The Extermination of the American Bison
It is hoped that the following historical account of the discovery, partial utilization, and almost complete extermination of the great American bison may serve to cause the public to fully realize the folly of allowing all our most valuable and interesting American mammals to be wantonly destroyed in the same manner. The wild buffalo is practically gone forever, and in a few more years, when the whitened bones of the last bleaching skeleton shall have been picked up and shipped East for commercial uses, nothing will remain of him save his old, well-worn trails along the water-courses, a few museum specimens, and regret for his fate. If his untimely end fails even to point a moral that shall benefit the surviving species of mammals which are now being slaughtered in like manner , it will be sad indeed.
Although Bison americanus is a true bison, according to scientific classification, and not a buffalo, the fact that more than sixty millions of people in this country unite in calling him a “buffalo,” and know him by no other name, renders it quite unnecessary for me to apologize for following, in part, a harmless custom which has now become so universal that all the naturalists in the world could not change it if they would.
W. T. H.
The discovery of the American bison, as first made by Europeans, occurred in the menagerie of a heathen king.
William T. Hornaday
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THE EXTERMINATION OF THE AMERICAN BISON.
Inscription
From the Report of the National Museum, 1886-’87, pages 369-548, and plates I-XXII.
CONTENTS.
LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS.
MAPS.
THE EXTERMINATION OF THE AMERICAN BISON,
BISON AMERICANUS. (Male; four months old.)
BISON AMERICANUS. (Male yearling, taken Oct. 31, 1886. Montana.)
LENGTH OF THE HAIR OF BISON AMERICANUS.
Total number of buffalo skins handled in nine years, 246,175; total cost, $924,790.
UTILIZATION OF THE BUFFALO BY WHITE MEN.
Fig. 1. A Dead Bull. From a photograph by L. A. Huffman.
Fig. 2. Buffalo Skinners at Work. From a photograph by L. A. Huffman.
Fig. 1. Five Minutes’ Work. Photographed by L. A. Huffman.
Fig. 2. Scene on the Northern Buffalo Range. Photographed by L. A. Huffman.
Sketch Map of the Hunt for Buffalo. Montana 1886.
THE ACCESSORIES.
THE SIX BUFFALOES.
THE TAXIDERMIST’S OBJECT LESSONS.
FOOTNOTES.