Steller's sea-cows with Kotick the
white seal – an 1895 engraving for 'The White Seal', from Rudyard Kipling's The
Jungle Book (public domain)
"By the Great
Combers of Magellan!" he said, beneath his moustache. "Who in the
Deep Sea are these people?"
They were like no
walrus, sea-lion, seal, bear, whale, shark, fish, squid, or scallop that Kotick
[the white seal] had ever seen before. They were between twenty and thirty feet
long, and they had no hind flippers, but a shovel-like tail that looked as if
it had been whittled out of wet leather. Their heads were the most
foolish-looking things you ever saw, and they balanced on the ends of their tails
in deep water when they weren't grazing, bowing solemnly to each other and
waving their front flippers as a fat man waves his arm.
"Ahem!" said
Kotick. "Good sport, gentlemen?" The big things answered by bowing
and waving their flippers like the Frog-Footman [from Alice's Adventures In
Wonderland]. When they began feeding again Kotick saw that their upper lip
was split into two pieces that they could twitch apart about a foot and bring
together again with a whole bushel of seaweed between the splits. They tucked
the stuff into their mouths and chumped solemnly…
"Well!" said
Kotick. "You're the only people I've ever met uglier than Sea Vitch – and with
worse manners."
Then he remembered in a
flash what the Burgomaster gull had screamed to him when he was a little
yearling at Walrus Islet, and he tumbled backward in the water, for he knew
that he had found Sea Cow at last.
Rudyard Kipling – 'The White Seal', from The
Jungle Book
Back in the 1800s, naturalists were much more open
to zoological anomalies, mysteries, and curiosities, including those of the
cryptozoological kind, than they are today. Never was this openness more
readily visible, however, than in the pages of a fascinating British monthly periodical
entitled The Zoologist (published 1843-1916), which was packed
throughout with contributions from amateur wildlife enthusiasts and eminent
biologists alike on every conceivable (and inconceivable!) aspect of natural
and, especially, unnatural history.
Today, conversely, such oddities that cannot be
readily pigeon-holed into 'acceptable', mainstream zoological categories rarely
receive widespread hard-copy coverage outside of newspapers and Fortean
publications – which is why Flying Snake, a periodical founded,
published, edited, and lovingly compiled every 4-6 months by the indefatigable,
inestimable cryptozoological and animal anomalies researcher Richard Muirhead
is such an absolute delight, a veritable diamond among so much modern-day
dross, especially online.
Steller's sea-cow, depicted on a
local postage stamp issued for Russia's Commander (=Komandorski) Islands, a 17-strong
group situated in the Bering Sea (east of the Kamchatka Peninsula in the
Russian Far East), and around which this huge sea mammal once lived (public
domain)
A natural, very worthy successor to The
Zoologist, this wonderful little journal contains so much extraordinary,
non-conventional Nature, the kind that cannot be readily found in any other
present-day publication, that whenever I receive the latest issue I know full
well that once I have opened it I shall find it impossible to put down until I
have read it from cover to cover.
In the April 2014 issue (vol. 3, #7), however,
Richard surpassed even his superlative ability to surprise me with his
researches, by virtue of this issue's front cover-highlighted lead article. It
consisted of an investigation conducted by Richard that quite simply took my
breath away – by featuring the history and two vintage photographs (one of
which appeared on the front cover) of what has seemingly long been claimed to
be a bona fide torso skin (i.e. lacking the head, flippers, and tail) of Hydrodamalis [=Rhytina] gigas, the long-extinct Steller's
sea-cow!
The front cover of Flying Snake,
April 2014, showcasing one of the two vintage photographs uncovered by Richard
that allegedly depict a preserved Steller's sea-cow skin (© Richard Muirhead/Flying
Snake – reproduced here on a strictly non-commercial Fair Use basis for
educational/review purposes only)
As I have documented in greater detail within an
earlier ShukerNature article (click here
to read it), at up to 30 ft long Steller's sea-cow was by far the largest
modern-day species of sirenian ever to have existed, very significantly bigger
than the dugong and any of the manatees that still survive today. It was discovered
in shallow waters around the Commander (aka Komandorski) Islands in what was
later dubbed the Bering Sea, separating Russia's Kamchatka Peninsula from
Alaska, by Arctic explorer Dr Georg W. Steller in 1741, during Danish explorer
Vitus Bering's Russian expeditions there. Tragically, however, the inoffensive,
unafraid behaviour of this huge herbivorous marine mammal, coupled with the
abundance and very tasty nature of its meat, swiftly proved to be its undoing,
dooming it to a rapid extinction despite its great numbers. For it was
mercilessly, relentlessly slaughtered by hungry mariners penetrating its icy,
inhospitable domain.
