<h2><SPAN name="IV"></SPAN>IV</h2>
<p class="h3">RULERS OF THE ANCIENT SEAS</p>
<blockquote><p>"<i>A time there was when the universe was darkness and
water, wherein certain animals of frightful and compound
mien were generated. There were serpents, and other creatures
with the mixed shapes of one another....</i>"—<i>The Archaic
Genesis.</i></p>
</blockquote>
<p>History shows us how in the past nation after
nation has arisen, increased in size and strength,
extended its bounds and dominion until it became
the ruling power of the world, and then
passed out of existence, often so completely
that nothing has remained save a few mounds
of dirt marking the graves of former cities.
And so has it been with the kingdoms of
nature. Just as Greece, Carthage, and Rome
were successively the rulers of the sea in the
days that we call old, so, long before the advent
of man, the seas were ruled by successive races
of creatures whose bones now lie scattered
over the beds of the ancient seas, even as the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_49">[49]</SPAN></span>
wrecks of galleys lie strewn over the bed of
the Mediterranean. For a time the armor-clad
fishes held undisputed sway; then their
reign was ended by the coming of the sharks,
who in their turn gave way to the fish-lizards,
the Ichthyosaurs and Plesiosaurs. These, however,
were rather local in their rule; but the
next group of reptiles to appear on the scene,
the great marine reptiles called Mosasaurs,
practically extended their empire around the
world, from New Zealand to North America.</p>
<p>We properly call these reptiles great, for so
they were; but there are degrees of greatness,
and there is a universal tendency to think of
the animals that have become extinct as much
greater than those of the present day, to magnify
the reptile that we never saw as well as
the fish that "got away," and it may be safely
said that the greatest of animals will shrink
before a two-foot rule. As a matter of fact,
no animals are known to have existed that
were larger than the whales; and, while there
are now no reptiles that can compare in bulk
with the Dinosaurs, there were few Mosasaurs
that exceeded in size a first-class Crocodile.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_50">[50]</SPAN></span>
An occasional Mosasaur reaches a length of
forty feet, but such are rare indeed, and one
even twenty-five feet long is a large specimen,<SPAN name="FNanchor_4_4"></SPAN><SPAN href="#Footnote_4_4" class="fnanchor">[4]</SPAN>
while the great Mugger, or Man-eating Crocodile,
grows, if permitted, to a length of twenty-five
or even thirty feet, and need not be
ashamed to match his bulk and jaws against
those of most Mosasaurs.</p>
<div class="footnote"><p><SPAN name="Footnote_4_4"></SPAN><SPAN href="#FNanchor_4_4"><span class="label">[4]</span></SPAN> <i>It is surprising to find Professor Cope placing the length
of the Mosasaurs at 70, 80, or 100 feet, as there is not the
slightest basis for even the lowest of these figures. Professor
Williston, the best authority on the subject, states, in his volume
on the "Cretaceous Reptiles of Kansas," that there is not in existence
any specimen of a Mosasaur indicating a greater length
than 45 feet.</i></p>
</div>
<p>The first of these sea-reptiles to be discovered
has passed into history, and now
reposes in the Jardin des Plantes, Paris,
after changing hands two or three times,
the original owner being dispossessed of his
treasure by the subtleties of law, while the
next holder was deprived of the specimen
by main force. Thus the story is told by
M. Faujas St. Fond, as rendered into English,
in Mantell's "Petrifactions and their Teachings":
"Some workmen, in blasting the rock
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_51">[51]</SPAN></span>in one of the caverns of the interior of the
mountain, perceived, to their astonishment, the
jaws of a large animal attached to the roof of
the chasm. The discovery was immediately
made known to M. Hoffman, who repaired to
the spot, and for weeks presided over the arduous
task of separating the mass of stone containing
these remains from the surrounding
rock. His labors were rewarded by the successful
extrication of the specimen, which he
conveyed in triumph to his house. This extraordinary
discovery, however, soon became
the subject of general conversation, and excited
so much interest that the canon of the cathedral
which stands on the mountain resolved to claim
the fossil, in right of being lord of the manor,
and succeeded, after a long and harassing lawsuit,
in obtaining the precious relic. It remained
for years in his possession, and Hoffman
died without regaining his treasure. At
length the French Revolution broke out, and
the armies of the Republic advanced to the
gates of Maestricht. The town was bombarded;
but, at the suggestion of the committee
of savans who accompanied the French<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_52">[52]</SPAN></span>
troops to select their share of the plunder, the
artillery was not suffered to play on that part
of the city in which the celebrated fossil was
known to be preserved. In the meantime, the
canon of St. Peter's, shrewdly suspecting the
reason why such peculiar favor was shown to
his residence, removed the specimen and concealed
it in a vault; but, when the city was
taken, the French authorities compelled him
to give up his ill-gotten prize, which was
immediately transmitted to the Jardin des
Plantes, at Paris, where it still forms one of
the most interesting objects in that magnificent
collection." And there it remains to
