[6]Thomas Ashe, Memoirs of Mammoth and Various Other Extraordinary and Stupendous Bones of Incognita, or Non-Descript Animals Found in the Vicinity of the Ohio, Wabash, Illinois, Mississippi, Missouri, Osage, and Red Rivers, &c. &c. (1806), 41.
[7]Jefferson, loc. cit.
[8]John Ranking, Historical Researches on the Conquest of Peru, Mexico, Bogota, Natchez, and Talomeco, in the Thirteenth Century, by the Mongols, Accompanied with Elephants (1823), 1-479. Johann R. Forster, Observations Made During a Voyage Around the World, etc. (1778), 316.
[9]Frederick Larkin, Ancient Man in America (1880), 3, 141.
[10]Max Uhle, “Späte Mastodonten in Ecuador,” Proceedings, 23rd International Congress of Americanists (1930), 247-258.
[11]Loren C. Eiseley, “The Mastodon and Early Man in America,” Science, 102:108-109 (1945).
[12]William B. Scott, A History of Land Mammals in the Western Hemisphere (2nd ed., 1937), 260.
[13]Loren C. Eiseley, “Men, Mastodons, and Myths,” Scientific Monthly, 62:517-524 (1946).
[14]Charles Lyell, Travels in North America, 1:54 (1845).
[15]Eiseley, “The Mastodon, etc.,” 109-110.