan, Pat, <SPAN href='#Page_214'>214</SPAN></li>
<li class='c016'>Whitaker, Governor, <SPAN href='#Page_160'>160</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_162'>162</SPAN></li>
<li class='c016'>Wichita, Big, <SPAN href='#Page_209'>209</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_212'>212</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_227'>227</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_230'>230</SPAN></li>
<li class='c016'>Williston, Dr. S. W., <SPAN href='#Page_49'>49</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_50'>50</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_53'>53</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_111'>111</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_112'>112</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_113'>113</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_144'>144</SPAN></li>
<li class='c016'>Woodward, Dr. A. Smith, <SPAN href='#Page_266'>266</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_273'>273</SPAN></li>
<li class='c016'>Wortman, Dr. J. L., <SPAN href='#Page_134'>134</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_171'>171</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_188'>188</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_279'>279</SPAN></li>
<li class='c016'>Wright, Mr., <SPAN href='#Page_140'>140</SPAN>, <SPAN href='#Page_218'>218</SPAN></li>
<li class='c004'><i>Zeuglodon</i>, <SPAN href='#Page_57'>57</SPAN></li>
</ul>
<div><span class='pageno' id='Page_292'>292</span></div>
<div class='ph2'>
<div class='nf-center-c1'>
<div class='nf-center c003'>
<div>E. RAY LANKESTER’S EXTINCT ANIMALS</div>
</div></div>
</div>
<p class='c006'>By Prof. <span class='sc'>E. Ray Lankester</span>, F.R.S., Keeper of the Natural
History Department of the British Museum, Author of “The
Advancement of Science” and “A Treatise of Zoölogy.”
With numerous illustrations. $1.75 net; by mail, $1.93.</p>
<p class='c000'>An interesting book by a high authority, based on a course
of his successful, popular lectures. His narrative is well
unified and developed, and his style so simple that children
as well as older folk may enjoy the work. The illustrations
are unusually effective.</p>
<p class='c013'><cite>N. Y. Sun</cite>:—A charming book ... showing that the greatest learning
can be combined with the utmost simplicity of expression ... a book
of intense interest ... the pictures are skilfully arranged to elucidate
the text.</p>
<p class='c013'><cite>N. Y. Globe</cite>:—A great deal more lively than it sounds.... Huxley
himself could not have talked more instructively in such simple
language.</p>
<p class='c013'><cite>N. Y. Tribune</cite>:—Opens up a world of new interest, popular rather
than technical.</p>
<div class='ph2'>
<div class='nf-center-c1'>
<div class='nf-center c003'>
<div>E. RAY LANKESTER’S THE KINGDOM OF MAN</div>
</div></div>
</div>
<p class='c006'>“Nature’s Insurgent Son”; “The Advance of Science—1881–1906”;
“Nature’s Revenges—The Sleeping Sickness.”
$1.40 net; by mail, $1.52.</p>
<p class='c000'>A readable and pictorial survey, brief but nevertheless
accurate, of the recent progress in the many branches of
science—all leading towards the realization of man’s kingdom—the
conquest and control of nature.</p>
<p class='c013'><i>H. I. Brock in a three-column notice in the New York Times Saturday
Review.</i>—An impressive statement of human progress in knowledge
and power by a conservative scientist who believes man soon able to
eliminate disease ... exceedingly interesting ... it gathers into a
very small compass and presents sharply to the layman an immensely
impressive set of facts and ideas.</p>
<hr class='c014' />
<p class='c000'>⁂ If the reader will send his name and address, the publishers will
send, from time to time, information regarding their new books.</p>
<div class='nf-center-c1'>
<div class='nf-center'>
<div>HENRY HOLT AND COMPANY</div>
<div>34 WEST 33d STREET       NEW YORK</div>
</div></div>
<div><span class='pageno' id='Page_293'>293</span></div>
<div class='ph2'>
<div class='nf-center-c1'>
<div class='nf-center c003'>
<div>THE AMERICAN NATURE SERIES</div>
</div></div>
</div>
<p class='c006'>In the hope of doing something toward furnishing a series where
the nature-lover can surely find a readable book of high authority,
the publishers of the American Science Series have begun the publication
of the American Nature Series. It is the intention that in its