this day.</p>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG src="images/i_084.jpg" width-obs="400" height-obs="559" alt="" /> Fig. 9.—A Great Sea Lizard, <i>Tylosaurus Dyspelor</i>. <br/> <i>From a drawing by J. M. Gleeson.</i></div>
<p>The seas that rolled over western Kansas
were the headquarters of the Mosasaurs, and
hundreds—aye, thousands—of specimens
have been taken from the chalk bluffs of that
region, some of them in such a fine state of
preservation that we are not only well acquainted
with their internal structure, but with
their outward appearance as well. They were
essentially swimming lizards—great, overgrown,
and distant relatives of the Monitors
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_53">[53]</SPAN></span>
of Africa and Asia, especially adapted to a
roving, predatory life by their powerful tails
and paddle-shaped feet. Their cup-and-ball
vertebræ indicate great flexibility of the body,
their sharp teeth denote ability to capture slippery
prey, and the structure of the lower jaw
shows that they probably ate in a hurry and
swallowed their food entire, or bolted it in
great chunks. The jaws of all reptiles are
made up of a number of pieces, but these are
usually so spliced together that each half of the
jaw is one inflexible, or nearly inflexible, mass
of bone. In snakes, which swallow their prey
entire, the difficulty of swallowing animals
greater in diameter than themselves is surmounted
by having the two halves of the lower
jaw loosely joined at the free ends, so that
these may spread wide apart and thus increase
the gape of the mouth. This is also helped by
the manner in which the jaw is joined to the
head. The pelican solves the problem by the
length of his mandibles, this allowing so much
spring that when open they bow apart to
form a nice little landing net. In the Mosasaurs,
as in the cormorants, among birds, there
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_54">[54]</SPAN></span>
is a sort of joint in each half of the lower jaw
which permits it to bow outward when opened,
and this, aided by the articulation of the jaw
with the cranium, adds greatly to the swallowing
capacity. Thus in nature the same end is
attained by very different methods. To borrow
a suggestion from Professor Cope, if the
reader will extend his arms at full length, the
palms touching, and then bend his elbows outward
he will get a very good idea of the action
of a Mosasaur's jaw. The western sea
was a lively place in the day of the great
Mosasaurs, for with them swam the king of
turtles, Archelon, as Mr. Wieland has fitly
named him, a creature a dozen feet or more in
length, with a head a full yard long, while in
the shallows prowled great fishes with massive
jaws and teeth like spikes.</p>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG src="images/i_087.jpg" width-obs="400" height-obs="83" alt="" /> Fig. 10.—Jaw of a Mosasaur, Showing the Joint that Increased the Swallowing Capacity of that Reptile.</div>
<p>There, too, was the great, toothed diver,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_55">[55]</SPAN></span>
Hesperornis (see page 83), while over the
waters flew pterodactyls, with a spread of
wing of twenty feet, largest of all flying
creatures; and, not improbably—nay, very
probably—fish-eaters, too; and when each and
all of these were seeking their dinners, there
were troublous times for the small fry in that
old Kansan sea.</p>
<p>And then there came a change; to the
south, to the west, to the north, the land was
imperceptibly but surely rising, perhaps only
an inch or two in a century, but still rising,
until "The Ocean in which flourished this
abundant and vigorous life was at last completely
inclosed on the west by elevations of
sea-bottom, so that it only communicated with
the Atlantic and Pacific at the Gulf of Mexico
and the Arctic Sea."</p>
<p>The continued elevation of both eastern and
western shores contracted its area, and when
ridges of the sea-bottom reached the surface,
forming long, low bars, parts of the water-area
were included, and connection with salt-water
prevented. Thus were the living beings imprisoned
and subjected to many new risks to<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_56">[56]</SPAN></span>
life. The stronger could more readily capture
the weaker, while the fishes would gradually
perish through the constant freshening of the
water. With the death of any considerable
class, the balance of food-supply would be lost,
and many large species would disappear from
the scene. The most omnivorous and enduring
would longest resist the approach of starvation,
but would finally yield to inexorable fate—the
last one caught by the shifting bottom among
shallow pools, from which his exhausted energies
could not extricate him.<SPAN name="FNanchor_5_5"></SPAN><SPAN href="#Footnote_5_5" class="fnanchor">[5]</SPAN></p>
<div class="footnote"><p><SPAN name="Footnote_5_5"></SPAN><SPAN href="#FNanchor_5_5"><span class="label">[5]</span></SPAN> <i>Cope: "The Vertebrata of the Cretaceous Formations of
the West," p. 50, being the "Report of the United States Geological
Survey of the Territories," Vol. II.</i></p>
</div>
<p>Like the "Fossil man" the sea-serpent
flourishes perennially in the newspapers and,
despite the fact that he is now mainly regarded
as a joke, there have been many attempts to
habilitate this mythical monster and place him
on a foundation of firm fact. The most earnest
of these was that of M. Oudemans, who
expressed his belief in the existence of some
rare and huge seal-like creature whose occasional
appearance in southern waters gave rise
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_57">[57]</SPAN></span>to the best authenticated reports of the sea-serpent.
