During the summer of 1890,
a work crew employed by the Swiss Northeastern Railway labored to
extend a short spur up a valley from Zurich to the far side of the
tiny hamlet of Niederweningen. As they approached their goal in July,
they found convenient a layer of gravel on the south side of the
tracks. The layer of gravel was nothing surprising. Switzerland was
well processed during the ice ages and strata of glacial till were
common in the valleys. What was surprising was the bones they found
beneath it.
Unlike many stories I've
told here, there was no mystery about the bones. By 1890, the ice
age, extinction, and Pleistocene giants were completely accepted by
European intellectuals. The workers, or at least their supervisors,
knew the bones were something special that needed to be preserved.
The railroad might even have had a formal policy about such things.
They carefully collected each bone and took it to the local inn for
storage. By the beginning of August, it was clear that there were a
lot of bones there. The minister of the church in nearby Dielsdorf,
Pastor Schluep (I can't find his first name), sent a telegram to the
president of the Zurich Antiquarian Society telling him about the
find.
The telegram arrived
on August 2, a Saturday. Before the day was over, Arnold Lang was in
Niederweningen eager to examine the site. As soon as business opened
on Monday, he met with local authorities and the management of the
railway and arranged formal permission to examine the site. In a mere
two weeks he organized an conducted a full excavation of the site.
During that time he not only collected bones, he brought in experts
to examine the geological situation and botanical remains associated
with the bones. In his account, he spends more words thanking the the
people who helped him than in describing the actual work—something
that is personally classy but frustrating to later historians and
paleontologists. The following year Lang organized a second formal
excavation. Remarkably, with all time he had to plan, they found
little to add to his first, tiny, improvised season.
Lang thought mammoths were
the most important part of the find. In his 1892 article, he cited
mammoths in his title. The description of the find was buried deep
within a historical essay on mammoth discoveries. Lang writes that
they identified bones from six individual mammoths (modern
paleontologists say seven), one so small he thought it might be a
fetus. There were also bones from wolves, horses, birds, rodents, and
a woolly rhinoceros that Lang calls "the constant companion of
the extinct mammoths."
Herr Dreyer, one of the
experts Lang recruited, used bones from all the adult mammoths to
assemble a composite skeleton which was mounted and displayed in the
zoology museum at the University of Zurich. Lang's drawing shows
something remarkable about Dreyer's preparation. He put the tusks on
the wrong sides. This wasn't a personal quirk of his; many
paleontologists thought that was the proper mounting. Look carefully
at some of the artwork from the time. Though mammoths are usually
shown in profile, if you study the shading you'll see that the
artists were portraying outward facing tusks. Unfortunately, art
directors, even at scientific magazines, still use these
illustrations. This is something of a pet peeve of mine.
The Niederweningen mammoth of
1892 (source)
The paleontologists and
artists of the time labored under a certain disadvantage with respect
to mammoths. No one had ever recovered a skull with the tusks still
attached. In Siberia, where most mammoth remains were found, the
finders were allowed to take and sell the ivory before notifying the
authorities. And most of them preferred not to tell the authorities
at all. In Europe, skulls didn't have a very good survival rate. The
skulls of elephants and mammoths are very fragile. Though they look
solid, they are actually made of of thin plates of bone honeycombed
with sinuses. This makes them lighter. When the skulls were dug from
the ground by farmers and railroad laborers, they frequently fell
apart before scientists could arrive to examine them.
But, given all the
possible arrangements, why did they choose one that looks so patently
absurd to us? To be fair, they didn't all believe that. The proper
placement was, as we say, controversial. Several placements had been
suggested. By the 1890s, quite a few had come around to the right
placement. At the root of it all was a conceptual problem. Western
naturalists believed that all horns, antlers, fangs, and tusks had to
be functional weapons. A moose's antlers might be over-engineered
because the ladies love a good rack, but, in the end, they still need
to be able to give a good thrashing to any challengers. The French
word for an elephant's tusks is "défenses." In fact,
modern elephants don't stab with their tusks; they swing sideways and
hit with them.
Another argument was that
the final inward curve of an old mammoth's tusks would have blocked
their vision. The growth of an a mammoth's tusks begins downward and
outward. They then curve forward and the outward growth ceases. By
the time they seriously curve upward, they also begin to curve
inward. In some old bulls, the tips actually cross in front of their
faces. And that was the problem. Some naturalists, who weren't that
familiar with elephant anatomy, thought this would dangerously
obstruct their vision. However, an elephants eyes are not on the
front of their skull. Like most herbivores, their eyes are on the
side. The line of sight that these naturalists thought would be
obstructed was already a blind spot for mammoths. Still, I am charmed
by the image of old, cross-eyed mammoths staggering around the tundra
supported by their woolly rhinoceros buddies.
During the 2003 and 2004
excavation seasons, new digs were conducted in Niederweningen. One of
them was conducted at the same site as the 1890-1 dig. Like Lang, the
organizers of these digs included botanists and geologists in their
teams. They also took advantage of cores drilled during the eighties
that revealed the geologic strata down to the bedrock twenty meters
below the village. What they discovered was that the ice age before
the most recent one scoured the valley clean. During the last glacial
maximum, the ice didn't reach the future site of Niederweningen. For
over 130,000 years, the valley has been home to alternating lakes and
peat bogs.
Lang reported that the
mammoths and other bones were discovered just beneath the gravel that
the railroad desired and on top of a layer of peat. His geologists
dug through the peat to reveal a layer of clay and silt—lake
sediment—below it. Modern geologists interpret the gravel as
glacial till washed down from the surrounding mountains at the end of
the last ice age. The date the transition from peat bog to alluvial
plain is uncertain. There is evidence of some erosion just above the
boundary. The bones have been dated to 33-34 thousand years old while
the peat just below it is six to eight thousand years older. Lang
found some pits in the peat that he thought might have been mammoth
footprints. Of they were, they weren't from any of the mammoths he
found.
Dreyer's composite
skeleton is still in Zurich (they have since fixed the tusks). Many
of the other bones, including the woolly rhinoceros and the baby
mammoth remained in Niederweningen. The 2004 dig discovered over half
of a mammoth including the jaw, tusks, most of the limb bones, and
part of the pelvis. The good citizens of Niederweningen promptly
built a museum for their new mammoth. Due to the richness of the
site, there will certainly be future digs there. I look forward to
hearing about them.
The new
Niederweningen
mammoth (source)
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