An Unusual Elephant

Posted by: Nick Redfern on September 15th, 2012

This just in from Dr. Karl Shuker:

“In his book The Vermilion Bird (1967), concerning life in T’ang Dynasty China (618-907 AD), Edward H. Schafer referred to a highly distinctive type of elephant:

“‘One T’ang source [namely, Ch’ing I Lu, by T’ao Ku] tells of a race of black elephants with small pink tusks in Hsun and Lei [corresponding to the Leizhou Peninsula and southeastern Guangxi Province]. Perhaps this describes the true Chinese race itself, whose furious representatives had been subdued by the agents of the kings of Shang [the Chinese dynasty spanning c.16th-11th Century BC]…The naturally pink ivory of the local elephants was well favoured, indeed as equal to the ivory imported from overseas.’

“Yet as such creatures certainly do not exist today, one might be forgiven for assuming that they owe more to local legend than zoological reality – which is why it came as such a surprise to discover that this elephantine enigma has actually been assigned its own official scientific name.”

And here’s Karl’s full post on this fascinating saga…

Nick Redfern About Nick Redfern
Punk music fan, Tennents Super and Carlsberg Special Brew beer fan, horror film fan, chocolate fan, like to wear black clothes, like to stay up late. Work as a writer.


4 Responses to “An Unusual Elephant”

  1. PoeticsOfBigfoot responds:

    Seen from a distance, a wet elephant with its mouth open might look like it’s black with pink tusks.

  2. wolfatrest responds:

    Seems like someone was determined to “discover” another type of elephant. Whether they existed or not.

  3. alan borky responds:

    A race of black elephants with small pink tusks.

    Oh my god Little Richard’d kill to own one of these!

  4. DWA responds:

    No need to postulate anything fantastical here.

    (Wet elephants with their mouths open surely could not account for this phenomenon, all by themselves.)

    A cursory acquaintance with zoology shows that something like this is plausible in the extreme.

    As is the unfortunate human tendency to exterminate something like this for extremely spurious short-term gain.

    (And “pink” is in the eye of the beholder. My bet is against shocking pink.)

    Shame we’ll never know.

Sorry. Comments have been closed.

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