<h2><SPAN name="XI"></SPAN>XI</h2>
<p class="h3">THE MASTODON</p>
<div class="inset18">
<p><span class="in8">"<i>. . . who shall place</i><br/></span>
<i>A limit to the giant's unchained strength?</i>"</p>
</div>
<p>The name mastodon is given to a number of
species of fossil elephants differing from the
true elephants, of which the mammoth is an
example, in the structure of the teeth. In the
mastodons the crown, or grinding face of
the tooth, is formed by more or less regular
<ANTIMG src="images/i_251.jpg" width-obs="10" height-obs="15" alt="" />
shaped cross ridges, covered with enamel,
while in the elephants the enamel takes the
form of narrow, pocket-shaped plates, set upright
in the body of the tooth. Moreover, in
the mastodons the roots of the teeth are long
prongs, while in the elephants the roots are
small and irregular. A glance at the cuts will
show these distinctions better than they can
be explained by words. Back in the past, however,
we meet, as we should if there is any truth<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_199">[199]</SPAN></span>
in the theory of evolution, with elephants having
an intermediate pattern of teeth.</p>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG src="images/i_252.jpg" width-obs="400" height-obs="166" alt="" /> Fig. 38.—Tooth of Mastodon and of Mammoth.</div>
<p>There is usually, or at least often, another
point of difference between elephants and mastodons,
for many of the latter not only had
tusks in the upper, but in the lower jaw, and
these are never found in any of the true elephants.
The lower tusks are longer and larger
in the earlier species of mastodon than in
those of more recent age and in the latest species,
the common American mastodon, the little
lower tusks were usually shed early in life.
These afford some hints of the relationships of
the mastodon; for in Europe are found remains
of a huge beast well called Dinotherium,
or terrible animal, which possessed lower
tusks only, and these, instead of sticking out<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_200">[200]</SPAN></span>
from the jaw are bent directly downwards.
No perfect skull of this creature has yet been
found, but it is believed to have had a short
trunk. For a long time nothing but the skull
was known, and some naturalists thought the
animal to have been a gigantic manatee, or sea
cow, and that the tusks were used for tearing
food from the bottom of rivers and for anchoring
the animal to the bank, just as the walrus
uses his tusks for digging clams and climbing
out upon the ice. In the first restorations of
Dinotherium it is represented lying amidst
reeds, the feet concealed from view, the head
alone visible, but now it is pictured as standing
erect, for the discovery of massive leg-bones
has definitely settled the question as to
whether it did or did not have limbs.</p>
<p>There is another hint of relationship in the
upper tusks of the earlier mastodons, and this
is the presence of a band of enamel running
down each tusk. In all gnawing animals the
front, cutting teeth are formed of soft dentine,
or ivory, faced with a plate of enamel, just as
the blade of a chisel or plane is formed of a
plate of tempered steel backed with soft iron;<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_201">[201]</SPAN></span>
the object of this being the same in both tooth
and chisel, to keep the edge sharp by wearing
away the softer material. In the case of the
chisel this is done by a man with a grindstone,
but with the tooth it is performed automatically
and more pleasantly by the gnawing of
food. In the mastodon and elephant the tusks,
which are the representatives of the cutting
teeth of rodents, are wide apart, and of course
do not gnaw anything, but the presence of
these enamel bands hints at a time when they
and their owner were smaller and differently
shaped, and the teeth were used for cutting.
Thus, great though the disparity of size may
be, there is a suggestion that through the mastodon
the elephant is distantly related to the
mouse, and that, could we trace their respective
pedigrees far enough, we might find a common
ancestor.</p>
<p>This presence of structures that are apparently
of no use, often worse than useless, is
regarded as the survival of characters that once
served some good purpose, like the familiar
buttons on the sleeve or at the back of a man's
coat, or the bows and ruffles on a woman's<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_202">[202]</SPAN></span>
dress. We are told that these are put on "to
make the dress look pretty," but the student
regards the bows as vestiges of the time when
there were no buttons and hooks and eyes had
not been invented, and dresses were tied together
with strings or ribbons. As for ruffles,
they took the place of flounces, and flounces
are vestiges of the time when a young woman
wore the greater part of her wardrobe on her
back, putting on one dress above another, the
bottoms of the skirts showing like so many
flounces. So buttons, ruffles, and the vermiform
appendix of which we hear so much all
fall in the category of vestigial structures.</p>
<p>Where the mastodons originated, we know
not: Señor Ameghino thinks their ancestors
are to be found in Patagonia, and he is very
probably wrong; Professor Cope thought they
came from Asia, and he is probably right; or
they may have immigrated from the convenient
Antarctica, which is called up to account
for various facts in the distribution of animals.<SPAN name="FNanchor_18_18"></SPAN><SPAN href="#Footnote_18_18" class="fnanchor">[18]</SPAN></p>
<div class="footnote"><p><SPAN name="Footnote_18_18"></SPAN><SPAN href="#FNanchor_18_18"><span class="label">[18]</span></SPAN> <i>During the past year, 1901, Mr. C. W. Andrews of the
British Museum has discovered in Egypt a small and primitive
species of mastodon, also the remains of another animal which he<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_203">[203]</SPAN></span>
thinks may be the long sought ancestor of the elephant family,
which includes the mammoth and mastodon.</i></p>
</div>
<p>Neither do we at present know just how many
species of mastodons there may have been in
the Western Hemisphere, for most of them are
known from scattered teeth, single jaws, and
odd bones, so that we cannot tell just what differences
may be due to sex or individual variation.
