-Top pictured is one of the Burrell photographs. Which were edited to be close ups to depict a 'thylacine in the wild' later debunked to be a captive thylacine.
-Middle pictured is the Wilfred batty thylacine which is the last recorded thylacine shot in the wild.
-Bottom pictured is the Beaumaris zoo family group.
Happy New Years! Here's this lil edit
“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.
just some thylacines
some more images of the thylacine you have probably never seen before
Currently sitting beside the thylacine in vienna natural history museum and overwhelmed by such a profound sandess.
General Zoology. Written by Mary J. Guthrie and John M. Anderson. 1957.
Internet Archive
Tasmanian Tiger Thylacinus cynocephalus Source: Here
Doggeroo.
The Bristol thylacine looks wistfully out of his glass box.
Sorry for being blurry but I had to use a long exposure on my phone.
another one
Thylacine from Animals of the World, Oddhams Press.
Collection of media revolving around the Thylacine
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