Episode 357: When Scientists Ate Mammoth Meat

Published: Dec. 4, 2023, 7 a.m.

b"This week we're going to talk about stories of scientists, explorers, and other modern people eating meat from long-dead extinct animals. Did it ever really happen?\\n\\nCheck out the great new podcast Herbarium of the Bizarre! I highly recommend it even though they don't eat any mammoth meat.\\n\\nFurther reading:\\n\\nWas frozen mammoth or giant ground sloth served for dinner at The Explorers Club?\\n\\nStudy Proves the Explorers Club Didn't Really Eat Mammoth at 1950s New York Dinner\\n\\nCompany Serves World's First 'Mammoth' Meatball, but Nobody Is Allowed to Eat It\\n\\nDon't eat me bro:\\n\\n\\n\\nBlue Babe, a steppe bison mummy found in Alaska:\\n\\n\\n\\nShow transcript:\\nWelcome to Strange Animals Podcast. I\\u2019m your host, Kate Shaw.\\nWe\\u2019ve talked about mammoths and other ice age megafauna plenty of times before, but this week we\\u2019re going to learn something specific and really weird about these animals, although it\\u2019s more accurate to say we\\u2019re going to learn how weird humans are.\\nYou may have heard this story before, or something similar to this story. A group of scientists in Siberia or Alaska have unearthed a mammoth carcass that\\u2019s been frozen in permafrost for at least 25,000 years. It\\u2019s in such good shape that the meat looks as fresh as a fancy restaurant steak that\\u2019s ready to go on the grill. At the end of a long day of using pickaxes to dig the mammoth out of ground frozen as solid as rock, the scientists are so hungry that when someone suggests they actually grill some mammoth meat, they all think it\\u2019s a good idea. The meat turns out to taste as good as it looks. Everyone has a big steak dinner, even the camp dogs, and when the expedition ends they not only have a mammoth to put on display in their museum, they have a great story to tell about a meal no human has eaten for thousands of years.\\nYou may even have come across an event that inspired this particular story. The incredibly well preserved 44,000 year old Berezovsky mammoth was discovered in Russia in 1900 and excavated in 1901, and it\\u2019s now on display in the Zoological Museum in Saint Petersburg. Rumors persisted for years that the expedition members ate some of the mammoth meat, but while we don\\u2019t know exactly what happened, definitely no one actually sat down to have a yummy meal of mammoth steak.\\nIt turns out that the meat did look appetizing when thawed, but stank like old roadkill. The expedition erected a big tent over the dig site as they excavated the carcass, which was a slow process in 1901, and the smell became so bad that the expedition members had to take frequent breaks and leave the tent for fresh air.\\nApparently the scientists got drunk one night and dared each other to try a bite of the meat, but even after they practically covered it in pepper to disguise the taste, no one could force any down. One man might have managed to eat a single bite, but reports vary. They fed the meat to the camp dogs instead, who were just fine. Dogs and wolves have short, fast digestive tracts and can tolerate eating foods that would make humans very sick.\\nBut that\\u2019s not the only story of modern humans eating meat from frozen mammoth carcasses. It supposedly happened on January 13, 1951 at the Roosevelt Hotel\\u2019s grand ballroom in New York City. A group called the Explorers Club met for their annual fancy dinner that evening, and as always, the menu contained lots of exotic foods. The main course has gone down in history as being slices of mammoth meat from a 250,000-year-old carcass found in Alaska.\\nThat\\u2019s where things get confusing, though, because supposedly the main course was megatherium meat found in Alaska. Megatherium was a giant ground sloth that hasn\\u2019t ever been found frozen in permafrost at all, certainly not in Alaska. It lived in South America. However, the Christian Science Monitor magazine thought megatherium was another word for mammoth and reported that the group was served mammoth meat.\\nSome of the Explorers Club members genuinely thought they were din..."