It is certain, however, that several distinct
kinds, or species, have inhabited various
parts of North America, while remains of others
occur in South America. <i>The</i> mastodon, however,
the one most recent in point of time, and
the best known because its remains are scattered
far and wide over pretty much the length
and breadth of the United States, and are
found also in southern and western Canada,
is the well-named <i>Mastodon americanus</i>,<SPAN name="FNanchor_19_19"></SPAN><SPAN href="#Footnote_19_19" class="fnanchor">[19]</SPAN> and
unless otherwise specified this alone will be
meant when the name mastodon is used. In
some localities the mastodon seems to have
abounded, but between the Hudson and Connecticut
Rivers indications of its former pres<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_204">[204]</SPAN></span>ence
are rare, and east of that they are practically
wanting. The best preserved specimens
come from Ulster and Orange Counties, New
York, for these seem to have furnished the
animal with the best facilities for getting mired.
Just west of the Catskills, parallel with the
valley of the Hudson, is a series of meadows,
bogs, and pools marking the sites of swamps
that came into existence after the recession of
the mighty ice-sheet that long covered eastern
North America, and in these many a mastodon,
seeking for food or water, or merely wallowing
in the mud, stuck fast and perished
miserably. And here to-day the spade of the
farmer as he sinks a ditch to drain what is left
of some beaver pond of bygone days, strikes
some bone as brown and rugged as a root, so
like a piece of water-soaked wood that nine
times out of ten it is taken for a fragment of
tree-trunk.</p>
<div class="footnote"><p><SPAN name="Footnote_19_19"></SPAN><SPAN href="#FNanchor_19_19"><span class="label">[19]</span></SPAN> <i>This has also been called giganteus and ohioticus, but the
name americanus claims priority, and should therefore be used.</i></p>
</div>
<p>The first notice of the mastodon in North
America goes back to 1712, and is found in a
letter from Cotton Mather to Dr. Woodward
(of England?) written at Boston on November
17th, in which he speaks of a large work in<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_205">[205]</SPAN></span>
manuscript entitled <i>Biblia Americana</i>, and
gives as a sample a note on the passage in Genesis
(VI. 4) in which we read that "there
were giants in the earth in those days." We
are told that this is confirmed by "the bones
and teeth of some large animal found lately in
Albany, in New England, which for some
reason he thinks to be human; particularly a
tooth brought from the place where it was
found to New York in 1705, being a very large
grinder, weighing four pounds and three quarters;
with a bone supposed to be a thigh-bone,
seventeen feet long," the total length of the
body being taken as seventy-five feet. Thus
bones of the mastodon, as well as those of the
mammoth, have done duty as those of giants.</p>
<p>And as the first mastodon remains recorded
from North America came from the region
west of the Hudson, so the first fairly complete
skeleton also came from that locality,
secured at a very considerable outlay of money
and a still more considerable expenditure of
labor by the exertions of C. W. Peale. This
specimen was described at some length by
Rembrandt Peale in a privately printed pamphlet,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_206">[206]</SPAN></span>
now unfortunately rare, and described
in some respects better than has been done by
any subsequent writer, since the points of difference
between various parts of the mastodon
and elephant were clearly pointed out. This
skeleton was exhibited in London, and afterwards
at Peale's Museum in Philadelphia
where, with much other valuable material, it
was destroyed by fire.</p>
<p>Struck by the evident crushing power of the
great ridged molars, Peale was led to believe
that the mastodon was a creature of carnivorous
habits, and so described it, but this error
is excusable, the more that to this day, when
the mastodon is well known, and its description
published time and again in the daily papers,
finders of the teeth often consider them as belonging
to some huge beast of prey.</p>