Among other possibilities it has been
suggested that some animal believed to be extinct
had really lived over to the present day.
Now there are a few waifs, spared from the
wrecks of ancient faunas, stranded on the
shores of the present, such as the Australian
Ceratodus and the Gar Pikes of North America,
and these and all other creatures that could
be mustered in were used as proofs to sustain
this theory. If, it was said, these animals
have been spared, why not others? If a fish
of such ancient lineage as the Gar Pike is so
common as to be a nuisance, why may there
not be a few Plesiosaurs or a Mosasaur somewhere
in the depths of the ocean? The argument
was a good one, the more that we may
"suppose" almost anything, but it must be
said that no trace of any of these creatures has
so far been found outside of the strata in which
they have long been known to occur, and all
the probabilities are opposed to this theory.
Still, if some of these creatures <i>had</i> been spared,
they might well have passed for sea-serpents,
even though Zeuglodon, the one most like a<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_58">[58]</SPAN></span>
serpent in form, was the one most remotely related
to snakes.</p>
<p>Zeuglodon, the yoke-tooth, so named from
the shape of its great cutting teeth, was indeed
a strange animal, and if we wonder at
the Greenland Whale, whose head is one-third
its total length, we may equally wonder at
Zeuglodon, with four feet of head, ten feet of
body, and forty feet of tail. No one, seeing
the bones of the trunk and tail for the first
time, would suspect that they belonged to the
same animal, for while the vertebræ of the
body are of moderate size, those of the tail
are, for the bulk of creature, the longest
known, measuring from fifteen to eighteen
inches in length, and weighing in a fossil condition
fifty to sixty pounds. In life, the animal
was from fifty to seventy feet in length,
and not more than six or eight feet through
the deepest part of the body, while the tail
was much less; the head was small and
pointed, the jaws well armed with grasping
and cutting teeth, and just back of the head
was a pair of short paddles, not unlike those
of a fur seal. It is curious to speculate on<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_59">[59]</SPAN></span>
the habits of a creature in which the tail so
obviously wagged the dog and whose articulations
all point to great freedom of movement
up and down. This may mean that it was an
active diver, descending to great depths to
prey upon squid, as the Sperm-Whale does
to-day, while it seems quite certain that it
must have reared at least a third of its great
length out of water to take a comprehensive
view of its surroundings. And if size is any
indication of power, the great tail, which obviously
ended in flukes like those of a whale,
must have been capable of propelling the beast
at a speed of twenty or thirty miles an hour.