By 1768, Steller's sea-cow was no more, exterminated
from the Commander Islands' coastal waters that had been its home since time
immemorial. Having said that, there have been infrequent subsequent reports
from various remote Arctic outposts of extremely large, mystifying sea beasts
that may – just may – be surviving sea-cows, but none has ever been confirmed.
Reconstruction of Dr Georg W. Steller
measuring a Steller's sea cow on Bering Island, 12 July 1742 (public domain)
As for preserved physical remains of this veritable
behemoth: a number of museums around the world have skeletons (complete,
partial, or composite), skulls (ditto), or isolated bones (limb bones,
vertebrae, ribs, etc) from Steller's sea-cows (click here
to access an extensive listing of such specimens).
In addition, there are a few scraps of preserved skin
on record that have been claimed to be from this lost species, but there are
also counterclaims averring that they are actually from seals or cetaceans. According
to the above listing of specimens, one such scrap is present in the
Überseemuseum at Bremen, Germany (a photograph of it snapped on 29 January 2011
by Flickriver user MareCrisium can be viewed here).
A second is (or was) held by Germany's Hamburg Zoological Museum (it may have
been destroyed by bombing during World War II, and the above listing presumes
that it is/was a misinterpreted whale skin anyway). And a third is held by the
Zoological Institute of the Academy of Sciences in St Petersburg, Russia
(queried in the listing as a probable whale skin fragment again, and originally
discovered in the Institute's collections by an A. Brandt). However, no museum
or scientific institution anywhere in the world lays claim of any kind to
possessing an entire torso skin from such a creature – which is why Richard's report
and accompanying photographs were of such profound interest to me.
Skeleton of a Steller's sea-cow at
the National Museum of Natural History in Paris, France (© FunkMonk/Wikipedia –
CC BY-SA 3.0 licence)
I strongly recommend everyone interested in this
case to read Richard's original article, but in the meantime here is a summary
of what he uncovered.
It all began with a local newspaper article. On 6
April 1956, the Kansas City Star in the U.S.A. published the photograph
that appears on the above-reproduced front cover of Flying Snake for
April 2014, together with the following details. The person holding the torso skin,
and pictured with it in her East Tenth Street, Intercity District, Kansas
home's living room, was Mrs Faye Keyton, who had inherited it jointly with her
brother, W.L. Shafer, from their aunt, Miss Myrtle Shafer, who had died in May
1955. It was normally kept rolled up inside a long cardboard tube, was quite
stiff, and according to Mrs Keyton it was an Alaskan Indian burial robe that
had been made from the skin of a Steller's sea-cow. But how did she know this?
Vintage photograph from the late
1800s/very early 1900s depicting Prof. Willoughby with the burial robe (public
domain)
Keyton revealed that her aunt had herself inherited
it, from Jim Willoughby, a distant relative, who in turn had received it from
his father, a certain Prof. Richard ('Dick') D. Willoughby (1832-1902), who had lived in
Alaska for half a century, where he had been made an Indian chief and spoke
their language. The robe was one of his possessions that he had acquired there
during that period, and when he died in 1902 it was placed over him during his
funeral as part of a native Alaskan Indian burial ceremony.
Reading this intriguing little history, I was
immediately struck by the curious fact that there was no explanation as to why
or how this robe was ever deemed to be the skin of a Steller's sea-cow. All that I can
assume is that it had been labelled as such by Prof. Willoughby himself, with that identity having subsequently been accepted unquestioningly by, and duly passed on down through, the generations of the robe's inheritors. Unfortunately, however, this in turn leads to a major problem in accepting such an identification. For as
revealed by Richard Muirhead in his Flying Snake article, Willoughby was a notorious
practical joker and had a longstanding reputation as a teller of exceedingly
tall tales. He was also known for attaching highly imaginative and often
decidedly lurid back-stories to the many curios contained in his house that he
had gathered from different parts of the Alaskan coast, many of which were of
native Alaskan Indian origin. Taking all of this into account, it is by no
means certain, therefore, that the robe really was a Steller's sea-cow skin – this could
just as easily have been yet another fanciful yarn spun by Willoughby.
Steller's sea-cow model at London's
Natural History Museum (© Emöke Dénes/Wikipedia CC BY-SA 4.0 licence)
But that is not all. Based upon direct eyewitness
descriptions and sketches of Steller's sea-cow by Steller himself and other
maritime travellers during the all-too-brief period of time spanning this
species' discovery and destruction, the robe doesn't look at all like the skin
of this officially extinct species. For whereas the latter's skin was said to be rough and
spotted, this robe is smooth and bears two very distinctive, highly conspicuous
white rings upon it as well as an upper and a lower white band. True, the
robe's leather may have been tanned, making it smooth, but those very large white rings and bands
are unlike anything ever recorded for Steller's sea-cow. In addition, judging from the photographs and allowing for forced perspective (in both photos, the skin was closer to the camera than the person was, thereby making the former appear bigger than it actually was), the skin was far smaller than any but the youngest of juvenile sea-cows would have been.
One of Richard's correspondents, regular Flying
Snake contributor Richard George, opined that he was certain that these
distinctive markings had been painted on the skin. Bearing in mind that it was used as a
ceremonial burial robe, adding such decorations to it as some form of symbolic
representation would not be at all beyond the realms of possibility. If only
the robe could be examined directly, however – this would soon determine
whether they were a natural component of it or had been artificially added.
Moreover, with today's advances in DNA analyses, a sample of tissue taken from
it would readily reveal the true taxonomic nature of the species from which
the skin had been obtained. But therein lies a fundamental problem – its
current whereabouts are presently unknown.
After reading Richard's article, I did consider
attempting to trace the robe, by pursuing the current whereabouts of Mrs Keyton, her
brother, or any children that either of them may have had. However, as so often
happens, other matters diverted my attention, and eventually I forgot about
this mysterious object – until this week, that is.
After having read with my usual enthusiasm the
latest, newly-published issue (#14, January 2019) of Flying Snake a few
days ago, I was about to place it with the other 13 issues on their allotted
shelf in my study's cryptozoological section when, while idly flicking through
them, I noticed the front cover of the April 2014 issue once more, the first
time that I'd looked at it in a very long while – but this time something
suddenly clicked inside my mind. I know that ringed patterning on the robe! I've seen it
somewhere before, somewhere else.
Steller's sea-cow (right) with a Steller's
sea lion and a northern fur seal, from a map of the Commander Islands drawn by
Sven Waxell in 1891 (public domain)
Sitting there in thought, I recalled the
above-linked listing of Steller's sea-cow material held by various museums
around the world, and in particular I remembered those controversial fragments
of skin that a few of the museums possessed, claimed by some to be genuine
Steller's sea-cow relics but by others to be derived from whales or seals.
And then, without warning, an image flashed into my
mind – an image of an extremely distinctive species of sea mammal, one that,
uniquely, possessed exactly the same ringed pelage as was so visibly present on
the Alaskan burial robe, but a species that unlike Steller's sea-cow was still very much alive today. Suddenly, I
knew exactly what the Alaskan burial robe had been obtained from – and it most definitely
was not a Steller's sea-cow!
Instead, it was from an exceptionally beautiful,
exquisitely marked species of phocid (earless) seal – namely, Histriophoca
fasciata, the ribbon or banded seal. Up to 5 ft long, it is native to the
Arctic and subarctic regions of the northern Pacific Ocean, but especially the
Bering Sea…separating Russia from Alaska! Moreover, it is immediately
distinguished from all other seal species (and all other species of any kind of
mammal, for that matter) by virtue of the two very large white circles on its body (one on
each side) and also the two wide white bands encircling its neck and tail
respectively that collectively decorate very strikingly its otherwise uniformly
dark-brown or black pelage.
All that I needed to do now in order to be
absolutely certain was to uncover if I could a photograph of a torso skin of a ribbon
seal to compare it directly with the Alaskan burial robe, and once I was on the
trail it didn't take me long to find an excellent example. Comparing the two
side by side, they were virtually identical, as shown below. Consequently,
there could be absolutely no doubt whatsoever – just like so many other
examples of his yarns on record, Willoughby's Steller's sea-cow skin was
nothing but a tall tale. It was in reality the skin of a ribbon seal. Case
closed.
Comparing Willoughby's Alaskan burial
skin (left) with the skin of a ribbon seal (right) (© Kansas City Star, reproduced here on a strictly
non-commercial Fair Use basis for educational/review purposes only / public
domain)
I am delighted that Richard Muirhead brought this
fascinating but hitherto little-publicised case to cryptozoological attention with
his customary investigative zeal via his Flying Snake article, and that
I in turn have been able to provide the solution to the longstanding riddle
that its subject posed.
For anyone seeking more information concerning Flying Snake,
a publication that I thoroughly recommend to everyone interested in the more unusual, unexpected facets of natural history, please click here.
Finally: although the following flying snake
illustration has nothing to do whatsoever either with Richard's periodical or
with Steller's sea-cow, its fictional subject is nonetheless cryptozoological
in nature and is such an extraordinary image in its own right that it deserves
to be included here, especially as at least to my knowledge it has never before
been featured in any cryptozoological article. So here it is, from the front
cover of an issue of an American men's magazine entitled Man's Conquest:
Front cover of the March 1967 issue
of Man's Conquest, depicting an attack of flying snakes, the subject of
a fiction short story contained inside (© Man's Conquest – reproduced here
on a strictly non-commercial Fair Use basis for educational/review purposes
only)