<p>Since the time of Peale several fine specimens
have been taken from Ulster and Orange
Counties, among them the well-known "Warren
Mastodon," and there is not the slightest
doubt that many more will be recovered from
the meadows, swamps, and pond holes of these
two counties.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_207">[207]</SPAN></span></p>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG src="images/i_260.jpg" width-obs="400" height-obs="214" alt="" /> Fig. 39.—The Missourium of Koch, from a Tracing of the Figure Illustrating Koch's Description.</div>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_208">[208]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>The next mastodon to appear on the scene
was the so-called Missourium of Albert Koch,
which he constructed somewhat as he did the
Hydrarchus (see p. 61) of several individuals
pieced together, thus forming a skeleton that
was a monster in more ways than one. To
heighten the effect, the curved tusks were so
placed that they stood out at right angles to
the sides of the head, like the swords upon
the axles of ancient war chariots. Like Peale's
specimen this was exhibited in London, and
there it still remains, for, stripped of its superfluous
bones, and remounted, it may now be
seen in the British Museum.</p>
<p>Many a mastodon has come to light since
the time of Koch, for while it is commonly
supposed that remains of the animal are great
rarities, as a matter of fact they are quite
common, and it may safely be said that during
the seasons of ditching, draining, and well-digging
not a week passes without one or more
mastodons being unearthed. Not that these
are complete skeletons, very far from it, the
majority of finds are scattered teeth, crumbling
tusks, or massive leg-bones, but still the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_209">[209]</SPAN></span>
mastodon is far commoner in the museums of
this country than is the African elephant, for
at the present date there are eleven of the
former to one of the latter, the single skeleton
of African elephant being that of Jumbo in
the American Museum of Natural History.
If one may judge by the abundance of bones,
mastodons must have been very numerous
in some favored localities such as parts of
Michigan, Florida, and Missouri and about
Big Bone Lick, Ky. Perhaps the most noteworthy
of all deposits is that at Kimmswick,
about twenty miles south of St. Louis, where
in a limited area Mr. L. W. Beehler has exhumed
bones representing several hundred
individuals, varying in size from a mere baby
mastodon up to the great tusker whose wornout
teeth proclaim that he had reached the
limit of even mastodonic old age. The spot
where this remarkable deposit was found is at
the foot of a bluff near the junction of two
little streams, and it seems probable that in
the days when these were larger the spring
floods swept down the bodies of animals that
had perished during the winter to ground in<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_210">[210]</SPAN></span>
an eddy beneath the bluff. Or as the place
abounds in springs of sulphur and salt water
it may be that this was where the animals
assembled during cold weather, just as the
moas are believed to have gathered in the
swamps of New Zealand, and here the weaker
died and left their bones.</p>
<p>The mastodon must have looked very much
like any other elephant, though a little shorter
in the legs and somewhat more heavily built
than either of the living species, while the
head was a trifle flatter and the jaw decidedly
longer. The tusks are a variable quantity,
sometimes merely bowing outwards, often
curving upwards to form a half circle; they
were never so long as the largest mammoth
tusks, but to make up for this they were a
shade stouter for their length. As the mastodon
ranged well to the north it is fair to suppose
that he may have been covered with long
hair, a supposition that seems to be borne out
by the discovery, noted by Rembrandt Peale, of
a mass of long, coarse, woolly hair buried in one
of the swamps of Ulster County, New York.
And with these facts in mind, aided by photographs
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_211">[211]</SPAN></span>
of various skeletons of mastodons, Mr.
