202 EXTINCT MONSLERS. 
all except one leg, but the flesh had almost all gone. The head 
was covered with a dry skin, one of the ears was seen to be 
covered with a tuft of hairs. All these parts suffered more or 
less injury in transport for a distance of 7330 miles to St. 
Petersburg, yet the eyes have been preserved. This Mammoth 
was a male, with a long mane on its neck, but both tail and 
proboscis had disappeared. The skin is of a dark grey colour, 
covered with a reddish wool and black hairs. The entire carcase 
was nine feet four inches high. ‘The skin of the side on which 
the carcase had lain was detached by Mr. Adams, for it was well 
preserved, but so heavy was it that ten persons found great 
difficulty in transporting it to the shore. The white bears, while 
devouring the flesh, had trodden into the ground much of the 
hair belonging to the carcase, but Mr. Adams was able by digging 
to procure about sixty pounds’ weight of hair. In a few days the 
work was completed, and he found himself in possession of 
a treasure which amply compensated him for the fatigues and 
dangers of the journey as well as the expense of the enterprise. 
When first seen, this Mammoth was embedded in clear pure ice, 
which forms in that coast escarpments of considerable thickness, 
sloping towards the sea, the top of which is covered with moss 
and earth. If the account of the Tungusians can be trusted, the 
carcase was some way below the surface of the ice when first 
seen. Arrived at Takutsk, Mr. Adams purchased a pair of tusks 
which he believed to belong to this Mammoth, but there is reason 
to doubt whether he did get the right tusks. They are nine feet 
six inches long. 
The skeleton of this specimen, the fame of which may be said 
to have spread all over the world, is now set up in the Museum 
of the St. Petersburg Academy, and the skin still remains attached 
to the head and feet. A part of the skin and some of the hair 
were sent by Mr. Adams to Sir Joseph Banks, who presented them 
to the Museum of the Royal College of Surgeons.+ A photograph 
1 A specimen of the hair of a mammoth may be also seen at the Natural 
