1 Cosmology and the Earth
2 Journey to the Center of the Earth
3 Drifting Continents and Spreading Seas
4 The Way the Earth Works: Plate Tectonics
5 Patterns in Nature: Minerals
6 Up from the Inferno: Magma and Igneous Rocks
7 A Surface Veneer: Sediments, Soils, and Sedimentary Rocks
8 Metamorphism: A Process of Change
9 The Wrath of Vulcan: Volcanic Eruptions
10 A Violent Pulse: Earthquakes
11 Crags, Cracks, and Crumples: Crustal Deformations and Mountain Building
12 Deep Time: How Old Is Old?
13 A Biography of Earth
14 Squeezing Power from a Stone: Energy Resources
15 Riches in Rock: Mineral Resources
16 Unsafe Ground: Landslides and Other Mass Movements
17 Streams and Floods: The Geology of Running Water
18 Restless Realm: Oceans and Coasts
19 A Hidden Reserve: Groundwater
20 An Envelope of Gas: Earth’s Atmosphere and Climate
21 Dry Regions: The Geology of Deserts
22 Amazing Ice: Glaciers and Ice Ages
23 Global Change in the Earth System
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Chapter 22: Amazing Ice: Glaciers and Ice Ages

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The Rest of the Story: The Discovery of Pleistocene Mammals

by Stephen Marshak

As early as the 1600s, scholars were arguing over the meaning of enormous bones found in sedimentary deposits in Europe. Most thought the bones were relicts of giant humans that had been drowned in Noah's flood. But in 1796, the French anatomist Georges Cuvier used his detailed knowledge of anatomy to show that these giant bones instead resembled those of elephants but were not the bones of any elephant species then alive. Since no one had ever seen these elephants and it seemed unlikely that they could be hiding anywhere, Cuvier reasoned that they must be extinct. The concept seemed outrageous to people of Cuvier's time, who could think of no reason for extinction to occur.

In the early 1800s, explorers discovered still more bones of extinct mammals: cave bears, giant lions, hyenas, and saber-toothed cats. Construction workers even unearthed hippopotamus bones in glacial drift beneath London. The final documentation of Pleistocene mammals came in the early twentieth century, when several Russian expeditions found wooly mammoths that had been frozen intact in the Siberian ice. Much of the mammoth's skin, hair, and flesh remained, and their 30,000-year-old meat was still edible (as far as the sled doges were concerned).

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