Mammoths and Mastodons: All American Monsters
A mammoth discovery in 1705 sparked a fossil craze and gave the young United States a symbol of national might
- By Richard Conniff
- Smithsonian magazine, April 2010, Subscribe
In the blue shadows after dawn, the low hills in this stretch of South Dakota can look like a line of elephants trudging toward some distant water hole. It’s a geologic echo of the great herds of Columbian mammoths that used to wander here. They were like African elephants, only bigger. “A full-grown adult weighed ten tons. That’s as much as a school bus,” a guide tells the tourists on a sidewalk at the Mammoth Site, a paleontological dig and museum in the town of Hot Springs. She points out a set of brick-size teeth with corrugated surfaces like the soles of running shoes. With them, a mammoth ate 400 pounds of grasses and sedges a day.
Directly below the sidewalk, a volunteer scratches up dirt in a niche formed largely by the bones of dead mammoths. She’s got a big shoulder blade sticking up out of the ground off her knees, the round end of a leg bone at her right elbow, ribs like stripes painted in the dirt wall just above, and behind her a sort of cascade of half-excavated skulls and tusks spilling down to the bottom of the dig. Altogether, parts of 58 mammoths lie exposed in an area about the size of a hockey rink, sheltered beneath a roof built to protect them. Larry Agenbroad, the paleontologist who helped discover this site 35 years ago, figures at least as many remain hidden underground.
This is one of the world’s largest sites that display the bones where mammoths died, and it has some of the horror and fascination of a slow-motion traffic pileup. About 26,000 years ago, Agenbroad says, a sinkhole formed here and filled with water from a hot spring, creating a vegetated oasis that lured many young mammoths to their death. In places, the bones have settled in the posture of the animal’s desperate struggle to get back up the slick, steep sides of the pond, a foreleg flung up, the back legs splayed out where they pawed for traction in the mud below. Occasionally a visitor will imagine the fear and trumpeting of the struggling animal and start to weep.
The guides, volunteers and paleontologists at the Mammoth Site are a bit more jaded. They’ve nicknamed one disarticulated skeleton Napoleon Bone-Apart. Another specimen, found minus its skull, started out as Marie Antoinette, after the guillotined French queen. It turned out to be a male, like all the other mammoths in this site. “So we renamed it Murray,” says Agenbroad, a soft-spoken, neighborly figure with bright, deep-set eyes behind rimless glasses.
It’s a venerable American tradition, this mix of science, show business and big hairy pachyderms. The same happy combination drives a new exhibition, “Mammoths and Mastodons: Titans of the Ice Age,” which just opened at Chicago’s Field Museum (and travels to Jersey City, Anchorage, St. Louis, Boston, Denver and San Diego). With Agenbroad as a consultant, one part of the exhibition aims to evoke the world of the mammoths in the South Dakota hills. Other parts explore the profound influence these creatures had in human history. Though dinosaurs now come to mind when we think about lost worlds, mammoths and mastodons provided the first persuasive evidence that one of God’s creatures could go extinct. (The idea had previously bordered on heresy, but we now know that the animals vanished mysteriously roughly 11,000 years ago.) And though we often associate them with Siberia, mammoths and mastodons played a huge role in establishing our national identity, as Americans struggled to climb out from under the shadow of Europe.
It started with a five-pound tooth. In the summer of 1705, in the Hudson River Valley village of Claverack, New York, a tooth the size of a man’s fist surfaced on a steep bluff, rolled downhill and landed at the feet of a Dutch tenant farmer, who promptly traded it to a local politician for a glass of rum. The politician made the tooth a gift to Lord Cornbury, then the eccentric governor of New York. (Cornbury liked to cross-dress as his cousin Queen Anne, or so his enemies said.) Cornbury sent the tooth to London labeled “tooth of a Giant,” after the statement in Genesis that “there were giants in the earth” in the days before the Flood.
