Later in the year, I visited Dan in his own habitat, the University of Michigan's Museum of Palaeontology, to find out how he unlocked the secrets of mammoth ivory. He brought out a tusk he'd acquired on his recent trip to Wrangel Island in the Arctic Ocean, home to the last of the mammoths.
This tusk was from an animal that died a mere 6000 years ago. We took it into a small room full of scientific paraphernalia - and a bandsaw - and started to cut. It was slow and painstaking work.
An hour later, the cut was complete. We laid the tusk on its side and Dan let me lift the upper half away, then laid it sawn face uppermost on the table. The tusk had opened like a book and now Dan could read it. We could see features: darker and lighter stripes. Under a UV lamp, the stripes stood out even more clearly.
Ivory grows incrementally throughout the lifetime of an elephant, mammoth or mastodon. The lines we could see most clearly related to annual growth cycles, but under the microscope, Dan was able to pick out much finer lines. He told me about the first time he counted those lines and realised that there were about 365 across an annual band: dentine laid down on a daily basis.
So here was an incredible record of the life of a proboscidean.
Just like tree rings, narrow bands corresponded with times of stress and poor growth, whereas they became wider in times of plenty.
So Dan could identify cycles of pregnancy and lactation in females; he could tell when young males first became sexually mature, going into the testosterone-fuelled rage called musth, when growth was not a priority.
All this information was useful in answering questions about individual mammoths and mastodons, but en masse, it started to provide a level of data that would help to answer the most compelling question: why had these animals become extinct?
Among late-surviving mastodons he has studied, Dan is finding examples of females losing calves (where one pregnancy is immediately followed by another, rather than by two years of lactation) and of males going into musth early (just as young bull elephants do in Africa, when mature males are poached out). Dan had also found examples of mammoths dying in the autumn, a time of year when they should have been in peak condition. Autumn deaths argued for an extrinsic cause of death. For Dan, all this could be pinned on one such cause: overhunting by humans.
Kill-sites exist that show humans were certainly, at least occasionally, hunting these formidable beasts. But it's hard to argue from those isolated cases that humans were responsible for wiping out entire species. Far from rampaging across the continent, killing every large mammal in sight, it seems ancient hunters may have had a more subtle, but no less terminal impact. Over thousands of years, the level of hunting was just enough to be unsustainable for these huge, slow-breeding behemoths of the ice age.
Cutting the tusk open like that was only the beginning of coaxing the ivory into yielding its secrets. Dan would make fine sections to look at under the microscope and take samples for chemical analysis.
He was quietly excited about this new specimen from Wrangel: "It's one of the best tusks I've seen."
-Observer