own way, the new series shall stand on a par with its famous predecessor.</p>
<p class='c000'>The primary object of the new series is to answer questions
which the contemplation of Nature is constantly arousing in the
mind of the unscientific intelligent person. But a collateral object
will be to give some intelligent notion of the “causes of things.”</p>
<p class='c000'>While the coöperation of foreign scholars will not be declined,
the books will be under the guarantee of American experts, and generally
from the American point of view; and where material crowds
space, preference will be given to American facts over others of not
more than equal interest.</p>
<p class='c000'>The series will be in six divisions:</p>
<div class='ph3'>
<div class='nf-center-c1'>
<div class='nf-center c004'>
<div>I. NATURAL HISTORY</div>
</div></div>
</div>
<div class='nf-center-c1'>
<div class='nf-center'>
<div><i>This division will consist of two sections.</i></div>
</div></div>
<p class='c000'><b>Section A. A large popular Natural History</b> in several volumes,
with the topics treated in due proportion, by authors of unquestioned
authority. 8vo. 7½ × 10¼ in.</p>
<div class='nf-center-c1'>
<div class='nf-center'>
<div><i>The books so far publisht in this section are</i>:</div>
</div></div>
<p class='c017'><b>FISHES</b>, by <span class='sc'>David Starr Jordan</span>, President of the Leland Stanford
Junior University. $6.00 net; carriage extra.</p>
<p class='c017'><b>AMERICAN INSECTS</b>, by <span class='sc'>Vernon L. Kellogg</span>, Professor in the
Leland Stanford Junior University. $5.00 net; carriage extra.</p>
<div class='nf-center-c1'>
<div class='nf-center'>
<div><i>Arranged for are</i>:</div>
</div></div>
<p class='c017'><b>SEEDLESS PLANTS</b>, by <span class='sc'>George T. Moore</span>, Head of Department
of Botany, Marine Biological Laboratory, assisted by other specialists.</p>
<p class='c017'><b>WILD MAMMALS OF NORTH AMERICA</b>, by <span class='sc'>C. Hart Merriam</span>,
Chief of the United States Biological Survey.</p>
<p class='c017'><b>BIRDS OF THE WORLD.</b> A popular account by <span class='sc'>Frank H.
Knowlton</span>, M.S., Ph.D., Member American Ornithologists
Union, President Biological Society of Washington, etc., etc.
<span class='pageno' id='Page_294'>294</span>with Chapter on Anatomy of Birds by <span class='sc'>Frederic A. Lucas</span>,
Chief Curator Brooklyn Museum of Arts and Sciences, and edited
by <span class='sc'>Robert Ridgway</span>, Curator of Birds, U. S. National Museum.</p>
<p class='c017'><b>REPTILES AND BATRACHIANS</b>, by <span class='sc'>Leonhard Steineger</span>, Curator
of Reptiles, U. S. National Museum.</p>
<p class='c000'><b>Section B. A Shorter Natural History</b>, mainly by the Authors
of Section A, preserving its popular character, its proportional treatment,
and its authority so far as that can be preserved without its
fullness. Size not yet determined.</p>
<div class='ph3'>
<div class='nf-center-c1'>
<div class='nf-center c004'>
<div>II. CLASSIFICATION OF NATURE</div>
</div></div>
</div>
<p class='c000'><b>1. Library Series</b>, very full descriptions. 8vo. 7½ × 10¼ in.</p>
<div class='nf-center-c1'>
<div class='nf-center'>
<div><i>Already publisht</i>:</div>
</div></div>
<p class='c017'><b>NORTH AMERICAN TREES</b>, by <span class='sc'>N. L. Britton</span>, Director of the
New York Botanical Garden. $7.00 net; carriage extra.</p>
<p class='c017'><b>FERNS</b>, by <span class='sc'>Campbell E. Waters</span>, of Johns Hopkins University
8vo, pp. xi + 362. $3.00 net; by mail, $3.30.</p>
<p class='c017'><b>2. Pocket Series, Identification Books</b>—“How to Know,” brief and
in portable shape.</p>
<div class='ph3'>
<div class='nf-center-c1'>
<div class='nf-center c004'>
<div>III. FUNCTIONS OF NATURE</div>
</div></div>
</div>
<p class='c000'>These books will treat of the relation of facts to causes and
effects—of heredity and the relations of organism to environment.
8vo. 6⅝ × 8⅞ in.</p>
<div class='nf-center-c1'>
<div class='nf-center'>
<div><i>Already publisht</i>:</div>
</div></div>
<p class='c017'><b>THE BIRD: ITS FORM AND FUNCTION</b>, by <span class='sc'>C. W. Beebe</span>,
Curator of Birds in the New York Zoological Park. 8vo, 496 pp.
$3.50 net; by mail, $3.80.</p>
<div class='nf-center-c1'>
<div class='nf-center'>
<div><i>Arranged for</i>:</div>
</div></div>
<p class='c017'><b>THE INSECT: ITS FORM AND FUNCTION</b>, by <span class='sc'>Vernon L.
