Mick Loates (b. 1947)
“In the collection stores of the Australian Museum is this beautiful specimen which has kept its vibrant fur thanks to minimal exposure to light or touch. As our Manager, Programs Matt put it, “Pulling the drawer open is an awe-inspiring, solemn and shameful experience.”
From The Australian Museum on Facebook.
The Tasmanian Wolf in Walter P. Dando, More Wild Animals and the Camera, photographer Dando (1913) - 9789004186729.
W.D. & H.O. Wills cigarette card featuring “Tasmanian Wolf”, circa 1890-1915.
Lonely Benjamin
The pipe’s finder was an amateur bottle digger who found it sandwiched between two larger bottles at the base of a pit on a private property near Launceston in 2016.
The collector then sold the pipe as an unwanted item.
Stephen Sleightholme, from the International Thylacine Specimen Database, snapped up the pipe at auction.
Captive thylacine, c.1920′s. [x]
I went to the natural history museum at Harvard a few weeks ago, saw a Tasmanian Tiger in person for the first time, cried about it, and then proceeded to take photos of it from every angle possible as I stared longingly at it for many many minutes.
The body of Wilf Batty’s thylacine, stiff with rigor mortis, tied to a fence on the man’s farm. Mr. Batty shot the animal, believed to be a male, in May of 1930, after it had reportedly been going after his chickens. It’s commonly believed that this represents the last thylacine to be killed in the wild. The photo itself, one of just five known to exist of the individual, was uncovered and shared by the great grandson of the original photographer. [ x ]
You know what? That's it.
**Tasmanians your tiger**
Don't You Forget About Me
Prints and shirts available here
Collection of media revolving around the Thylacine
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