Something of the kind must have been needed
in order that the small head might provide food
enough for the great tail, and it has been suggested
that inability to do this was the reason
why Zeuglodon became extinct. On the other
hand, it has been ingeniously argued that the
huge tail served to store up fat when food was
plenty, which was drawn upon when food became
scarce. The fur seals do something similar
to this, for the males come on shore in
May rolling in blubber, and depart in September<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_60">[60]</SPAN></span>
lean and hungry after a three months'
fast.</p>
<p>Zeuglodons must have been very numerous
in the old Gulf of Mexico, for bones are found
abundantly through portions of our Southern
States; it was also an inhabitant of the old
seas of southern Europe, but, as we shall see,
it gave place to the great fossil shark, and this
in turn passed out of existence. Still, common
though its bones may be, stories of their use
for making stone walls—and these stories are
still in circulation—resolve themselves on
close scrutiny into the occasional use of a big
vertebra to support the corner of a corn-crib.</p>
<p>The scientific name of Zeuglodon is <i>Basilosaurus
cetoides</i>, the whale-like king lizard—the
first of these names, <i>Basilosaurus</i>, having been
given to it by the original describer, Dr. Harlan,
who supposed the animal to have been a
reptile. Now it is a primary rule of nomenclature
that the first name given to an animal
must stick and may not be changed, even by
the act of a zoölogical congress, so Zeuglodon
must, so far as its name is concerned, masquerade
as a reptile for the rest of its paleontological<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_61">[61]</SPAN></span>
life. This, however, really matters
very little, because scientific names are simply
verbal handles by which we may grasp animals
to describe them, and Dr. Le Conte, to show
how little there may be in a name, called a
beetle Gyascutus. Owen's name of Zeuglodon,
although not tenable as a scientific name, is
too good to be wasted, and being readily remembered
and easily pronounced may be used
as a popular name.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_62">[62]</SPAN></span></p>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG src="images/i_095.jpg" width-obs="400" height-obs="235" alt="" /> Fig. 11.—Koch's Hydrarchus, Composed of Portions of the Skeleton of Several Zeuglodons.</div>
<p>One might think that a creature sixty or
seventy feet long was amply long enough, but
Dr. Albert Koch thought otherwise, and did
with Zeuglodon as, later on, he did with the
Mastodon, combining the vertebræ of several
individuals until he had a monster 114 feet
long! This he exhibited in Europe under the
name of Hydrarchus, or water king, finally
disposing of the composite creature to the
Museum of Dresden, where it was promptly
reduced to its proper dimensions. The natural
make-up of Zeuglodon is sufficiently composite
without any aid from man, for the head
and paddles are not unlike those of a seal, the
ribs are like those of a manatee, and the shoulder
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_63">[63]</SPAN></span>
blades are precisely like those of a whale,
while the vertebræ are different from those
of any other animal, even its own cousin and
lesser contemporary Dorudon. There were
also tiny hind legs tucked away beneath skin,
but these, as well as many other parts of the
animal's structure were unknown, until Mr.
Charles Schuchert collected a series of specimens
for the National Museum, from which it
was possible to restore the entire skeleton.
Owing to a rather curious circumstance the
first attempt at a restoration was at fault;
among the bones originally obtained by Mr.
Schuchert there were none from the last half
of the tail, an old gully having cut off the
hinder portion of the backbone and destroyed
the vertebræ. Not far away, however, was a
big lump of stone containing several vertebræ
of just the right size, and these were used as
models to complete the papier-maché skeleton
shown at Atlanta, in 1894. But a year after
Mr. Schuchert collected a series of vertebræ,
beginning with the tip of the tail, and these
showed conclusively that the first lot of tail
vertebræ belonged to a creature still undescribed<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_64">[64]</SPAN></span>
and one probably more like a whale
than Zeuglodon himself, whose exact relationships
are a little uncertain, as may be imagined
from what was said of its structure. Mixed
with the bones of Zeuglodon was the shell of
a turtle, nearly three feet long, and part of the
backbone of a great water-snake that must
have been twenty-five feet long, both previously
quite unknown. One more curious
thing about Zeuglodon bones remains to be
told, and then we are done with him; ordinarily
a fossil bone will break indifferently in any
direction, but the bones of Zeuglodon are built,
like an onion, of concentric layers, and these
have a great tendency to peel off during the
preparation of a specimen.</p>
<hr class="tb" />
<p>And now, as the wheels of time and change
rolled slowly on, sharks again came uppermost,
and the warmer Eocene and Miocene oceans
appear to have fairly teemed with these sea
wolves. There were small sharks with slender
teeth for catching little fishes, there were
larger sharks with saw-like teeth for cutting
slices out of larger fishes, and there were sharks<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_65">[65]</SPAN></span>
that might almost have swallowed the biggest
fish of to-day whole, sharks of a size the waters
had never before contained, and fortunately do
not contain now. We know these monsters
mostly by their teeth, for their skeletons were
cartilaginous, and this absence of their remains
is probably the reason why these creatures are
passed by while the adjectives huge, immense,
enormous are lavished on the Mosasaurs and
Plesiosaurs—animals that the great-toothed
shark, <i>Carcharodon megalodon</i>, might well
have eaten at a meal. For the gaping jaws
of one of these sharks, with its hundreds of
gleaming teeth must, at a moderate estimate,
have measured not less than six feet across.</p>
<p>The great White Shark, the man-eater, so
often found in story books, so rarely met with
in real life, attains a length of thirty feet, and
a man just makes him a good, satisfactory
lunch. Now a tooth of this shark is an inch
and a quarter long, while a tooth of the huge
<i>Megalodon</i> is commonly three, often four, and
not infrequently five inches long. Applying
the rule of three to such a tooth as this would
give a shark 120 feet long, bigger than most<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_66">[66]</SPAN></span>
whales, to whom a man would be but a
mouthful, just enough to whet his sharkship's
appetite. Even granting that the rule of three
unduly magnifies the dimensions of the brute,
and making an ample reduction, there would
still remain a fish between seventy-five and
one hundred feet long, quite large enough to
satisfy the most ambitious of <i>tuna</i> fishers, and
to have made bathing in the Miocene ocean
unpopular. Contemporary with the great-toothed
shark was another and closely related
species that originated with him in Eocene
times, and these two may possibly have had
something to do with the extinction of Zeuglodon.