Kellogg</span>, Professor in the Leland Stanford Junior University.</p>
<p class='c017'><b>THE FISH: ITS FORM AND FUNCTION</b>, by <span class='sc'>H. M. Smith</span>, of
the U. S. Bureau of Fisheries.</p>
<div><span class='pageno' id='Page_295'>295</span></div>
<div class='ph3'>
<div class='nf-center-c1'>
<div class='nf-center c004'>
<div>IV. WORKING WITH NATURE</div>
</div></div>
</div>
<p class='c000'>How to propagate, develop, care for and depict the plants and
animals. The volumes in this group cover such a range of subjects
that it is impracticable to make them of uniform size.</p>
<div class='nf-center-c1'>
<div class='nf-center'>
<div><i>Already publisht</i>:</div>
</div></div>
<p class='c017'><b>NATURE AND HEALTH</b>, by <span class='sc'>Edward Curtis</span>, Professor Emeritus
in the College of Physicians and Surgeons. 12mo. $1.95 net;
by mail, $1.37.</p>
<p class='c017'><b>THE FRESHWATER AQUARIUM AND ITS INHABITANTS.</b>
A Guide for the Amateur Aquarist, by <span class='sc'>Otto Eggeling</span> and
<span class='sc'>Frederick Ehrenberg</span>. Large 12mo. $9.00 net; by mail, $2.19.</p>
<p class='c017'><b>THE LIFE OF A FOSSIL HUNTER</b>, by <span class='sc'>Charles H. Sternberg</span>.</p>
<div class='nf-center-c1'>
<div class='nf-center'>
<div><i>Arranged for</i>:</div>
</div></div>
<p class='c017'><b>PHOTOGRAPHING NATURE</b>, by <span class='sc'>E. R. Sanborn</span>, Photographer
of the New York Zoological Park.</p>
<p class='c017'><b>THE SHELLFISH INDUSTRIES</b>, by <span class='sc'>James L. Kellogg</span>, Professor
in Williams College.</p>
<p class='c017'><b>CHEMISTRY OF DAILY LIFE</b>, by <span class='sc'>Henry P. Talbot</span>, Professor
of Chemistry in the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.</p>
<p class='c017'><b>DOMESTIC ANIMALS</b>, by <span class='sc'>William H. Brewer</span>, Professor Emeritus
in Yale University.</p>
<p class='c017'><b>THE CARE OF TREES IN LAWN, STREET AND PARK</b>, by
<span class='sc'>B. E. Fernow</span>, Professor of Forestry, University of Toronto.</p>
<div class='ph3'>
<div class='nf-center-c1'>
<div class='nf-center c004'>
<div>V. DIVERSIONS FROM NATURE</div>
</div></div>
</div>
<p class='c000'>This division will include a wide range of writings not rigidly
systematic or formal, but written only by authorities of standing.
Large 12mo. 5¼ × 8⅛ in.</p>
<div class='nf-center-c1'>
<div class='nf-center'>
<div><i>Already publisht</i>:</div>
</div></div>
<p class='c017'><b>INSECT STORIES</b>, by <span class='sc'>Vernon L. Kellogg</span>. $1.50 net; by mail, $1.69</p>
<p class='c017'><b>FISH STORIES</b>, by <span class='sc'>Charles F. Holder</span> and <span class='sc'>David Starr Jordan</span>.</p>
<div class='nf-center-c1'>
<div class='nf-center'>
<div><i>Arranged for</i>:</div>
</div></div>
<p class='c017'><b>HORSE TALK</b>, by <span class='sc'>William H. Brewer</span>.</p>
<p class='c017'><b>BIRD NOTES</b>, by <span class='sc'>C. W. Beebe</span>.</p>
<div class='ph3'>
<div class='nf-center-c1'>
<div class='nf-center c004'>
<div>VI. THE PHILOSOPHY OF NATURE</div>
</div></div>
</div>
<p class='c000'>A Series of volumes by President <span class='sc'>Jordan</span>, of Stanford University,
and Professors <span class='sc'>Brooks</span> of Johns Hopkins, <span class='sc'>Lull</span> of Yale, <span class='sc'>Thomson</span>
of Aberdeen, <span class='sc'>Pasibram</span> of Austria, <span class='sc'>zur Strassen</span> of Germany,
and others. Edited by Professor <span class='sc'>Kellogg</span> of Leland Stanford, <SPAN href='#Page_12'>12</SPAN>mo.
5⅛ × 7½ in.</p>
<hr class='c014' />
<div class='nf-center-c1'>
<div class='nf-center'>
<div>HENRY HOLT AND COMPANY, <span class='sc'>New York</span></div>
</div></div>
<div class='lg-container-l'>
<div class='linegroup'>
<div class='group'>
<div class='line'>January, ’09.</div>
</div></div>
</div>
<div class='pbb'>
<hr class='pb c001' /></div>
<div class='tnotes'>
<div class='chapter'>
<h2 class='c005'>TRANSCRIBER’S NOTES</h2></div>
<ol class='ol_1 c004'>
<li>Silently corrected typographical errors.
</li>
<li>Retained anachronistic and non-standard spellings as printed.
</li>
</ol></div>
<SPAN name="endofbook"></SPAN>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />