THE MAMMOTH. 193 
men of science. To the latter, however, one of its many points 
of interest is that paleontology may be said to have been founded 
on the Mammoth. Cuvier, the “lustrious founder of the science 
of organic remains, was enabled, by his accurate and minute 
knowledge of the structures of living animals, to prove to his 
astonished contemporaries that the Mammoth bones and teeth, 
so plentifully discovered in Europe, were not such as could have 
belonged to any living elephant, and consequently that there 
must have existed, at some previous period in the world’s history, 
an elephant of a different kind, and quite unknown to naturalists. 
This was a new idea, and accordingly one that met with opposition 
as well as incredulity. 
It was thought in those days that whatever animals lived in the 
past must have resembled those now inhabiting the world, and 
the idea of extinct types unknown to man, and unknown to the 
regions where their bones were found embedded below the soil, 
was of so novel and startling a character as to appear incredible. 
Besides, the Mosaic account of Creation made no direct reference 
to extinct animals, and therefore the notion was not to be 
entertained. 
It is amusing to note the devices to which people resorted in 
order to combat this revolutionary teaching. Thus, when Cuvier 
first announced the discovery of the fossil remains of the elephant, 
hippopotamus, and rhinoceros in the superficial deposits of con- 
tinental Europe, he was gravely reminded of the elephants intro- 
duced into Italy by Pyrrhus in the Roman wars, and afterwards 
in the Roman triumphal processions or the games at the Colosseum. 
It was only by means of minute anatomical differences that he 
was able to show that the bones and teeth of these elephants 
must have belonged to a species unlike those now living. But 
these differences proved too subtle for even scientific men to 
appreciate, so slight was their knowledge of anatomy compared 
with his; so that they were either disallowed or explained away. 
But he was not to be beaten, and appealed to the fact that 
O 
