sciencecenter:

This Day in Science History: the extinction of the Thylacine
It’s not often that humans can know the exact moment when a species went extinct. Zookeepers at the Hobart Zoo in Tasmania, Australia have the unfortunate distinction of being able to announce just that - the day, exactly 75 years ago, when the thylacine went extinct.
Though the thylacine looks very much similar to modern dogs, it is actually a marsupial. It’s only distantly related to modern canines, though the evolutionary convergence is striking. Thylacines died off on the Australian mainland two millenia ago due to hunting and competition, but they survived on the island of Tasmania into the 1930’s. Today, there are only a half dozen movie clips left documenting the existence of the marsupial, though fossil evolution places the rise of the modern Thylacine at 4 million years ago. The last captive thylacine was named Benjamin, even though film footage appears to show that she is a female - the sex has never been confirmed. Read more at the Thylacine Museum.
RIP, Thylacines - 4MYA - September 7th, 1963
(Technically, it was yesterday. So I’m one day behind - forgive me?)

sciencecenter:

This Day in Science History: the extinction of the Thylacine

It’s not often that humans can know the exact moment when a species went extinct. Zookeepers at the Hobart Zoo in Tasmania, Australia have the unfortunate distinction of being able to announce just that - the day, exactly 75 years ago, when the thylacine went extinct.

Though the thylacine looks very much similar to modern dogs, it is actually a marsupial. It’s only distantly related to modern canines, though the evolutionary convergence is striking. Thylacines died off on the Australian mainland two millenia ago due to hunting and competition, but they survived on the island of Tasmania into the 1930’s. Today, there are only a half dozen movie clips left documenting the existence of the marsupial, though fossil evolution places the rise of the modern Thylacine at 4 million years ago. The last captive thylacine was named Benjamin, even though film footage appears to show that she is a female - the sex has never been confirmed. Read more at the Thylacine Museum.

RIP, Thylacines - 4MYA - September 7th, 1963

(Technically, it was yesterday. So I’m one day behind - forgive me?)