This species is distinguished by having
on either side of the base of the great triangular
cutting teeth a little projection or
cusp, like the "ear" on a jar, so that this species
has been named <i>auriculatus</i>, or eared.
The edges of the teeth are also more saw-like
than in those of its greater relative, and as the
species must have attained a length of fifty or
sixty feet it may, with its better armature,
have been quite as formidable. And, as perhaps
the readers of these pages may know, the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_67">[67]</SPAN></span>
supply of teeth never ran short. Back of each
tooth, one behind another arranged in serried
ranks, lay a reserve of six or seven smaller, but
growing teeth, and whenever a tooth of the
front row was lost, the tooth immediately
behind it took its place, and like a well-trained
soldier kept the front line unbroken. Thus
the teeth of sharks are continually developing
at the back, and all the teeth are steadily
pushing forward, a very simple mechanical
arrangement causing the teeth to lie flat until
they reach the front of the jaw and come
into use.</p>
<p>Once fairly started in life, these huge sharks
spread themselves throughout the warm seas
of the world, for there was none might stand
before them and say nay. They swarmed
along our southern coast, from Maryland to
Texas; they swarmed everywhere that the water
was sufficiently warm, for their teeth occur in
Tertiary strata in many parts of the world, and
the deep-sea dredges of the Challenger and
Albatross have brought up their teeth by scores.
And then—they perished, perished as utterly
as did the hosts of Sennacherib. Why? We do<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_68">[68]</SPAN></span>
not know. Did they devour everything large
enough to be eaten throughout their habitat,
and then fall to eating one another? Again,
we do not know. But perish they did, while
the smaller white shark, which came into being
at the same time, still lives, as if to emphasize
the fact that it is best not to overdo things,
and that in the long run the victory is not
<i>always</i> to the largest.</p>
<h3><i>REFERENCES</i></h3>
<p><i>The finest Mosasaur skeleton ever discovered, an
almost complete skeleton of Tylosaurus dyspelor, 29 feet
in length, may be seen at the head of the staircase leading
to the Hall of Paleontology, in the American Museum
of Natural History, New York. Another good specimen
may be seen in the Yale University Museum, which probably
has the largest collection of Mosasaurs in existence.
Another fine collection is in the Museum of the State
University of Kansas, at Lawrence.</i></p>
<p><i>The best Zeuglodon, the first to show the vestigial hind
legs and to make clear other portions of the structure, is
in the United States National Museum.</i></p>
<p><i>The great sharks are known in this country by their
teeth only, and, as these are common in the phosphate<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_69">[69]</SPAN></span>
beds, specimens may be seen in almost any collection. In
the United States National Museum, the jaws of a twelve-foot
blue shark are shown for comparison. The largest
tooth in that collection is 5-3/4 inches high and 5 inches
across the base. It takes five teeth of the blue shark to
fill the same number of inches.</i></p>
<p><i>The Mosasaurs are described in detail by Professor S.
W. Williston, in Vol. IV. of the "University Geological
Survey of Kansas." There is a technical—and, consequently,
uninteresting—account of Zeuglodon in Vol.
XXIII. of the "Proceedings of the United States National
Museum," page 327.</i></p>
<div class="figcenter200">
<ANTIMG src="images/i_102.jpg" width-obs="200" height-obs="340" alt="" />
Fig. 12.—A Tooth of Zeuglodon, one of the "Yoke
Teeth," from which it derives the name.</div>
<hr class="chapter" />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_70">[70]</SPAN></span></p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />