For a long time it was thought that the body of the last Tasmanian tiger, the thylacine, was lost forever. However, scientists managed to find his coat and skin in one of the museums in Tasmania. Artifacts remained purposeful only due to the fact that they were stored completely in the wrong place where they should have been. It turned out that they were used for the needs of education. Robert Puddle and Katherine Medlock got to the bottom of the truth, unraveling several mysteries and mysteries.

The thylacine is a large marsupial animal with a body structure resembling a dog. Its fur is decorated with stripes, like a tiger’s. This type of predator was distributed throughout Australia, and not at the very beginning of the 20th century, its range was reduced to natsigan. From the remains, the students then studied anatomy, not the skin and the vest were put away in the pantry and forgotten on the stairs. This particular specimen was captured in 1936 by Elias Churchill and kept at Beumaris in the city.

I noticed one unpublished report prompted the search. The German case referred to a deceased thylacine donated to the TMAG museum. It turned out that his remains are stored not in the zoological department, but in the educational department. Orytie, probably, completely breaks the myth that extinguishes what unites the individual “t 16”. Now we can say for sure that the name “Last Tiger” belongs to a female thylacine, the remains of which were exhibited on the left.

tasmanian tiger

Source: Tech Cult

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