The Big Issue – August 19, 2019

(Barry) #1

30 | BIGISSUE.COM ǼȄɯǽȀg&g]cǽǻǼȄ


sea level was dozens of metres lower
than it is today. Fishermen trawling
the Dogger Bank sometimes catch
mammoth tusks and other ice age
relics (including Neanderthal bones),
ƪ쯯ƟĩĢŁƢŻůƷʼnĩƪĩþǴŦŻŻƢǜʼnĩƢĩƷʼnĩǢ
have lain for millennia.
Britain itself is a veritable ice-age
fossil wonderland. If we take just one
species, the woolly mammoth, we
have a record going back hundreds
of thousands of years, including
some of the very last European
mammoths ever found (from
Condover in Shropshire and only
14,000 years old). We know more
about mammoths than nearly any
other ice-age mammal thanks to
mummies preserved in Siberian
permafrost, copious art painted on
cave walls and even sculptures carved
out of mammoth ivory by people who
lived and breathed alongside these
giant wonders of nature. Conservative
estimates suggest there are more than
a million mammoths still lying buried
in the permafrost. Plenty of material
ƪƷŎŦŦŦĩǼƷŁŻƢƪƷƿĢǢ᠆
ȃƢŻƿłʼnþűþŦǢƪŎƪŻŁƷʼnĩŎƢłĩűĩƪ
we know that some mammoths were
blonde, most were brunette, some
had silky hair, others had limited
sense of smell. Mammoths lived in

matriarchal groups, like elephants
do today, and certainly would have
had their own unique culture, have
trod the same paths to waterholes for
ěĩűƷƿƢŎĩƪ᠄þűĢůŻĢŎȀĩĢƷʼnĩʼnþĚŎƷþƷ
ƷʼnĩǢŦŎǛĩĢŎűĚǢǴŦþƷƷĩűŎűłƷƢĩĩƪ᠄
clearing snow and fertilising the earth
ǜŎƷʼnƷŻűűĩƪŻŁůþűƿƢĩĢþǢþǼƷĩƢĢþǢ᠐
While most mammoths were gone by
the end of the Pleistocene, one Arctic
island had mammoths until 2500BC.
àƢþűłĩŦSƪŦþűĢʼnĩŦĢůþůůŻƷʼnƪþǼƷĩƢ
®ƷŻűĩʼnĩűłĩǜþƪěŻűƪƷƢƿěƷĩĢ᠄þǼƷĩƢ
ǜƢŎƷŎűłǜþƪŎűǛĩűƷĩĢ᠐ȃĩǢůƿƪƷʼnþǛĩ
ĚĩĩűůþłűŎȀěĩűƷ᠐
We have evidence, far too much
evidence, that people hunted them.
We have mammoth shoulder blades
ǜŎƷʼnǴŦŎűƷƪƟĩþƢƟŻŎűƷƪƪƷŎŦŦĢĩĩƟŦǢ
embedded from a hunt that took place
200 centuries ago. We have bones
broken and burnt, and ivory chipped
and whittled, to show that mammoths
were a one-stop-shop for Palaeolithic
needs. Mammoths and nearly all the
giant mammals that lived in ice age-
Europe and Britain are not here today.
ȃĩĩěʼnŻƪƟĩþţƪ᠃ŎƷǜþƪƿƪ᠐

ȄĩrŎƪƪŎűłhǢűǡ by
Ross Barnett is out now
(Bloomsbury, £16.99)

