A
while back I spent several days at the New Bedford Whaling Museum research
library, where I uncovered some of the earliest known writings about narwhals.
And last week I finally received some scanned images from the librarian of what
early explorers believed narwhals looked like. The oldest volumes, like those
by Swedish writer Olaus Magnus in 1555 and naturalist Konrad Gesner in 1558,
written entirely in Latin, included woodcut prints illustrating what they
identified as Monocerote or Monocerotis, an early variation on today’s
taxonomical identifier, Monodon monoceros.
Next to an illustration of a sawfish –
which several authors apparently believed were closely related to narwhals –
Magnus showed a fish-like creature with a short, thick horn emerging from its
forehead. He described it as “a sea-monster that has in its brow a very large
horn wherewith it can pierce and wreck vessels and destroy many men.” Gesner’s
narwhal, depicted with just its head emerging from the water, looked more like
an alligator, with a long snout and abundant teeth, large dog-like eyes and, like
Magnus, a horn sticking straight up from the top of its head.
Surgeon
Ambrose Paré, in 1582, writing in French about unicorns, described a sea
unicorn “with a horn on his forehead like a saw, three feet long and a half,
and four inches wide, with its two peaks very acute.” The accompanying lithographic illustration
featured a monstrous creature labeled Vletif with a long, scaly body, a mermaid
tail, two pairs of pectoral fins that looked to me like dragon wings, a
wolf-like face and teeth, and a horn like the rostrum of a sawfish rising from
the top of its head. It exhibited an angry look as hunters poked at it from
land while whaling ships sailed by in the distance. Theologian Isaac de La
Peyrère in Relation du Groenland
(1663) includes three excellent views of a narwhal skull alongside an
illustration of a narwhal looking more like a fish than a whale but with a
bear-like snout and its tusk growing from its nose. It is clear that he had
access to narwhal skulls and tusks from which to create accurate illustrations,
but he had not been able to study complete narwhal specimens and were instead
left to interpret brief sightings of the animals in the water.
In
1700, ship’s surgeon Pierre Martin de la Martiniére published observations from
an Arctic expedition in A New Voyage to
the North, which includes an extraordinarily unique depiction of a narwhal
hunt that the Whaling Museum’s librarian said “has no precedent.” Yet it is the image of the narwhal that was
most disturbing to me: a scaly body, a hawk-like beak and eyes, and a spiral
tusk emerging from its forehead, with its head the size of a rowboat
Not
long afterward, descriptions and illustrations of narwhals finally became more
and more true to life. Explorer Henry Ellis’s A Voyage to Hudson’s-Bay (1748) was the first I found to correctly
illustrate the tail of a narwhal as a horizontal fluke as opposed to the
vertical caudal fin of a fish tail that most earlier illustrations feature.
Bernard O’Reilly’s written description of narwhals in Greenland, the Adjacent Seas, and the Northwest Passage to the Pacific
Ocean (1818) is much more accurate in its physical descriptions and
behaviors than most earlier works, though critics claim most of his book is
fiction. He must have had a specimen available to him, as he included such
details as its tongue length and placement in the mouth (“very short,
immoveable, and placed very far behind”), the size of the throat passage to its
stomach (“very small, not three inches over”), and its mouth size (“very small;
its greatest expansion being not more than six inches”).
While
descriptions of what narwhals look like were getting more accurate,
descriptions of narwhal behavior remained just exaggerated guesses. For
instance, William Henry Dewhurst, a surgeon on an English whaling ship, wrote in
The Natural History of the Order of
Cetacea and the Oceanic Inhabitants of the Arctic Region (1834) that the
narwhal “is an animal possessing almost colossal strength, inasmuch as it
precipitates itself upon every thing giving it the least offense, and furiously
rushes against the most trifling obstacle.
Its habitual sojourn is among the ice and icebergs of the Arctic Seas. Here, in the vast empire of eternal frost,
where darkness reigns for so great a portion of the year, this giant of the
frozen ocean dares every power, braves every danger; and bent upon carnage, he
attacks without provocation, combats without rivalry, destroying without
necessity; and the only enemy to whom he is occasionally compelled to yield to,
is man.”
Legendary
author Jules Verne continued these exaggerations in his 1870 classic Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea. His main character, Captain Nemo, a marine
biologist, said: “The ordinary narwhal,
or unicorn fish, is a kind of whale which grows to a length of sixty feet… [It]
is armed with a kind of ivory sword, or halberd, as some naturalists put it. It is a tusk as hard as steel. Occasionally
these tusks are found embedded in the bodies of other kinds of whales, against
which the narwhal always wins. Others
have been removed, not without difficulty, from the hulls of ships which they
had pierced clean through as easily as a drill pierces a barrel.”
The
truth about the narwhal’s abilities, from its flexible tusk to its
extraordinary diving abilities, is far more extraordinary than Verne’s fiction.

Your writing is both detailed and clear. I appreciate the careful and spirited research you conducted. Thank you for this solid work about the narwhal.
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