About 2,000,000 years ago elephants arrived on various Mediterranean islands - including Sicily, and started to get smaller: some being eventually less than one quarter of the size of their Mammoth relatives. The mini-elephants became extinct only about 8,000 years ago - coincidentally at about the time that our Neolithic ancestors were colonising the islands. The discovery of a dwarf elephant skull would not have been an unusual event, even 5,000 years later, when the first Mycenaean Greeks were making contact with the island. All elephants, of course, have a unique feature: their nose is elongated to form a trunk. But this proboscis has no bones in it - an elephant's skeleton would give little clue as to the physiognomy of its original owner- especially to a population unaware of a past elephant population. In fact the nasal cavity looks like nothing so much as a single enormous eye-socket. Hence the Cyclops legend? The dwarf elephant of Sicily would not have been a giant to compare with the modern African elephant - but his skull, with its single eye-hole would, in my opinion, certainly be enough to suggest that a race of one-eyed giants had once roamed on the island. There's a new book (Spring 2000) from Princeton University Press by Adrienne Mayor, which advances the theory that tales of Griffins, Giants and Centaurs as well as Cyclopes arose from interpretation of the fossil evidence by the ancients. It's called Palaeontology in Greek and Roman Times. The dwarf elephant theory to explain the Cyclops was first thought of in 1914 by Othenio Abel.