Chūrui Naumann Elephant Museum

The Chūrui Naumann Elephant Museum (忠類ナウマン象記念館, Chūrui Nauman-zō Kinenkan) opened in Makubetsu, Hokkaidō, Japan in 1988. It commemorates the chance discovery of a fossilized Naumann's elephant in Chūrui, now Makubetsu, on 26 July 1969, during construction work on a farm road: the youth who unearthed the initial piece with his pickaxe crying out "this is an elephant's tooth" (「これは象の歯だ」). During the course of three subsequent excavations, some forty-seven bones were recovered, representing 70–80% of the total skeleton. Twenty-two museums in Japan and the rest of the world now house the reconstructed elephant's remains from the Chrui finds.[1]

Chūrui Naumann Elephant Museum
忠類ナウマン象記念館
The museum is modelled on Naumann's elephant, with the dome representing its body, the four corners its paws, the entrance its head, the pebble walls its skin, and the long approach its trunk and tusks[1]
Location in Japan
Location in Japan
Location within Hokkaido
Location in Japan
Location in Japan
Chūrui Naumann Elephant Museum (Japan)
General information
Address383-1 Chūrui Shirogane-machi
Town or cityMakubetsu, Hokkaidō
CountryJapan
Coordinates42°33′29″N 143°18′00″E
OpenedAugust 1988
Website
Official website

See also

References

  1. 忠類ナウマン象記念館 [The Churui Museum of Naumann's Elephant]. Makubetsu Town. Retrieved 7 September 2019.



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