Man or beast, this “monstrous creature,” as Cornbury called it, would soon become celebrated as the “incognitum,” the unknown species. The discovery of dinosaurs was more than a century in the future, but in terms of this creature’s grip on the popular imagination, it was “the dinosaur of the early American republic,” according to Paul Semonin, author of American Monster, a history of the incognitum. Some primal force in the American spirit embraced it, he says, as “in effect, the nation’s first prehistoric monster.”
Based on the size of bones discovered near the tooth, the Massachusetts poet Edward Taylor estimated the incognitum’s height at 60 or 70 feet (10 would have been closer to the mark) and wrote bad poetry about “Ribbs like Rafters” and arms “like limbs of trees.” The minister Cotton Mather boasted that the New World possessed biblical giants to make the Old World’s “Og and GOLIATH, and all the Sons of Anak” look like pygmies.
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Comments (15)
I think that this is very cool. Do you to yes or no
Posted by on September 26,2012 | 09:10 AM
Mastodon State Historic Site in Imperial, Missouri, contains an important archaeological and paleontological site - the Kimmswick Bone Bed, where scientists discovered the first solid evidence of the coexistence of humans and the American mastodon in eastern North America.
Posted by Robie on August 19,2011 | 11:38 AM
Nice article, but the author made a common mistake in his description of the dinner between Franklin and the 'diminutive Frenchman'. If the Frenchman really did 'mutter something about exceptions proving rules', then he was agreeing with Franklin, since 'the exception proves the rule' means that the exception tests the rule, not that it verifies it. This is a case where the aphorism has outlived one of the original meanings of the word.
Lovely magazine, keep up the wonderful work!
Posted by Nancy Dise on June 3,2010 | 04:21 AM
Just a Wave Over the Ocean
Novicky April 29, 2010
I pity the poor Mastodon,
For such a magnificent creature, it's a sad lonely song
How did it happen, where did it go wrong?
A creature so big eating hundreds of pounds
His life hung in balance and came to the brink
The next thing you know, he just goes extinct.
It shook up the world back in 1705
What they thought was a giant, became a surprise
Conventional wisdom was thrown out the door
As they dug at the tusks buried deep in the floors
It tugged at their brains, it was a terrible fight
But when the dust settled it was American might
That Buffon French Naturalist that used puny terms
Had Jefferson fuming while the Frenchman just squirmed
But it was good ol’ Charlie Willson that set them all straight
With his first national museum at the earliest date
So it’s up to your ears in Mammoth big toes
Now who would have imagined such a giant sink hole?
So it’s goodbye to Europe and goodbye to France
Incognitum just gave them a swift kick in the pants!
Posted by Robert Novicky on April 29,2010 | 04:51 PM
Much as I enjoyed 'All-American Monsters' in this month's edition, I am bound to doubt that a Frenchman actually spoke of exceptions proving rules.
This is a persistent mis-translation of the French verb éprouver, which means not to prove but to test something. The idea of an exception proving a rule is, after all, absurd; but an exception would certainly test the validity of one.
Thus we have the odd notion that the proof, rather than the testing, of the pudding is in the eating. We also have the idea of a proving ground, where the Military test munitions but often don't prove anything at all.
I can, however, understand how Franklin's treatment of the fort petit Frenchman at dinner would have made him un peu testy.
Posted by Chris Stimpson on April 28,2010 | 10:32 PM
Another fascinating place not far from this one is at the Fort Robinson center near Chadron, Nebraska (NW corner of NE on the Fossil Highway). Besides the very well-presented historic information (Red Cloud, Crazy Horse, etc.) they also have the Trailside Museum of Natural History. This has a lot of good displays and information, including a display of 2 bull mammoths whose tusks became locked together, resulting in their deaths. Address is http://trailside.unl.edu/. And there's also a restaurant on the grounds that serves wonderful buffalo burgers! A short way south of this is also the Agate Fossil Museum - small but very interesting; also a lot of Red Cloud's and early rancher historic info/items. I love some of the smaller museums and displays. Here's two of them. Enjoy!