Gleeson made the restoration which accompanies
this chapter.</p>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG src="images/i_264.jpg" width-obs="400" height-obs="291" alt="" /> Fig. 40.—The Mastodon. <br/> <i>From a drawing by J. M. Gleeson.</i></div>
<p>As for the size of the mastodon, this, like
that of the mammoth, is popularly much over-estimated,
and it is more than doubtful if any
attained the height of a full-grown African
elephant. The largest femur, or thigh-bone,
that has come under the writer's notice was
one he measured as it lay in the earth at
Kimmswick, and this was just four feet long,
three inches shorter than the thigh-bone of
Jumbo. Several of the largest thigh-bones
measured show so striking an unanimity in
size, between 46 and 47 inches in length, that
we may be pretty sure they represent the average
old "bull" mastodon, and if we say that
these animals stood ten feet high we are
probably doing them full justice. An occasional
tusk reaches a length of ten feet, but
seven or eight is the usual size, with a diameter
of as many inches, and this is no larger than
the tusks of the African elephant would grow
if they had a chance. It is painful to be
obliged to scale down the mastodon as we have
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_212">[212]</SPAN></span>
just done the mammoth, but if any reader
knows of specimens larger than those noted,
he should by all means publish their measurements.<SPAN name="FNanchor_20_20"></SPAN><SPAN href="#Footnote_20_20" class="fnanchor">[20]</SPAN></p>
<div class="footnote"><p><SPAN name="Footnote_20_20"></SPAN><SPAN href="#FNanchor_20_20"><span class="label">[20]</span></SPAN> <i>As skeletons are sometimes mounted, they stand a full foot
or more higher at the shoulders than the animal stood in life,
this being caused by raising the body until the shoulder-blades
are far below the tips of the vertebræ, a position they never assume
in life.</i></p>
</div>
<p>The disappearance of the mastodon is as difficult
to account for as that of the mammoth,
and, as will be noted, there is absolutely no
evidence to show that man had any hand in it.
Neither can it be ascribed to change of climate,
for the mastodon, as indicated by the wide distribution
of its bones, was apparently adapted
to a great diversity of climates, and was as
much at home amid the cool swamps of Michigan
and New York as on the warm savannas
of Florida and Louisiana. Certainly the much
used, and abused, glacial epoch cannot be held
accountable for the extermination of the creature,
for the mastodon came into New York
after the recession of the great ice-sheet, and
tarried to so late a date that bones buried in
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_213">[213]</SPAN></span>the swamps retain much of their animal matter.
So recent, comparatively speaking, has
been the disappearance of the mastodon, and
so fresh-looking are some of its bones, that
Thomas Jefferson thought in his day that it
might still be living in some part of the then
unexplored Northwest.</p>
<p>It is a moot question whether or not man
and the mastodon were contemporaries in
North America, and while many there be who,
like the writer of these lines, believe that this
was the case, an expression of belief is not a
demonstration of fact. The best that can be
said is that there are scattered bits of testimony,
slight though they are, which seem to
point that way, but no one so strong by itself
that it could not be shaken by sharp cross-questioning
and enable man to prove an alibi
in a trial by jury. For example, in the great
bone deposit at Kimmswick, Mo., Mr. Beehler
found a flint arrowhead, but this may have lain
just over the bone-bearing layer, or have got
in by some accident in excavating. How easily
a mistake may be made is shown by the report
sent to the United States National Museum of<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_214">[214]</SPAN></span>
many arrowheads associated with mastodon
bones in a spring at Afton, Indian Territory.
This spring was investigated, and a few mastodon
bones and flint arrowheads were found,
but the latter were in a stratum just above the
bones, although this was overlooked by the first
diggers.<SPAN name="FNanchor_21_21"></SPAN><SPAN href="#Footnote_21_21" class="fnanchor">[21]</SPAN> Koch reported finding charcoal and
arrowheads so associated with mastodon bones
that he inferred the animal to have been destroyed
by fire and arrows after it became
mired. It has been said that Koch could have
had no object in disseminating this report, and
hence that it may be credited, but he had just
as much interest in doing this as he did in fabricating
the Hydrarchus and the Missourium,
and his testimony is not to be considered seriously.
It seems to be with the mastodon
much as it is with the sea-serpent; the latter
never appears to a naturalist, remains of the
former are never found by a trained observer
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_215">[215]</SPAN></span>associated with indications of the presence of
man. Perhaps an exception should be made
in the case of Professor J. M. Clarke, who
found fragments of charcoal in a deposit of
muck under some bones of mastodon.</p>
<div class="footnote"><p><SPAN name="Footnote_21_21"></SPAN><SPAN href="#FNanchor_21_21"><span class="label">[21]</span></SPAN> <i>This locality has just been carefully investigated by Mr.
W. H. Holmes of the United States National Museum who
found bones of the mastodon and Southern Mammoth associated
with arrowheads. But he also found fresh bones of bison,
horse, and wolf, showing that these and the arrowheads had
simply sunk to the level of the older deposit.</i></p>
</div>
<p>We may pass by the so-called "Elephant
Mound," which to the eye of an unimaginative
observer looks as if it might have been intended
for any one of several beasts; also, with
bated breath and due respect for the bitter controversy
waged over them, pass we by the elephant
pipes. There remains, then, not a bit
of man's handiwork, not a piece of pottery, engraved
stone, or scratched bone that can <i>unhesitatingly</i>
be said to have been wrought into
the shape of an elephant before the coming of
the white man. True, there is "The Lenape
Stone," found near Doyleston, Pa., in 1872,
a gorget graven on one side with the representation
of men attacking an elephant, while the
other bears a number of figures of various animals.