g=cgYʸ


BOOKS


A

fossil is just an echo. Reaching out to
us from the past, the further in time
it’s travelled, the weaker the tale it tells.
Luckily, some of the most fascinating
stories come from fossils of animals that have only
just gone. In geological time, we just missed them.
ȃĩůþůůŻƷʼnþűĢƷʼnĩǜŻŻŦŦǢƢʼnŎűŻ᠐ȃĩƪþĚƢĩƷŻŻƷʼn
cat þűĢƷʼnĩSƢŎƪʼnĩŦţ᠐ȃĩěþǛĩŦŎŻűþűĢƷʼnĩěþǛĩĚĩþƢ᠐
All these species disappeared along with the closing
of the ice age, the Pleistocene epoch, around
11,700 years ago.
Today, we are all eyewitnesses to the sixth mass
ĩǡƷŎűěƷŎŻű᠃þŦŻƿĢƪěƢĩþůƷʼnþƷǜŎŦŦƢĩƪŻűþƷĩŎűƷŻƷʼnĩ
future to tell any survivors how lightly we valued our
planet. Some people think that the sixth extinction
only started with the silent springs of the 20th
ěĩűƷƿƢǢ᠐ȃĩŦŻƪƪŻŁƪƟĩěŎĩƪŦŎţĩƷʼnĩʼnƿŎþ᠄ƷʼnĩƷʼnǢŦþěŎűĩ
and the passenger pigeon can seem anomalous,
exceptional even. Nothing could be further from
the truth.
SŻǼƷĩűƷʼnŎűţŻűƷʼnĩŁþƷĩŻŁƷʼnĩłĩűƷŦĩ®ƷĩŦŦĩƢᡒƪƪĩþ
cow. A giant (up to 10 tonnes and nine metres long)
relative of dugongs and manatees, its last refuge was
ƷʼnĩŁƢŎłŎĢ£þěŎȀěǜþƷĩƢŻŁƷʼnĩ ŻůůþűĢĩƢSƪŦþűĢƪ᠄
east of Kamchatka. Here, in 1741, shipwrecked
Russian sailors discovered it. One of their number
was a trained naturalist, Georg Steller, who while
surrounded by scurvy and starvation took copious
notes on the sea cow that would later bear his name.
ȃĩþűŎůþŦǜþƪƷʼnĩŎƢƪþǛŎŻƿƢ᠐tþŕǛĩƷŻƷʼnĩƷʼnƢĩþƷ
of humans, it could be approached without fear,
ĢƢþłłĩĢƷŻƪʼnŻƢĩǜŎƷʼnƢŻƟĩƪþűĢǴŦĩűƪĩĢþŦŎǛĩ᠐
Steller pathetically relates how in the
monogamous pairs the males would stay by the
bodies of their butchered mates for days. His journals
are full of gastronomic notes on the taste of the
seacow; blubber that had a pleasant hint of almonds
and could be eaten raw, meat that was comparable
ƷŻƷʼnĩȀűĩƪƷǛĩþŦ᠐ȃĩŎűŻDzŁĩűƪŎǛĩĚĩþƪƷ᠄ƷþţĩűþƷ
leisure, gave the crew the means to survive a vicious
ǜŎűƷĩƢ᠐ȃĩǢůþĢĩŎƷĚþěţƷŻrŻƪěŻǜþűĢƷƢŎłłĩƢĩĢ
a stampede of whalers and fur-hunters anxious to
exploit the fauna of the Commander Islands. By
 ᚆᚅᚇűŻƪĩþěŻǜƪǜĩƢĩŦĩǼƷþŦŎǛĩ᠐¼ǜĩűƷǢᠸƪĩǛĩűǢĩþƢƪ
ŻŁěŻűƷþěƷǜŎƷʼnʼnƿůþűƪǜþƪƪƿDzȀěŎĩűƷŁŻƢƷʼnĩŎƢ
total eradication.
Extinction is ever present. Since modern humans
ȀƢƪƷŦĩǼƷŁƢŎěþᚅᙹ᠄ᙹᙹᙹǢĩþƢƪþłŻ᠄ĩǡƷŎűěƷŎŻűʼnþƪĚĩĩű
our constant travelling companion. If our species has
ŦĩǼƷþŦĩłþěǢŁŻƢƷʼnĩŁƿƷƿƢĩ᠄ŎƷŎƪƷʼnŎƪ᠐
NŻůŻƪþƟŎĩűƪȀƢƪƷþƢƢŎǛĩĢŎű/ƿƢŻƟĩþĚŻƿƷ
40,000 years ago at the height of the ice age, and
ĩűěŻƿűƷĩƢĩĢþǜŎŦĢ/ĢĩűȀŦŦĩĢǜŎƷʼnłŎþűƷůþůůþŦƪ᠐
ȃĩůþůůŻƷʼnŁþƿűþǜĩƢĩþƷʼnŻůĩĩǛĩűŎűƢŎƷþŎű᠐
þěţƷʼnĩűŻƿƢŎƪŦþűĢǜþƪŠƿƪƷþƟĩűŎűƪƿŦþ᠐ȃĩtŻƢƷʼn
Sea didn’t exist. So much water was locked up in
giant ice sheets over Scotland and Scandinavia that

Illustration: Joseph Joyce


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AUTHORFEATURE


The deadliest


predator

Free download pdf