Posted by Judy M. on April 19,2010 | 12:24 PM
Oops. My comment was similar to Bindiji post above, not to Carson post.
Posted by Janet Langlois on April 15,2010 | 07:32 PM
Its amazing how the discovery of mammoths in the United States gave Americans a renewed sense of pride and strength to rival that of the European powers, and that when the Comte de Buffon insulted America's natural wonders as puny and degenerate, it also started a political bickering by Jefferson and Franklin when they traveled to Europe. The discovery of mammoths had not only created a renewed sense of pride, but also an international rivalry as well.
Posted by Tsunami Harder on April 15,2010 | 04:05 PM
I see that my comment is similar to G.B. Carson post above. I was reading Adrienne Mayor's Fossil Legends of the First Americans (Princeton University Press, 2005) by chance when I read Richard Conniff's article "All-American Monsters" in the April issue, and find that the Mayor title is a useful supplement, if not corrective, to his fascinating article. Mayor's recuperative thesis is that 18th- and 19th-century naturalists, Cuvier and Jefferson among them, credited American Indian fossil legends with good reason as a number of Ameridian accounts of fossil remains were backed by what is now seen as scientific evidence and observation. The two American Indian legend examples Conniff cites are not reflective of most of the data presented in Fossil Legends. For example, Rembrandt Peale's use of Indian legend to drum up business for his own dig in the Hudson River Valley, "TEN THOUSAND MOONS AGO..." (43), undercuts Cuvier's recognition that American Indians recognized the concept of the extinction of large species which was one of his paleontological contributions to Western science. Jefferson's acceptance of an Indian legend that mammoths and mastodons still lived in the far Northwest (44-45) is correct, but many other accounts, in fact the majority of them as indicated above, were that these great creatures were long extinct, and no Amerindian group reported seeing them alive in living memory. Mayor's reading is that Jefferson's desire to find live examples had him accept an American Indian account that was an exception, not the rule.
Posted by Janet Langlois on April 13,2010 | 02:00 PM
I read Paul Semonin's AMERICAN MONSTER shortly after publication and found it to be a groundbreaking historical and theoretical contribution to American history, so it is good to see this article and the mention of the book.
Posted by G.B. Carson on April 10,2010 | 01:53 PM
Long before Europeans understood the concept of extinction, many Native American groups had already recognized that the remarkable, fossilized bones of mammoths, mastodons, and other enormous creatures no longer existed. Their oral traditions accounted for the fossils and attempted to explain the creatures' destruction.
Indeed, Cuvier himself gathered these Indian traditions and was influenced by them as he developed his extinction/catastrophe theory.
For the exciting and full story of historic Native American discoveries of mastodon, mammoth, and other megafauna--from the pre-Columbian era to the mid-nineteenth century--and their contributions to the early science of paleontology, see Adrienne Mayor, FOSSIL LEGENDS OF THE FIRST AMERICANS (Princeton 2005)
Posted by Bindiji on April 10,2010 | 01:12 PM
I really loved this article. I think it should also mention the Waco Mammoth Site in Texas since it boasts the one and only nursery herd of pleistocene mammals found in North America. This contained 19 columbian mammoths.
Posted by Troy Gray on April 8,2010 | 12:32 PM
What a fun and informative read; thanks to Mr. Conniff for telling the tale so well.
Readers interested in volunteering with Dr. Agenbroad through an Earthwatch expedition and learning more about the project should visit: www.earthwatch.org/exped/agenbroad.html
Posted by George Grattan on April 6,2010 | 01:01 PM
Great article - well written - congrats to Richard Conniff. I grew up in the Albany, NY area. The natural history museum has a wonderful exhibit of the Cohoes Mastodon. Looks real. Go see it.
Posted by Remo Bianco on March 31,2010 | 11:20 PM