seen from China

seen from United States
seen from United Kingdom
seen from China

seen from Belgium
seen from France
seen from France
seen from Russia
seen from Lithuania
seen from Türkiye
seen from China

seen from Germany
seen from Netherlands
seen from Bosnia & Herzegovina
seen from United States

seen from Germany
seen from China
seen from Bangladesh

seen from United States
seen from China
No.3 of 3 pieces on endangered animals, featuring the addax, and a bluebuck constellation
distraction
9-1-1 & 9-1-1: Nashville | Blue Bennings/Evan Buckley 3,412 words | Rated E
Post-episode: s01e12 Spirit of the Games | Flirting | Hook-Up | Workplace Sex | Hand Jobs | Blow Jobs | Evan Buckley is not over Tommy Kinard
"You did good today though," Buck says, turning to him and allowing a flirty grin to tug at his lips; he'd seen the way Blue had been looking at him all day, seen the way his eyes had lingered on his arms as he'd hefted the ladder in training, on his throat as he'd downed a bottle of water after. On his lips now. "Thanks, Hollywood." Blue's grin widens, pleased, and Buck can't help himself. "For a nepo baby," he adds, laughing and holding up his hands in surrender when Blue swats at his arm, mock offense on his face. "I'm kidding, I'm kidding. I mean it, you did good." He lets his gaze wander, and not subtly; flirting was something he'd always been good at—always enjoyed—and it turned out there wasn't all that much difference between flirting with women and flirting with guys. He smirks, tilting his head playfully. "The way you handled that baton…" Blue laughs, a light pink blush dusting across his cheeks as he meets Buck's gaze. His voice is low, his accent deliciously husky when he says, "maybe I could give you a, uh, private demonstration before you leave Nashville?"
Animal of the Day!
Bluebuck (Hippotragus leucophaeus)
(Photo in Public Domain)
Extinction Date- 1800
Habitat- Southern Africa
Size (Weight/Length)- 200 kg; 1.6 m
Diet- Grasses
Cool Facts- By the time the bluebuck was scientifically described, it was already on the decline and the Europeans certainly didn’t help. Bluebucks lived in small herds and spent their lives on the move in search of fresh grasses. These antelope are considered the first large African mammal to go extinct in modern times. Changes in environment, such as a rising sea level, and low genetic diversity already put the bluebuck at risk. Europeans then hunted the antelope to extinction for its meat and as museum specimens. Multiple rock paintings depict Bluebuck throughout Africa and were believed to have supernatural potency by Neolithic peoples. Roan and sable antelopes, their closest relatives, still wander Africa today. Sable antelope are critically endangered due to illegal hunting and conservations are rushing to make sure it doesn’t go the way of the bluebuck.
Rating- 13/10 (Only remembered by four taxidermied individuals.)
[ The specimen in question, the horns and partial skull of a bluebuck. ]
"The bluebuck or blue antelope was the first large African mammal to go extinct in recent times. Once found living in the grasslands along the southern coast of South Africa, it was driven to extinction by humans in around 1800. While closely related to two surviving antelopes, the sable and roan, the bluebuck was distinct having split from a last common ancestor some 1.5 million years ago. As the name suggests, the bluebuck had a predominantly blue-grey coat that faded to a whitish colour on its belly. On its head it had white patches in front of its eyes, and a pair of large, ridged horns that swept back in an elegant curve. While these horns were typically smaller than those found on its relatives, they still reached a respectable length of about 50 centimetres. But the likely scarcity of the bluebuck by the time Europeans first encountered it, and the speed at which it was made extinct, means that there are astonishingly few specimens of this antelope in museums around the world. Now a new study has used genetics to confirm that a pair of horns in the Natural History Museum’s collection is from the unfortunate species, bringing the total number of confirmed bluebuck specimens globally to five."
- Excerpt from "Horns in the Natural History Museum's collection confirmed to be from extinct bluebuck antelope" by Josh Davis.