The good faith of the finder of this
stone is unimpeachable, but it is a curious fact
that, while this gorget is elaborately decorated
on both sides, no similar stone, out of all that<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_216">[216]</SPAN></span>
have been found, bears any image whatsoever.
On the other hand, if not made by the aborigines,
who made it, why was it made, and why
did nine years elapse between the discovery of
the first and second portions of the broken ornament?
These are questions the reader may
decide for himself; the author will only say
that to his mind the drawing is too elaborate,
and depicts entirely too much to have been
made by a primitive artist. A much better bit
of testimony seems to be presented by a fragment
of Fulgur shell found near Hollyoak,
Del., and now in the United States National
Museum, which bears a very rudely scratched
image of an animal that may have been intended
for a mastodon or a bison. This piece
of shell is undeniably old, but there is, unfortunately,
the uncertainty just mentioned as to
the animal depicted. The familiar legend of
the Big Buffalo that destroyed animals and
men and defied even the lightnings of the
Great Spirit has been thought by some to
have originated in a tradition of the mastodon
handed down from ancient times; but why
consider that the mastodon is meant? Why<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_217">[217]</SPAN></span>
not a legendary bison that has increased with
years of story-telling? And so the co-existence
of man and mastodon must rest as a case
of not proven, although there is a strong probability
that the two did live together in the
dim ages of the past, and some day the evidence
may come to light that will prove it beyond
a peradventure. If scientific men are
charged with obstinacy and unwarranted incredulity
in declining to accept the testimony
so far presented, it must be remembered that
the evidence as to the existence of the sea
serpent is far stronger, since it rests on the testimony
of eye-witnesses, and yet the creature
himself has never been seen by a trained observer,
nor has any specimen, not a scale, a
tooth, or a bone, ever made its way into any
museum.</p>
<h3><i>REFERENCES</i></h3>
<p><i>There are at least eleven mounted skeletons of the
Mastodon in the United States, and the writer trusts he
may be pardoned for mentioning only those which are
most accessible. These are in the American Museum of
Natural History, New York; the State Museum, Al<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_218">[218]</SPAN></span>bany, N. Y.;
Field Columbian Museum, Chicago; Carnegie
Museum, Pittsburg; Museum of Comparative
Zoölogy, Cambridge, Mass. There is no mounted skeleton
in the United States National Museum, nor has there
ever been.</i></p>
<p><i>The heaviest pair of tusks is in the possession of T. O.
Tuttle, Seneca, Mich., and they are nine and one-half
inches in diameter, and a little over eight feet long;
very few tusks, however, reach eight inches in diameter.
The thigh-bone of an old male mastodon measures from
forty-five to forty-six and one-half inches long, the humerus
from thirty-five to forty inches. The height of
the mounted skeleton is of little value as an indication of
size, since it depends so much upon the manner in which
the skeleton is mounted. The grinders of the mastodon
have three cross ridges, save the last, which has four, and
a final elevation, or heel. This does not apply to the
teeth of very young animals. The presence or absence
of the last grinder will show whether or not the animal is
of full age and size, while the amount of wear indicates
the comparative age of the specimen.</i></p>
<p><i>The skeleton of the "Warren Mastodon" is described
at length by Dr. J. C. Warren, in a quarto volume entitled
"Mastodon Giganteus." There is much information
in a little book by J. P. MacLean, "Mastodon,
Mammoth, and Man," but the reader must not accept all
its statements unhesitatingly. The first volume, 1887,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_219">[219]</SPAN></span>
of the New Scribner's Magazine contains an article on
"American Elephant Myths," by Professor W. B. Scott,
but he is under an erroneous impression regarding the
size of the mastodon, and photographs of the Maya
carvings show that their resemblance to elephants has been
exaggerated in the wood cuts. The story of the Lenape
Stone is told at length by H. C. Mercer in "The Lenape
Stone, or the Indian and the Mammoth."</i></p>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG src="images/i_274.jpg" width-obs="400" height-obs="182" alt="" /> Fig. 41.—The Lenape Stone, Reduced.</div>
<hr class="chapter" />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_220">[220]</SPAN></span></p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />