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Giant Bones Challenged 18th-Century Intellectuals
Cincy Post ^ | Dan Hurley

Posted on 09/29/2007 5:27:14 PM PDT by blam

Giant bones challenged 18th-century intellectuals

By Dan Hurley
Post columnist

Today, the valley is dry, dusty and unremarkable, but 250 years ago it was one of the most fascinating spots ever discovered in the North America. From the very first time in 1739 that local Indians led a contingent of French explorers to the salt licks near the Ohio River in what is today Boone County, Ky., the spot raised intellectually troubling questions.

European and American scientists understood the importance of salt licks and why thousands of modern buffalo, deer and elk beat broad paths to the marshy lick, but they could not explain why they found huge bones and tusks of "elephants," as well as other giant animals for which they had no names (eventually named giant ground sloth, the moose ox, flat headed peccary, etc.) lying on the ground and exposed in the banks of the nearby creek.

As explorers pushed westward, fantastic reports piled up. In 1751 Christopher Gist acquired two large teeth found at Big Bone Lick from men who reported that they had seen a skeleton with rib bones "eleven feet long, and the skull bone six feet wide, across the forehead."

In 1765 and 1766 George Croghan became the first explorer to collect significant quantities of bones, including two tusks "about six feet long." He sent these to London for inspection by the leading scientists of the day, including Benjamin Franklin, who thought the bones were "extremely curious on many accounts; no living elephant having been seen in any part of America by any of the Europeans settled there, or remembered by any tradition of the Indians."

It is difficult today to appreciate the intellectual shock waves set off by these giant bones in the 1790s and early 1800s. The first dinosaur would not be unearthed until 1824. Scientists, like everyone else, operated with the religiously grounded view of a "perfect creation" in which every creature had its place in a divinely established, hierarchical and stable "Great Chain of Being."

Not until people like French scientist George Cuvier, working with specimens from Big Bone collected by French explorers, and Benjamin Franklin, working with specimens collected by Croghan, did anyone pose one of the shattering question that both reflected the emerging modern consciousness: Is it possible that a species which once existed can become extinct?

With only the first hints from the nascent field of geology that the earth's age had to be calculated in non-biblical terms, and with no knowledge of ice ages, Franklin put forward a very modern hypothesis. He suggested that the best explanation for the extinction of the giant creatures was a significant change in climate in North America.

As a leading citizen of the Enlightenment, no one was more intrigued by Big Bone Lick than Thomas Jefferson, but, like a good scientist, he cautioned against a rush to judgment. With so much of North America unexplored, he was not prepared to conclude that mammoths and mastodons were extinct. They may simply be hiding in the vast wilderness of the American West, leading him to instruct Lewis and Clark in 1803 to be "observant of the animals of the country generally, & especially those not known in the US, the remains & accounts of any which may be deemed rare or extinct."

After the Corps of Discovery completed its famous exploration, Jefferson sent William Clark to the Lick in 1807 to systematically collect bones for him. The next year the President displayed nearly 100 of the specimens from Northern Kentucky in the East Room of the White House and invited fellow scientists to join him and "satisfy your curiosity."

For Dr. Glenn Storrs, the curator of Vertebrate Paleontology, and Dr. Brenda Hanke, the curator of Invertebrate Paleontology at the Cincinnati Museum Center, working close to Big Bone Lick means working close to the place where modern paleontology had its beginnings. For Storrs and Hanke, Big Bone remains a source of excitement and the curiosity.

Dr. Hanke just completed work on an interactive touch screen computer kiosk that will be unveiled during a special program at 5 this afternoon on the floor of the Museum of Natural History and Science in Union Terminal. The modern, high-tech program is located in the midst of ancient specimens from Big Bone Lick. As part of the Great Outdoor Weekend this Saturday and Sunday (www.CincyGreatOutdoorWeekend.org), Dr. Storrs will help lead tours at Big Bone Lick itself.

Hanke, a Canadian, always thought of Franklin and Jefferson as political figures, not scientists with whom she shared a curiosity and passion to understand the natural world. Now she sees Big Bone as an exciting human story as much as a scientific story. For her, the enduring lesson of Big Bone is the "infectious curiosity" it created among the greatest minds in America. She believes the site and its bones still have the power to inspire people, no matter what their age, to "explore and follow our curiosities, even if we don't end up writing a Declaration of Independence."

Dan Hurley is assistant vice president for history and research at the Cincinnati Museum Center. He is also staff historian for Channel 12 News and executive producer of Local 12 Newsmakers. E-mail: dhurley@cincymuseum.org.


TOPICS: News/Current Events; US: Kentucky
KEYWORDS: bigbonelick; bones; boonecounty; catastrophism; giant; godsgravesglyphs; intellectuals; ohio
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To: blam

bfl


21 posted on 09/29/2007 8:15:54 PM PDT by shield (A wise man's heart is at his RIGHT hand;but a fool's heart at his LEFT. Ecc 10:2)
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To: Ruy Dias de Bivar

well,

anything’s possible.

first time i heard that one.

thanks.


22 posted on 09/29/2007 8:29:19 PM PDT by ken21 ( people die + you never hear from them again.)
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To: ken21

I was watching a morning talk show years ago and the guest was Louis L’Amour. It was then that he talked about elephants in the Americas in the 1500’s.

I also read a newspaper interview in which he voiced the same views. He said he was going to write a novel about it. I don’t know if he did as he died not long after.


23 posted on 09/29/2007 9:15:45 PM PDT by Ruy Dias de Bivar (("democrat" 'one who panders to the crude and mindless whims of the masses.'))
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To: blam

That’s a great park. Dad took me there when I was 6 or 7 years old—I remember gazing at football-sized Mastodon teenth with wonderment.


24 posted on 09/30/2007 5:37:43 AM PDT by Renfield (How come there aren't any football teams with pink uniforms?)
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To: Ruy Dias de Bivar

Hey....they are still out there. They hide really well in trees. My dog barks at them all the time, you have to know where to look.


25 posted on 09/30/2007 5:43:00 AM PDT by Quick Shot
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To: blam

Wow, would love to visit that park.


26 posted on 09/30/2007 6:42:10 AM PDT by Dustbunny (The BIBLE - Basic Instructions Before Leaving Earth)
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To: Ruy Dias de Bivar

Louis L’Amour, we love the movies they make from his books.


27 posted on 09/30/2007 6:43:44 AM PDT by Dustbunny (The BIBLE - Basic Instructions Before Leaving Earth)
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To: blam
as well as other giant animals for which they had no names (eventually named giant ground sloth, the moose ox, flat headed peccary, etc.)

Does the author mean Musk Ox? If there is a Moose Ox, maybe I haven't seen every Discovery Channel show on antiquity for the last 22 years.

28 posted on 09/30/2007 1:06:46 PM PDT by Sawdring
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To: Sawdring

Moose Musk ox.


29 posted on 09/30/2007 1:19:14 PM PDT by blam (Secure the border and enforce the law)
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To: Ruy Dias de Bivar
He said he was going to write a novel about it

I know he included it in one of his novels about the first Sackett to explore America, it may have been called Jubal Sackett.

30 posted on 09/30/2007 2:43:20 PM PDT by yhwhsman ("Never give in--never, never, never, never, in nothing great or small..." -Sir Winston Churchill)
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To: blam

Believe me, Rosie O’Doughnuts remains are not a challenge that anyone would spend much time on.

The brain matter was always missing. There is a very small cavity in the head area.


31 posted on 09/30/2007 2:45:38 PM PDT by dforest (Duncan Hunter is the best hope we have on both fronts.)
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To: Ruy Dias de Bivar
From what I've heard, Louis L'Amour put a lot of research into the information he put in his stories, so if he included elephants (mammoths probably) it was because he had found pretty solid evidence for it.
32 posted on 09/30/2007 2:46:36 PM PDT by yhwhsman ("Never give in--never, never, never, never, in nothing great or small..." -Sir Winston Churchill)
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