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@galoisphrenic
Блогу "Galois and Others" сегодня исполнилось 3 года!
Thylacine - Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History
I’m in Washington, D.C., spending time with my sister after speaking at a conference in Baltimore this weekend. At the last minute I asked if we could go to the NMNH - every time I visit D.C. I vow to see another museum but in the end it’s truly my favorite and deserves a stop every time. Kris Helgen - zoologist, Curator of Mammals, discoverer of the Olingito - pinged me when he saw I was there and asked if I’d be interested in going behind-the-scenes - duh YES.
So, that’s how I ended up meeting a Thylacine yesterday, formerly the top predator in Australia, Tasmania, and New Guinea. Known for their unique gait, ability to open their mouths more than 120 degrees, and the fact that they were the largest carnivorous marsupial to exist during modern times, the Thylacine became extinct after habitat loss and overhunting in the early-mid 20th century.
These particular individuals (the large one, female, mother of the smaller pup) came from the National Zoo around 1910 as they attempted to launch breeding programs in order to sustain populations. Additionally, disease in their native habitats contributed to the thylacine’s untimely extinction before the animals could be effectively bred in captivity. Rumors exist today that these fantastic creatures may still be roaming in parts of Australia, but as of now, there has been no solid confirmation of such claims.
Big thanks to Kris Helgen for taking the time to show me around! Stay tuned for more photos from our adventures at the NMNH soon.
Animal Diversity Web: Thylacinidae
with daemon
Novel About Seven Hanged by jennarotancrede
Wien by takmaj
TWO YEARS
Canis dirus by *Goldenwolf
I’ve always loved Wilde’s love & respect for Keats.
You speak of Lord Byron and me; there is this great difference between us. He describes what he sees — I describe what I imagine. Mine is the hardest task.
John Keats in a letter to his brother George, 1819 (via ladycashasatiger)
Théodore Géricault
A joy forever, etc.
John Keats on His Deathbed, Joseph Severn, 1821.
Tom Keats
“No—my sweet Fanny—I am wrong. I do not want you to be unhappy—and yet I do, I must while there is so sweet a Beauty - my loveliest my darling! Good bye! I kiss you—O the torments!”
Random thylacine sketch
Now, this fucking excited me. As a person in which the thylacine is her favorite animal, I often find myself hunting down any and all photographs that I have yet to see. More often than not, I don’t get any hits. Recently, however, I stumbled across a few, and this one in particular made me very excited. The thylacine in this photograph is downright beautiful. And if the information I found that went along with it is true, I’ve seen this thylacine in one of the short films released.
According to the information, this photograph was taken by a man named David Seth-Smith, a British zoologist. This is also the thylacine (supposedly a female, according to the Thylacine Museum.) featured in a London Zoo short film shot in 1930 (in which it was shown feeding on a rabbit), making this thylacine one of the last few living members of its species, and one of the last living ones at the London Zoo.
Link to the video; http://www.naturalworlds.org/thylacine/captivity/films/flv/film_7.htm
Link to the source; http://douglasstewart.com.au/objects/natural-history-thylacine-london-zoo/
Also, the price made me lol.
Also, holy fuck, the Thylacine Museum has gotten an upgrade. It’s certainly quite pretty.