GB
  
You are currently viewing the United Kingdom version of the site.
Would you like to switch to your local site?
8 MIN READ TIME

PUTTING THE PIECES TOGETHER

MASTODON GRINDER TOOTH STUDIED BY CUVIER

We ended Part One with a wonderful scene from 200 years ago: President Thomas Jefferson gleefully sorting mastodon fossils in the halls of the White House. It was an exciting time for Jefferson and other fans of the mammoth and mastodon mysteries. Breakthroughs came in a rush. After centuries of wonder, legends, debate, and frustrating guesswork, many key pieces of this fossil puzzle snapped into place in just a handful of years. Largely complete mastodon skeletons were finally unearthed in the United States, allowing the bones of this so-called “American incognitum” to be put together and displayed for the very first time. The discovery of a well-preserved frozen mammoth in Siberia provided not only a nearly complete skeleton but also its shaggy skin. This revealed that wooly mammoths were adapted for life in cold climates. And in France, scientific research by the naturalist Georges Cuvier convincingly demonstrated that mammoths, mastodons, and modern elephants were all distinct from one another. It was Cuvier who gave the incognitum its name— “mastodon”—based on its “grinder” teeth.

Jefferson was glad to see the American incognitum finally given a name and recognized as a distinct type of creature.

Unlock this article and much more with
You can enjoy:
Enjoy this edition in full
Instant access to 600+ titles
Thousands of back issues
No contract or commitment
Try for 99p
SUBSCRIBE NOW
30 day trial, then just £9.99 / month. Cancel anytime. New subscribers only.


Learn more
Pocketmags Plus
Pocketmags Plus

This article is from...


View Issues
Skeptic
21.4
VIEW IN STORE

Other Articles in this Issue


Editor’s Letter
About the Skeptics Society
The Skeptics Society is a nonprofit 501 (c)(3) educational organization
COLUMNS
The SkepDoc
Anti-Aging Claims: The Fountain of Youth Is Still Only a Legend
The Gadfly
Can Working Memory Be Trained to Work Better?
CONTRIBUTORS
Michelle E. Ainsworth holds an MA in history. She enjoys
SPECIAL SECTION CLASSIC SKEPTICISM
The Amityville Hoax at 40
Why the Myth Endures
Bad Anatomy: Do the Mysterious Rhodope Skull and Adygea Skulls Belong to Aliens?
TO SOMEONE WITH BIOLOGICAL TRAINING, ONE OF THE MOST irritating
The Nazca Geoglyphs
A Pictographic Creation Story
Clown Panic!
Sightings of Mysterious Clowns Rattle Nerves in South Carolina
ARTICLES
The Case for a Galactic Defense System
LAST JUNE, THE LONG AWAITED SEQUEL INDEPENDENCE Day: Resurgence opened
What is Spirituality, Anyway?
Is “Spirituality” so Broadly Defined that Testing for It Is Meaningless?
I am Not Living in a Computer Simulation, and Neither Are You
THE NOTION THAT WE’RE ALL JUST COMPUTER simulations living in
The State of Tumortown
The Cancer-care Industry’s Marketing Is Among the Most Deceptive on the Consumer Landscape
Luck and Regression To the Mean
One of the Most Fundamental Sources of Error in Human Judgment
Political Obfuscation
Thinking Critically about Public Discourse
REVIEWS
Why Salem?
A review of three books about the Salem Witch Trials
A Betrayal of Confidence
A Review of The Faith of Christopher Hitchens by Larry Taunton
JUNIOR SKEPTIC
MAMMOTH MYSTERIES!
Welcome back to the curious tale of mammoths and mastodons!
MEAT-EATING MASTODON?
With new fossil discoveries and Cuvier’s research, it was becoming
EXTINCTION AND PREHISTORY
Rembrandt Peale was mistaken about his carnivorous mastodon with the
MAMMOTH HUNTERS
At the same time that new fossil discoveries were revealing
MANUFACTURED MONSTER
The first few decades of the 1800s brought a wealth
NEWSPAPER HOAXES
It’s a lot of trouble to make money selling tickets
MAMMOTH MYSTERIES
People who read newspapers during the 1800s found tall tales
LINGERING QUESTIONS
We’ve come a long way since the days when mammoth