Well, from what I know, wolverine’s origins are more than a little mysterious, in every aspect of the canon. He was born, possibly a very long time ago, as a mutant with remarkable healing powers.
They suspect that some military organization was experimenting to see how far those healing powers went… and managed to replace his entire skeleton with an artificial one, not to mention implant the claws.
Woverines’ mutant abilities are a healing factor and animal scenses.
Wolverine is very old. He was an experienced fighter in WWII, and has been around possibly much longer than that. His healing factor stops the aging process in the same way it heals wounds and doesn’t allow him to get very drunk.
A group of scientists working for or with the canadian government took Woverine and Sabretooth for an experiment. They both have healing factors. Wolverine went first, and had his skelaton replaced with adamantium, an unbreakable metal. This would kill a normal person, but the healing factor constantly keeps him alive. They also added the claws.
The Canadian government was doing the experiment to create powerful mutant fighters that they could control. They wanted them to join their superhero team “Alpha Flight”.
Before the procedure could be done on Sabretooth, Wolverine trashed the place and they both escaped. Since Sabretooth has super strength in addition to the same scenses and healing factor of Wolverine, he would have been very powerful if the procedure was done on him as well. Since he didn’t get the adamantium bones, they are about evenly matched.
My apologies in advance if I messed up any of the details. The movie was basically true to what I’ve said, they just left out some of the details in the interests of brevity.
And then you’ve got the whole “Wolverine is part of an ancient race” story that came out of the Earth X clusterf***.
Just how does that whole series tie into the Marvel canon, by the way?
Wolverine was born James Howlett in Alberta, Canada, towards the end of the nineteenth century. Origin follows his story from the point of view of a girl named Rose, who was hired to keep him company as a child.
If you want more detail, just ask, but I didn’t want to ruin the story for you.
And unless this has been contradicted recently, the experiment DIDN’T actually add the claws, they were always part of his skeleton, and just plated with adamantium like the rest. This was discovered when Magneto ripped out the adamantium from his body, and he had bony claws for a while. (Which were somehow shaped differently than when they were covered with adamantim.)
Apocalypse got a hold of him and made him into the Death horseman.
Re: Earth X: I don’t recall that at all. I actually loved that series, but I appear to be the only one…
Re: Origin. One of the nice things about comic books is that one has the ability to ignore pretty much whatever you want. Don’t like Punisher having been an angel? Don’t read it. Never happened. Don’t like Wolverine being a whiny idiot from Wuthering Heights? In that case, Origin doesn’t make a difference. Don’t want Spider-Man to have been married? Well, you’re screwed with that.
Check out BWS’ WEAPON X which is one of the more brilliant stories out there. It was originally written as eight page installments for Marvel Comics Presents, but reads (with one or two exceptions) seamlessly. And, for those of you who actually notice such things, it’s got the best lettering I’ve yet seen (outside Cerebus of course).
The recent Grant Morrisson run of New X-Men speculates that some/all of his memories in this regard were implanted and artificial, and that he was really Weapon X (pronounced “Weapon Ten”), the product of a genetic research team that performed evolution experiments in an envelope of accelerated time, so that they could observe and cross-breed several orders of magnitude more mutations than they would normally be able to. Morrisson also posits that “Weapon I” was Captain America.
I’m sure that later on we’ll hear that Wolverine is really really imagining the whole thing, including the old memories and the old-old memories and the old-old-old memories, and was actually the spawn of a ninja and a female werewolverine, and the bone claws “grew in” once the metal claws were added, sort of like a specialized calcium deposit.
And that he used to love pudding but now he can’t stand it.
Hm. I’ll have to pick that up. But I still like the Origin take on it, if only because the ending intimates that since “Logan” has forgotten where he came from, and Rose’s diary is burned, no one in the X-Men Universe will ever know his true origins.
Oh, and Yakkette, there’s another trade paperback called Mutant Genesis that includes Logan’s memories of his original Weapon X stuff. That might be what you were really looking for.